New Care Home Directory for Yorkshire Launched

Tadcaster firm Kaleton Ltd today announced the launch of a new online Care Home Directory Initiative serving the whole of Yorkshire. The web site, CareHomesYorkshire.com, aims to make essential information about accessing care services easily available to everyone in the county.

“Traditionally, details of local Care Homes have only been available from social workers and councils, usually in paper format” said Keith Madeley MBE, the company’s President and Chairman of the Yorkshire Society. “It is not possible for the public to search through their leaflets easily, locate Care Homes in a specific postcode area or compare homes side by side. By bringing Care Home information onto the web and adding modern database search technology we have made it far easier for people to find exactly what they need, when they need it.”

In addition to a searchable directory of care providers, the web site features articles and advice about choosing Care Homes, accessing funding and other related issues. The public can also post reviews of the Care Homes thus favouring those providing the best levels of care.

As well as providing a long overdue service to the public, the site has a section aimed at benefitting the Care Home operators. This facilitates networking within the care sector as well as access to key suppliers.

“The CareHomesYorkshire.com web site is allowing us to effectively engage with local people who need our care services. It is also a great source of information when our care homes need to find suppliers or recruit staff” said Patrick Roche, Managing Director of Leeds based Care Home group Roche Healthcare.

Readers are encouraged to visit the new web site at www.carehomesyorkshire.com

New appointment for Yorkshire MBE

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New appointment for Yorkshire MBE

Emerging IT firm, Kaleton Ltd, has appointed Yorkshire business stalwart Keith Madeley MBE as chairman.

Keith joins the Tadcaster based company as it embarks on ambitious plans to expand within the region’s nursing and care home sector.

The Bradford-born businessman, known affectionately as “Mr. Yorkshire”, was recognised earlier this month in the Queen’s New Year’s Honours list. Mr. Madeley was awarded an MBE for service to the communities of Yorkshire.

Mr. Madeley, who lives in Leeds, has over 30 years of business experience and is a well known member of the Yorkshire business community. He is currently chairman of The Prince’s Trust for Yorkshire and the Humber as well as the Yorkshire Society and the Duke of York’s Community Initiative.

“Kaleton is a young, exciting company with great growth potential”, said Keith.

“Kaleton’s expanding portfolio of IT, software and internet services is rapidly establishing the company in the nursing and care home sector. As Chairman I look forward to building on Kaleton’s position as a key service provider in this growing sector whilst expanding into other markets. I am confident that the company has a very bright future”, he added.

Kaleton’s founder James Fell said, “We are delighted to have appointed Keith as chairman. Keith was particularly impressed with Kaleton’s portfolio of cutting edge IT products and how these can benefit other businesses. He brings a wealth of business know-how which will be invaluable in ensuring we achieve our expansion plans.”

Read Keith Madeley’s full statement on Kaleton’s web site at http://www.kaleton.com/chairman-message.php

ENDS

Japan’s elderly fail to welcome their robot overlords

Original article: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-12347219

In Japan robots are friendly helpers not Terminators.

So when they join the workforce, as they do often in factories, they are sometimes welcomed on their first day with Shinto religious ceremonies.

But whether the sick and elderly will be as welcoming to robot-like tech in their homes is a question that now vexes a Japanese care industry that is struggling with a massive manpower shortage.

Automated help in the home and hospitals, believe some, could be the answer. A rapidly ageing first world is also paying close attention to Japan’s dalliance with automated care.

It wants to know whether it can construct the nursing-care and medical-care needed in a future with fewer younger people to take care of the elderly. Japan could show us how.

“The country sees it as an imperative to build carer robots and systems that can monitor health in the home. Because without them the nation’s health care system won’t cope,” says carer Yasuko Amahisa.

“There will simply be too many elderly to care for as the nation faces a dramatic declining birth rate, an ageing population, and loosening of family ties.”

Above all Japan wants, if not needs, its dreams of robots in the home to come true because its immigration policy is decidedly anti-immigration, she adds.

Read the rest of this article

Shadow Health Secretary John Healey highlights care homes plight in North Yorkshire

Original article: http://www.yorkpress.co.uk/news/8687756.Shadow_Health_Secretary_highlights_care_homes_plight/

Shadow Health Secretary John Healey highlights care homes plight in North Yorkshire

THE plight of North Yorkshire care homes threatened with closure has been highlighted by Labour’s Shadow Health Secretary.

John Healey, who was in York yesterday to speak at a conference in the city, joined City of York Council’s Labour group leader, James Alexander, on a visit to Haxby Hall elderly persons’ home, where they spoke to residents.

Mr Healey discussed budget cuts with residents and said he was hearing “day in day out from people whose services are being cut, with often the most vulnerable members of society losing out.”

Last week, The Press reported that North Yorkshire County Council was considering cost-cutting measures to the tune of £20 million in the next five years.

One idea is for elderly residents to be moved to facilities run alongside businesses and voluntary groups.

A report going before the council’s care and independence overview and scrutiny committee this week said residential placements for elderly people, intensive personal care packages and carers’ support networks could also face reductions. Accompanying Mr Healey yesterday, Coun Alexander said: “People in York are rightly concerned that when the City of York Council’s ruling Lib Dem group brings forward its own budget proposals in the new year, they will contain similar measures.

“I want people to know that in these really difficult times, Labour’s priority will always be the most vulnerable members of our community.

