Yorkshire Post

‘Many care homes not satisfacto­ry’

- STEVE TEALE NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

Old people are being forced to live in unsatisfac­tory care homes in parts of the country including Yorkshire, according to new analysis.

Yorkshire and The Humber is the second worst performing region in England when it comes to the proportion of satisfacto­ry care homes, whilst London is the best performing region.

The market is simply not providing a decent choice for older people Simon Bottery, of care charity Independen­t Age

OLD PEOPLE are being forced to live in unsatisfac­tory care homes in parts of the country including Yorkshire, according to new analysis.

Yorkshire and The Humber is the second worst performing region in England when it comes to the proportion of satisfacto­ry care homes, whilst London is the best performing region. In some areas such as Bradford or Wakefield, older people and their families face little choice of quality care, with nearly half of care homes rated not good enough.

The analysis was by old people’s charity Independen­t Age and based on Care Quality Commission (CQC) inspection­s.

Four local authority areas in Yorkshire and The Humber are in the 20 worst performing areas of the country for proportion of homes rated ‘inadequate’ or ‘requires improvemen­t”. They are Bradford (46.3 per cent of homes), Wakefield (46 per cent), Calderdale (43.1 per cent) and Kirklees (39.7 per cent).

The research found variations within the region. In Doncaster, fewer than one in five care homes in the local authority are rated ‘inadequate’ or ‘requires improvemen­t’. But in neighbouri­ng Wakefield, older and disabled people are faced with far fewer choices of quality care, nearly half of homes in the local authority are rated ‘inadequate’ or ‘requires improvemen­t’.

However, no care homes in the Isles of Scilly, Islington and Rutland were labelled inadequate or require improvemen­t. The charity said the variation in quality was caused by low levels of funding by local authoritie­s, difficulti­es recruiting staff, and low pay, as well as a lack of a support mechanism for improving struggling care homes.

Simon Bottery, director of policy at the care charity Independen­t Age, said: “No-one should be forced to live in an unsatisfac­tory care home but our analysis shows this is the grim reality in some parts of the country. The market is simply not providing a decent choice for older people and their families but there is little indication that local authoritie­s or the Government are giving the problem the attention it deserves.

“Money is likely to be one cause but not the only one.

“The Government has an opportunit­y to address this in its upcoming Green Paper on social care but, in the meantime, councils must demonstrat­e that they understand the reasons for care home failures and are working to resolve them.”

Margaret Willcox, of the Associatio­n of Directors of Adult Social Services (ADASS), said: “High quality care is essential to providing good adult social care to profession­al standards expected by elderly and disabled people and their families, who both need and deserve it.

“Most health and adult social care services in England are providing people with safe, high quality and compassion­ate care, as recognised in last year’s annual CQC report, with 71 per cent of adult social care services inspected rated as good.

“However, the CQC raised concerns that the sustainabi­lity of the adult social care market is approachin­g a tipping point. Despite councils working hard with providers and the sector to maintain and improve the quality of care provided, the chronic and historic underfundi­ng of social care has severely impacted on their ability to do so.

“Reductions in funding, increased demand by people living longer and with more complex needs, and the cost of the National Living Wage, while welcome, are putting significan­t pressures on councils and providers who are finding it hard to recruit and retain staff.”

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