when psychosocial interventions go wrong... jill manthorpe and kritika samsi
TRANSCRIPT
When psychosocial interventions go wrong...
Jill Manthorpe and Kritika Samsi
Working with puppets...
Care home workers terrified dementia patients with horror handpuppets 'for fun‘
Daily Mail, 3rd December 2010
Two care home nurses are facing jail for using a glove puppet to bully elderly women as a joke.
(They) were paid to look after the frail grandmothers - but instead the pair 'scared them
for just for the fun of it'. (They) laughed while using a green goblin puppet to terrify women patients aged 87 and 91 in the home for the
elderly.
Being playful...
Jail for care trio who filmed their abuse of elderly at X nursing home
Bradford Telegraph & Argus, 15th December 2010
Three care workers have been jailed after filming the “inhuman and degrading” abuse of two old people… Harrowing mobile phone footage of an
86-year-old man being bullied, baited and taunted and a 99-year-old woman sprawled, legs apart, on the floor pleading for help were played
to a packed courtroom.
‘fooling around...’ (mitigation)
Care workers filmed attacks on elderlyIsle of Wight County Press, 26th February 2009
Two young women filmed their sickening abuse of old people to entertain their friends. A court
was told how the two former care home workers tormented their victims, both suffering from severe dementia, pinching them, pulling and
contorting their faces, pushing a mobile phone at one woman’s face and putting their fingers in the
mouth of another.
Managing challenging behaviour?
Carer pinned OAP down by his armsRhyl Journal, 26th November 2008
A carer in a nursing home who held a 91-year-old resident down by his arms, wept as she
was found guilty of ill-treatment. (she) claimed that she had been acting in self-defence as the man, who suffered from
dementia, tried to punch her.
These are examples of convictions under the Mental Capacity Act 2005. They all
relate to people with dementia and their treatment by paid care workers/nurses.
Our study – Evidem MCA• We wanted to know if professionals in dementia care
knew of this potential empowerment of people with dementia.
• Conducted interviews and survey with 250 staff working in dementia care.
• We found that most did not know – despite training, publicity and newspaper coverage.
• We therefore recommend greater attention to the rights of people with dementia not to be abused and their rights to have access to justice.
• In doing so, this may reduce the fear, stigma and dependency of dementia.
We conclude that psychosocial interventions needs to be supplemented by:
• Highlighting the value of recording so it may stop the abuse and provide better access to justice for vulnerable people (and staff)
• Whistleblowing (reporting concerns to outsiders but also to insiders)
• Promoting accountability to people with dementia above accountability to colleagues, employer or agency
• recognising that training does not itself safeguard and that interventions need to be ethical.
Thank you
DisclaimerThis report/article presents independent research commissioned by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) under its Programme Grants for Applied Research scheme (RP-PG-060-1005). The views expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR or the Department of Health.