The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Fife care worker who drank on job is struck off

HEARING: She also told service user she would ‘go to hell’

- NADIA VIDINOVA nvidinova@thecourier.co.uk

A Fife support worker who drank alcohol on the job and told an elderly woman she would “go to hell” has been struck off the social work register.

Yvonne Matthews, who was employed at Abbotsford Nursing Home in Glenrothes, has been deemed unfit to practise by the Scottish Social Services Council (SSSC) after a five-day hearing in Dundee.

A three-month suspension order has been imposed until the permanent removal comes into force, to ensure she cannot work in the sector in the meantime.

One care assistant said she saw her sip “pure vodka” out of a soft drink bottle.

The worker, referred to as Witness A, told the panel: “There was often a smell of alcohol off Yvonne.

“She had a bottle that she would take out of her bag, take a sip and put it back in her bag.”

Witness A also described an incident when she and Mrs Matthews were with a “vocal” service user and Mrs Matthews told the woman: “When you die you’ll go to hell, you won’t go to heaven”.

Meanwhile, managers at Abbotsford vouched for the support worker.

Nurse and manager Elspeth Steel said: “I never had any reason to suspect Yvonne. I’m not always there – she was in a unit on her own.”

Mrs Matthews claimed she had been the victim of “bullying” and “malicious” allegation­s by her colleagues, whom she accused of colluding against her.

However, Rebecca Mudie, leading the case, said the witnesses who made the allegation­s had been “credible and reliable” and that there was no evidence of bullying or malice.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom