The Sunday Post (Dundee)

12 days of care home hell

Family fury as life-loving Alice, 85, robbed of dignity

- By Janet Boyle

A SMILING gran went into a care home in good health – then suffered 12 days of torment which left her frail and barely recognisab­le.

Trusting Alice Morrison even had her glasses taken away from her at the home, where she fell twice, suffered a bruised face and

broke her thighbone.

Her angry son Barry said last night: “She went in happy and came out less than two weeks later wracked in pain and totally changed. They took my mum’s dignity away.”

SHE worked hard all her life and dotes on her family.

At 85, selfless Alice Morrison should have been enjoying and reflecting on a life well lived.

Instead she was forced to endure 12 days of torment at a care home where she suffered a bruised face and two falls – one trip after staff removed her glasses.

According to the home, her spectacles were removed because she had been “tampering with the frame” and they feared for her safety.

But this – coupled with an allegation staff gave her a walking stick that was far too short – led to her suffering a fall in May.

She needed emergency treatment for a broken femur. But her condition was so severe, it took medical staff five days to stabilise her before they could operate.

In total she had to stay in hospital for 32 days.

Disturbing­ly – in what has been upheld as a poor example of treatment at a private care home – The Sunday Post can also reveal:

She suffered one fall within hours of entering the home, but staff gave conflictin­g accounts over whether it had left Alice bruised or not.

No staff member had undertaken recent “falls training” and there was no practical element to their first aid training.

The family were not consulted over the decision to confiscate her glasses.

Alice’s son Barry, 52, of Carnwath, Lanarkshir­e, is furious at the treatment she received.

“Mum ended up seriously injured. Not helped because she had her glasses taken from her,” he said. “She was vomiting, pale and in agony when she was eventually admitted to hospital.”

Barry’s anger at his mum’s stay at the Auchinlea Care Home in Largs, North Ayrshire, comes on the back of an equally scathing report into the establishm­ent by the Care Inspectora­te watchdog body.

“She is a caring gran who devoted her life to her family,” he said. “But she was robbed of her dignity.

“She went in as a happy, trusting grandmothe­r with dementia and left distressed, wracked with pain and in tears.

“It is shocking what she went through and we do not want any other frail, elderly person to ever be treated like this.”

In its report, the Care Inspectora­te found Alice’s glasses were most likely removed for “safety reasons”.

Despite this, the home’s care plan contained no informatio­n “to clarify safety issues regarding glasses” and it concluded: “We were not confident that staff took sufficient action to prevent falls.

“In particular, a decision to remove glasses from Mrs Morrison greatly increased (the) falls risk.”

“I was stunned to discover Mum had her glasses taken from her, especially when she really needs them,” Barry added. “Staff told us they were taken from her because she played with the lenses, something she’d never been known to do.

“Her walking stick disappeare­d as well, only for it to be replaced with one that was too small to use.

“It’s shocking that we have care homes which leave our most vulnerable at the mercy of such failings.”

Desperate to seek out the truth of his mum’s 12-day stay, Barry called in the Care Inspectora­te to investigat­e.

He was concerned about his mum’s welfare and an apparent lack of clarity about her care plan.

The Care Inspectora­te report found a worker phoned Mrs Morrison’s family to say there had been an accident shortly after she moved in. She said she had no bruise on her forehead.

But the same worker – in a call to

She was left in pain and in tears. She was robbed of her dignity

NHS 24 – contradict­ed what the family were told, saying: “She has a wee bruise on her forehead and is asking for paracetamo­l.”

The lack of clear communicat­ion was one of the family’s biggest gripes, said exasperate­d son Barry.

Care Inspectora­te staff visited the home four times as part of its investigat­ion, including a 1am surprise visit. It spoke to a number of staff, including the manager, two senior supervisor­s and four senior carers.

In total, six different aspects of the family’s complaint were investigat­ed by the body, and all of them were upheld, resulting in a raft of recommenda­tions being imposed on the home, run and operated as part of chain owned by Bertinaley Care Limited, headquarte­red in Edinburgh.

The key complaints – that the home failed to take action to prevent falls and that inaccurate and conflictin­g informatio­n was provided to the family – led to a number of key recommenda­tions being put forward.

Auchinlea has been told to train staff to carry out first aid, ensure staff can cope well to prevent and cope with falls, look after residents’ belongings, keep accurate records of patients’ care and keep families accurately informed.

Alice, a well-known Largs figure and former school support worker, was cared for by husband Ricky, until his health made the task too difficult. The decision was then taken that Alice – who has dementia – could be best cared for in a private care home.

But the family have been left to rue their choice of home, given her experience at Auchinlea.

Barry added: “All this has been distressin­g. They are a devoted couple who worked all their days, Dad in a power plant, Mum at a school. They deserved none of this.”

Alice has now been moved to a different care home.

In a letter of apology to the family, Auchinlea’s assistant operations manager, Rory Nicoll enclosed a £200 cheque for a missing walking stick.

The home also issued a statement to The Sunday Post outlining how it had taken on board the recommenda­tions highlighte­d by the Care Inspectora­te.

It said all of these have been addressed, “and of course we have apologised to the family”.

A spokespers­on for the Care Inspectora­te said: “This was a serious case and we have looked into the concerns brought to us.

“We have made clear to the care home the areas which must improve swiftly to ensure that the care provided to residents meets the standard they have a right to expect, and are working closely together to ensure this happens.

“Everyone in Scotland has the right to care which meets their needs and respects their rights.”

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 ??  ?? Alice went to Auchinlea Residentia­l Home after she could no longer stay at her home
Alice went to Auchinlea Residentia­l Home after she could no longer stay at her home
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 ??  ?? The marked change in Alice’s appearance, before and after she was in the care home, rang alarm bells for her son Barry.
The marked change in Alice’s appearance, before and after she was in the care home, rang alarm bells for her son Barry.
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