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Kerosene baths reveal systemic aged care crisis in Australia
By Regina Lohr and Mike Head
10 March 2000
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Every day this week has brought new and harrowing reports of
elderly residents in Australian nursing homes being seriously
maltreated.
The revelations began when news leaked out that a nursing home
in an outer Melbourne working class suburb had subjected its 57
patients to kerosene baths. Several suffered second-degree burns
and blisters. One woman, aged 84, died two days later. The bathing
had been ordered to control an outbreak of scabies, a skin disease.
The news provoked widespread outrage from the families of people
in care. Reports of similar horrors across the country followed
as health workers, relatives and pensioner groups seized on the
rare media attention to speak out.
On January 17 the federal Department of Health and Aged Care
had received complaints from nursing staff at the care-for-profit
Riverside Nursing Home about the kerosene baths and other ill-treatment
of residents. It was not until the complaints received media coverage
three weeks later, however, that the department referred the matter
to the Aged Care Standards and Accreditation Agency, and inspectors
were dispatched to investigate. Aged Care Minister Bronwyn Bishop
claimed not to know of the facts until mid-February.
It soon emerged that last year nursing staff at Riverside had
lodged complaints about shortages of bed linen and medical supplies,
and weevil-infested food, among other things. Despite Riverside
failing on 26 out of 29 case standards, the government excused
the breaches, closing its file four months later. That decision
was consistent with the government's record of never having withdrawn
a nursing home licence.
On February 22, facing mounting public outcry and media attention,
Bishop and the government initially sought to bury the issue by
quietly withdrawing federal subsidies from the home without any
public announcement.
As more details continued to emerge, the government suddenly
ordered the closure of Riverside last Monday. It did not consult
the 57 residents or their families, nor did it give them notice
of the decision. Most of the patients were left with no choice
but to transfer to a hospital 40 kilometres away in the centre
of Melbourne.
Anguished patients, relatives and staff bitterly accused the
government of further endangering the lives and welfare of the
residents. Many of the residents' loved ones, often elderly themselves,
will have no means of travelling to the hospital to make visits.
In a bid to justify its sudden reversal, the government released
the Aged Care Accreditation Agency's report on Riverside. That
report, however, showed a protracted pattern of mistreatment to
which the government had clearly turned a blind eye for years.
Bandages for wounds were so scarce that dressings that
are leaking fluids or falling off are patched up. There
was ongoing risk that residents' open wounds can become
flyblown and infested with maggots. Soiled dressings were
left in bathrooms; soiled bandages and towels were washed with
the residents' laundry; urine-stained foam mattress overlays were
stored with clean linen; and fly-screens were missing. Cornflour
was applied to residents' skin to treat itchiness.
Of the 46 residents reviewed, six have confirmed dehydration,
nine others have possible dehydration, 15 have recorded increasing
episodes of aggression, confusion, depression, fainting or loss
of consciousness, 13 have recorded infections such as conjunctivitis,
cellulitis, diarrhoea, urinary tract infections and infected wounds
(and) two residents have chest infections.
In the single worst case, a woman's broken arm had been undetected
for a week, misdiagnosed as simply a reaction to an influenza
injection.
Only the determination of the nurses forced the conditions
at Riverside into the open. One nurse told the media that nursing
staff had fought against the kerosene baths, which
had been ordered by the supervising nurse. Nurses were now afraid
that they would be viewed as monsters.
Adelaide Ericksen, a registered nurse who formerly worked at
Riverside, told the Australian that nurses worked there
in a climate of fear. There was also a sense of panic among patients
that they might not receive their medication. She had left after
a senior nurse forbade her to administer oxygen to a woman whom
she had revived after choking. Describing her experience, she
said: It was dreadful, disgusting. I felt sorry for the
patients but I just won't go back. I'll never go back to any nursing
home again.
Prime Minister John Howard has adamantly defended his minister,
Bishop, and denied the existence of any nursing homes crisis.
I don't accept it's a crisis, he said on the Australian
Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) Lateline TV program. I
mean that is just a ridiculous exaggeration. It is a very sad
and regrettable incident concerning one nursing home.
Yet a litany of reports has surfaced in the media about conditions
in other nursing homes, indicating that the problem is systemic.
Bishop acknowledged that her department had received over 4,000
complaints in the last two-and-a-half years.
The day after the government shut down Riverside, it admitted
to allowing a nursing home to keep operating in Gladstone, central
Queensland last November, despite complaints from relatives and
nurses. Three residents died soon after from gangrene and dehydration.
In a letter tabled in parliament, a Gladstone Hospital nurse
said hospital staff had been appalled and moved to tears at the
state of one of the patients, who arrived from the Alchera Park
Nursing Home with numerous pressure sores, dehydrated, barely
conscious, anemic and with a bowel obstruction and pneumonia.
His dressings had been pitiful and he died the next
day.
In another example, a woman told the Melbourne Age that
her elderly father, a resident at the Bellevue nursing home in
suburban Oakleigh, was just waiting to die as the
home no longer organised any activities for the residents. She
had seen people at the home left lying in beds soiled with faeces
and vomit, a. patient whose wounds had become infested with maggots
and others who had developed mouth infections due to poor denture
hygiene.
