The Scotsman

‘No social care voice in coronaviru­s strategy cost lives in care homes’

- Rebecca Mccurdy www.scotsman.com

Scottish Covid Inquiry has heard there were 2,900 changes made to guidance for care home workers over the first 18 months of the pandemic.

Scottish Care chief executive Donald Macaskill told the inquiry that the chief objective of carers was to keep people alive.

Staff were fearful of entering their working environmen­t, Mr Macaskill said, because they did not understand what the guidance was.

Mr Macaskill also said the lack of social care voices in Scottish Government pandemic decisions “absolutely” cost lives in care homes.

He said the government was warned it needed to include front line experience in policy making, particular­ly in the decision not to immediatel­y test hospital patients being discharged into care homes.

In evidence to the inquiry yesterday, he also said Operation Koper – a special Crown investigat­ion into the circumstan­ces of all care home deaths during the pandemic – has “broken” staff in the sector.

He told the inquiry it was a “real failure” of the scottish government­not to have a social care director, similar to the clinical role held by Jason Leitch.

Asked by co-lead counsel to the inquiry Stuart Gale KC if that absence had an impact on the people being supported, he replied: “It has a profound impact.

“I have thought very carefully about what I’m about to say: I am absolutely convinced that the lack of engagement and involvemen­t in planning the early stage of the social care sector in anything upward than presence… that lack did and sadly cost many people their lives, both staff and people who were residents in our care homes and citizens in our communitie­s.”

Dr Macaskill also said a statement by then health secretary Jeane Freeman on May 5, 2020 following a spate of care home Covid outbreaks was an “unhelpful politicisa­tion” when she implied some care homes were not following guidance.

He said some frontline care staff were “victimised or bulthe lied” in their communitie­s because they worked in a “death home”.

Referencin­g opera ti onko per, which is still ongoing, he said it has been “devastatin­g” for staff.

But he said those who had lost loved ones “deserve” to know whether error or inappropri­ate practice took place.

He added: “However, what we now have is four years on, we have thousands of staff whose profession­alism has been called into question, over whom there is a weight of suspicion and a cloud hanging over.

“Sadly, that has resulted in individual­s feeling they can’t continue in their role and makinga decision to leave the sector.

“Tragically, it has resulted in individual­s–andwhereas­there is never one reason for somebody to take measures to harm themselves, I know personally there have been a number of individual­s from whom investigat­ions as part of Operation Koper, even having to fill out the 27 questions per death for each resident when you maybe lost 10 in the space of a week, even that process has broken them.

“There is a complete imbalance and I think personally it is a real stain on the justice system in scotland that this disproport­ionate action still remains against a workforce who by vast majority tried to do their best.”

Scottish Care chief executive Donald Macaskill told the inquiry the lack of social care voices in Scottish Government pandemic decisions ‘absolutely’ cost lives in care homes

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom