Herald on Sunday

Rest home horror Fractures, bad food and cockroache­s

Nearly 100 complaints have been upheld since last year, writes Nicholas Jones

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Investigat­ions into rest home complaints have confirmed residents suffered festering wounds and unexplaine­d bruising and leg fractures.

Nearly 100 complaints made about aged-care facilities since 2020 have been fully or partially upheld by health authoritie­s, documents obtained by the Herald on Sunday reveal — and some of the failures are life-threatenin­g.

Most complaints were made by residents’ families. Others were lodged by ambulance and hospital staff, who were alarmed at the condition of elderly patients.

The complaint findings include:

● Substandar­d medical treatment, including for painful bedsores, dehydratio­n and weight loss, incontinen­ce, scabies and after residents fell over. There were medication errors.

● Unhealthy food and cold rooms, with one complaint about cockroache­s in a resident’s bed.

● Dementia patients weren’t showered or cleaned frequently enough. Renovation­s at one rest home created an unsafe environmen­t, including exposed nails and disconnect­ed call bells.

● Incorrect financial charges. A Northland rest home took money from a resident’s account without consent.

The Herald on Sunday obtained the informatio­n by sending Official Informatio­n Act requests to the country’s 20 DHBs, and the Ministry of Health.

Four complaints concerned rest homes run by Heritage Lifecare, which runs 43 rest homes and made headlines in 2018 after maggots hatched in a terminally ill man’s open leg wounds.

Counties Manukau DHB ordered changes at the care home, Palms Lifecare in Pukekohe. However, informatio­n obtained by the Herald on Sunday shows another serious complaint was made in January 2020, and upheld by the DHB.

A summary released by the ministry says there was “delay in care and admission to hospital, delay in diagnosis and treatment of scabies, fluid/weight management, delay in staff noticing a foot infection”. There were also “concerns about personal cares (such as showering and toileting delays)”.

Other upheld complaints about Heritage Lifecare homes include Whanga¯rei’s Puriri Court Rest Home (immobile residents weren’t moved frequently enough, there was poor management of incontinen­ce, diabetes and when a resident’s health rapidly deteriorat­ed), and Cantabria Lifecare in Rotorua (failures related to wound care, dehydratio­n, management of falls and “unexplaine­d bruising”).

Norah Barlow, chief executive of Heritage Lifecare, said no upheld complaint was acceptable to the company, which strives to provide the best care for its residents, “who are increasing­ly more ill as they enter our homes”.

The complaints needed to be viewed in the context of Heritage caring for more than 10,000 residents since 2020, Barlow said, including through Covid-19 lockdowns.

“While we treat caring for our residents as a privilege, it cannot be denied that this can be challengin­g for our staff, particular­ly with the increasing severity of conditions,” Barlow said. “We are confident that the complaints do not show systemic failings.”

Other large companies to have more than one complaint upheld include Bupa NZ. Its Parklands Hospital had a February 2020 complaint substantia­ted, summarised by the ministry as regarding “the unexplaine­d injury of a resident (leg fractures). No explanatio­n provided to the family of how the injury occurred.”

A Bupa spokespers­on wouldn’t provide more detail, citing privacy. “We carried out an extensive investigat­ion and kept the family regularly updated.”

Most DHBs refused to name the facilities involved, saying informatio­n was withheld to protect the privacy of residents, who were often unaware a complaint was made.

Those DHBs were Northland, Waikato, Bay of Plenty, Lakes, MidCentral, Taranaki, Hutt Valley, Capital & Coast, Nelson Marlboroug­h, and Canterbury. Complaint summaries could also be vague.

The Herald on Sunday has appealed the DHBs’ lack of transparen­cy to the Ombudsman.

The facilities that weren’t named had disturbing failures in care upheld against them. For example, a Canterbury care home apologised after inadequate treatment of a bedsore and “significan­t excoriatio­n in skin folds”.

Another apology was from a rest home within the Lakes DHB region, after a review into how a resident’s bone was fractured. Taranaki Hospital emergency department staff complained about how long it took a rest home to transfer a resident who’d suffered a fall.

A partially substantia­ted complaint came from Bay of Plenty DHB staff, about how an unnamed facility managed a gastro outbreak.

Grey Power opposes the secrecy over such cases. “The public have a right to know,” said Roy Reid, who chairs Grey Power’s retirement village and aged-care committee.

The organisati­on wants all audits to be carried out without advance notice (currently most audits, carried out by companies contracted by DHBs, are signalled).

“Most rest homes are trying to run as close to the [financial] margin as they can. Most of them have got shareholde­rs, who require a dividend,” Reid said. “Some of them certainly don’t come up to the mark.”

Grey Power has for decades lobbied for changes including an agedcare commission­er, with power to take action on individual facilities and sector-wide issues like safe staffing ratios.

Labour campaigned on setting up such a watchdog ahead of the 2017 and 2020 elections, and set aside $8.1 million in Budget 2021. Further detail on the position will be announced soon.

The Aged Care Associatio­n believes current regulation is adequate, including regular audits, DHB oversight, complaints to the Health & Disability Commission­er, and inspection of dementia units by the Chief Ombudsman.

When an aged-care commission­er is added to that mix, it should be with the remit to advocate on wider sector issues, the associatio­n’s chief executive, Simon Wallace, told the Herald on Sunday.

That includes a “workforce crisis”,

Most rest homes are trying to run as close to the [financial] margin as they can. Roy Reid, Grey Power

with more than 900 nursing vacancies, Wallace said. The associatio­n is lobbying for more Government funding so aged-care nurses can be paid the same as those working in hospitals.

The complaint failings were separate incidents and not indicative of wider, systemic problems, Wallace said. Rest homes are doing their best to provide care, he said, despite challenges including Covid-19, funding restrictio­ns and border closures that worsen staffing challenges.

“While the staffing crisis does not excuse any failings in care, it does put our ability to provide beds for older New Zealanders at risk.”

Some of the rest home complaints show the strain caused by Covid-19. For example, Northland DHB partially upheld a complaint by a relative of a resident with terminal cancer, who wanted to die at home. Covid-19 restrictio­ns meant palliative care couldn’t be put in place, and the resident ended up in hospital. Their loved one was forced to say goodbye over Skype.

Stories by the Herald last year revealed problems at rest homes that were hit by Covid-19, including Rosewood Rest Home in Christchur­ch, where 12 people died.

The Herald’s previous reporting has also highlighte­d problems with the restraint of residents in dementia facilities, including some residents being strapped to chairs all day, with minimal movement or reposition­ing.

The Government gave the Ombudsman power to inspect secure dementia facilities soon after that 2018 report. The latest inspection report by Chief Ombudsman Peter Boshier was published last month, and found one resident spent more than 11 hours tied to a chair, with only minutes between a restraint being removed and reapplied.

 ??  ?? Roy Reid
Roy Reid
 ?? Photo / Getty ?? Some complaints were upheld over substandar­d medical treatment.
Photo / Getty Some complaints were upheld over substandar­d medical treatment.

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