Ted Quinlan, a spokesman for the Pensioners and Superannuants
Action Group, told the ABC: If you go to some of these nursing
homes the stench where they're lying in their own body waste is
appalling. Some of the people are just left there without drinking
fluids, their food is put in front of them. They wouldn't know
what day it was. The group had lodged a complaint with the
UN Human Rights Commissioner, citing cases of neglect and overcharging.
According to the government, 135,000 people live in residential
care in 3,000 homes and hostels throughout Australia. Two-thirds
of the institutions are corporate-controlled businesses, with
most of the rest operated by churches and charities. The government
spends $3.5 billion each year on subsidies.
In 1997, when the Howard government introduced its Aged Care
Act, it claimed that higher fees and bonds would provide the incentive
for investors to expand and improve the industry. Instead, conditions
in nursing homes have deteriorated while the average waiting time
has lengthened from two weeks to six, with much longer queues
in some areas.
Under the Act, nursing home operators no longer have to allocate
a set proportion of government subsidies to patient care. Links
between the level of funding received and the number of qualified
staff employed were removed. In 1998 the previous requirement
for a registered nurse to be on duty was scrapped.
Homes and hostels were to be licensed for three years, with
standards monitored through spot checks. Yet no such checks were
ever conducted, Bishop admitted this week. According to Tim Burns,
the general manager of the Aged Care Standards and Accreditation
Agency, its ability to carry out monitoring was severely compromised
due to insufficient funding. He stated during Senate estimates
hearings that the agency was 60 to 65 external assessors short
in New South Wales and Victoria alone.
The Aged Care Act specifies that audit reviews of nursing homes
be made public on a regular basis. However, late last year a list
rating nursing homes was removed from the Aged Care Standards
and Accreditation Agency's web site. A list of the 18 worst
homes has reappeared on Nancy's Aged Care site, denounced by Bishop
as a rogue site. She claimed the material had been
removed from the official site in order not
to put undue pressure on homes, which may be rapidly moving to
improve their situations.
The government's changes have made the industry a more lucrative
target for corporate takeovers. Under the headline, Golden
Oldies, the Sydney Morning Herald reported on March
2 that Nursing homes are big business, with handsome profits,
for some. American-based corporations are moving into
Australia to capitalise on a growth industry protected by an assured
flow of government funds.
A US-based real estate investment trust, Omega Health Care
Investors, in connection with AMP Life Limited is seeking to buy
nursing homes in order to lease them back to operators. It has
already bought 40 properties since 1998, including 30 formerly
owned by Australia's largest operator, Doug Moran. Managing director
Kevin Moss said: Once you are in the business you have a
guaranteed government income. It's a very good business. It's
been a cottage industry in Australia ... and some have milked
the cow. But we are trying to get it more corporatised and professional.
Commenting on the corporate interest in the aged care market,
Francis Sullivan, executive director of Catholic Health Australia,
a major charitable nursing home proprietor, said: This shows
the money is in renting out facilities; you can't make it from
providing care. This is the sadness of the whole show. He
said government funding was inadequate and had failed to keep
up with rising costs.
Having been given cash to spend as they see fit for the past
three years, business operators are now free to exit the industry
before January 1, 2001, the next accreditation deadline, without
having invested a cent in improvements. They will be able to continue
to operate until January 1 and then sell their bed licenses for
up to $35,000 each, the going price on the Sydney market.
The doctors' organisation, the Australian Medical Association,
and the nurses' union, the Australian Nursing Federation, have
warned that between 600 and 2,500 beds will close on January 1
in the state of Victoria alone, intensifying the crisis.
In condemning the government and calling for Bishop's resignation,
the Labor Party opposition has avoided any reference to its own
record.
The last Labor government, headed by Paul Keating, cut $250
million from aged care in the 1994-95 budget. Led by former minister
Carmen Lawrence, it also pioneered the application of the user
pays regime to aged care by imposing higher fees and introducing
entry bonds on residents in aged hostels. The Howard government
simply deepened the cuts by slashing $1 billion in the 1996-97
budget and lifting nursing homes fees and entry bonds.
Professor Bob Gregory compiled a report for the Keating government
detailing filthy, sub-standard and over-crowded conditions throughout
the country, with many poorer residents crammed into rooms with
four beds or more. His report estimated that $1 billion was needed
to provide adequate standards.
Like every other aspect of life, aged care has become an increasingly
two-class system. High quality homes with modern facilities, strict
medical and hygiene standards, fresh and nourishing food and tranquil
surroundings existbut they are reserved for the wealthy
who can afford fees in the order of $900 a week and entry bonds
around $250,000. For lower middle class and working class retirees,
the conditions have become Dickensian.
Increasingly stripped of all protective and regulatory remnants
of the post-war welfare state, the unleashing of the free
market is producing conditions where the majority of elderly
people are treated as so much unwanted refuse. Medical science
has significantly increased life expectancy, but, under the imperatives
of the profit system, those who suffer the misfortune of being
poor are simply being disposed of as cheaply and quickly as possible.
See Also:
Australia's MRI "scandal"
diverts attention from government restrictions on medical diagnosis
[29 January 2000]
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