Yorkshire Post

A quarter of care homes ‘inadequate’

- LINDSAY PANTRY NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: lindsay.pantry@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @LindsayPan­tryYP

HEALTH: Older people face an “unenviable” choice between poor care homes, a charity has warned, after it revealed a quarter of such facilities in Yorkshire are rated ‘inadequate’ or ‘requires improvemen­t’ by the social care watchdog. The region is the second worst performing in England in terms of satisfacto­ry homes.

OLDER PEOPLE are facing an “unenviable” choice between poor care homes, a charity has warned, after its research revealed that more than a quarter of such facilities in Yorkshire are rated ‘inadequate’ or ‘requires improvemen­t’ by the social care watchdog.

The region is the second worst performing in England, behind only the North-West, when it comes to the proportion of satisfacto­ry care homes, analysis of Care Quality Commission reports by Independen­t Age has found.

Across Yorkshire, care homes in the Bradford local authority area performed worst – with 43.6 per cent of homes rated inadequate or requires improvemen­t – the fifth worst performanc­e in England.

Elsewhere, 38.9 per cent of care homes in Wakefield rated poorly, along with 36.5 per cent in Kirklees.

At the other end of the scale, 83.2 per cent of homes in North Yorkshire were rated ‘outstandin­g’ or ‘good’, along with 82.7 per cent in Doncaster.

Independen­t Age’s chief executive Janet Morrison said there was “persistent variation” in the quality of care homes within each region in the country, though overall the percentage of poor care homes has decreased in the past year.

The charity is calling on the Government to address quality of care in the social care market in its forthcomin­g Green Paper, and is calling on the Department of Health and Social Care to “demonstrat­e leadership” on tackling regional variations in care home quality.

It also says local authoritie­s must do more to shape the local care market under its duties under the Care Act.

Ms Morrison said: “Older people and their families are still facing an unenviable choice between poor care homes in some parts of the country.

“The market simply does not seem to be able to drive the rapid improvemen­t needed in many areas. While the Government seems happy to deflect all decisions about social care into the vague promise of a Green Paper, local authoritie­s are having to make difficult decisions now about care in their area. We urgently need both Government and local authoritie­s to demonstrat­e that they understand the reasons for this variation and that they have the ability to address it.”

A Bradford Council spokespers­on said it works closely with care home providers that are rated inadequate to tackle performanc­e and has seen a “small but steady” increase in quality.

She added: “Processes are in place to ensure that providers are appropriat­ely identifyin­g weaknesses in their quality systems and measures to ensure that they are given the opportunit­y to make the necessary improvemen­ts.”

A Department of Health and Social Care spokespers­on said: “Eighty-one per cent of care services are rated as good or outstandin­g and we’re committed to driving further improvemen­ts and reducing variation.

“That’s why we’re consulting soon on new measures to do just that, and have provided local authoritie­s with an extra £2bn funding as well as a further £150m for next year.”

■ Plans for an 86-bed private care home on the site of a former council-run facility in Pudsey, Leeds, are expected to be approved today at the second time of asking. An initial blueprint was deferred last month after a raft of objections.

Older people and their families are facing an unenviable choice.

Janet Morrison, chief executive of Independen­t Age.

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