“The news from North Yorkshire is another reminder of how the cuts imposed by the Lib Dem/Conservative Government are hitting front-line services already.” Last week Derek Law, corporate director of adult and community services at North Yorkshire County Council, said: “Is it possible to protect the same number of vulnerable adults and children in North Yorkshire communities for less money? The honest answer is probably not, but we can minimise the damaging impact if we think and behave differently.”

Care home company in talks for future

Original article: http://www.thenorthernecho.co.uk/business/8690731.Care_home_company_in_talks_for_future/

With times being hard for care homes it is essential to optimise your care home and get the best value for money.
Care home company in talks for future

THE UK’s largest care home provider, Southern Cross Healthcare, is holding exploratory talks with other potential buyers after private equity firm Towerbrook Capital walked away without making an offer.

Towerbrook said in August it was weighing up a bid for Darlington- based Southern Cross which has been hit hard by public sector cuts. Southern Cross declined to enter talks with the London and New York-based firm, but later started to explore strategies to turn around its flagging performance, during which it said other parties expressed interest in the company.

A company statement said: “While these approaches are highly preliminary in nature, the board believes it to be in shareholders’ interest to continue to hold exploratory discussions.

There can be no certainty that any offer will be forthcoming.”

Southern Cross, which operates about 750 homes with capacity for about 37,000 beds, will announce its full results on December 7. It has warned that pressure on public spending was hitting admissions.

Earlier this month, Southern Cross defended itself against criticism of the quality of care in one of its homes after industry watchdog the Care Quality Commission gave 19 of its homes a zero rating, where zero is rated as poor and three stars is excellent.

Bristol nursing home staff ignored dementia sufferers

Original article: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-bristol-11837585

This article is another strong argument for more CCTV in care homes!

Bristol nursing home staff ignored dementia sufferers

Carers at a Bristol nursing home ignored dementia sufferers despite repeated calls for help, inspectors have found.

The Care Quality Commission (CQC) said residents were left with food on their faces and clothing at Sunnymead Manor, in Southmead.

Admissions at the home have been suspended following the report.

The owner of the home, Mimosa Healthcare, has issued an “unreserved” apology for the distress caused.

“Mimosa Healthcare regrets that in recent months it has not delivered in certain areas to the high standards of care the company expects and delivers throughout its business,” it said in a statement.

“We also acknowledge that this has also fallen short of the high standards rightly demanded by residents, relatives, the CQC and other partners.”

The firm added it took the “concerns and issues highlighted within this report extremely seriously”.
‘Exposed to infection’

The CQC said it inspected the home after a member of staff there raised concerns.

Two inspections were carried out on 13 and 15 October.

Inspectors found bedrooms at Sunnymead had “offensive odours and stained carpets” while morning medication was given to residents too late.

There was also no evidence of training for staff in how to manage wounds and infection.

Ian Biggs, from the CQC, said the care at the home “fell far short of the standards people have a right to expect”.

“It is even more disturbing when you consider that many of the residents here are frail, vulnerable people who are the least able to complain about the poor and unhygienic environment.

“We found clear evidence that the home is not maintaining essential standards of cleanliness, with the risk that staff and residents are exposed to healthcare associated infection.”

Care home operator warns on profits

An article that illustrates how care home operators now need to spend both their IT and marketing budgets carefully and get the best value for money possible from all their chosen suppliers. Kaleton Ltd can help to maximise your occupancy through creating professional, search engine optimised web sites ensuring that your homes are found online before your competitors’.

Original article: http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2010/aug/09/southern-cross-care-home-profits

Southern Cross Healthcare says dramatic cuts to public spending will hit revenues

The UK’s biggest care home operator has become the latest private sector business to warn that dramatic cuts to public spending will hit revenues.

The coalition government’s drive to reduce spending means that Southern Cross Healthcare has seen a reduction in admissions to its care homes from local authorities. As a result of this lost business, the company, which has 730 care homes and 37,000 beds under the Southern Cross and Ashbourne Senior Living brands, will miss analysts’ profit forecasts for the full year.

“Whilst the longer-term fundamentals for residential care remain positive, the short-term outlook is challenging as pressure grows to reduce overall public sector spending,” the company said in a statement. “As a result of this pressure, the group has continued to experience a reduction in admissions from local authorities during the third quarter.”

Over the three months to the end of June, Southern Cross saw average occupancy in its estate fall to 85.4%, from 87.5% last year. Self-funding residents accounted for 17.4% of total residents and the company is focusing on getting more – in the quarter 19% of new admissions were self-funding – as it tries to mitigate the effects of the public sector squeeze.

The company said profits before financial charges were £12.1m over the quarter, down from £19.9m. For the full year, the company estimates profits before financial charges will be about £53m, down from £72.5m in 2009. As a result of the warning, shares in the company dropped almost 4%.

The government’s clampdown on public sector spending, as announced in chancellor George Osborne’s emergency budget earlier in the year, has already claimed several corporate scalps.

• Construction group Morgan Sindall, which fits out offices and builds schools and houses, warned today that government spending is reducing, although the impact if being offset somewhat by growing demand for commercial buildings. Reporting a 3% fall in first-half profit, chairman John Morgan warned that he reckons the coalition government will reveal cuts of 35-40% in construction funding when it unveils the public sector spending review in October. School and road building will be cut dramatically, he said “and we’ll have to wait and see what happens to health and social housing”.

• But the shock waves are already being felt in social housing. The most spectacular casualty of the new era of public sector frugality is social housing maintenance group Connaught. In June it warned that some revenues from 31 of about 200 social housing contracts had been deferred hitting the amount of cash coming into the business. The company is now in emergency talks with its lenders about a possible debt-for-equity swap which could wipe out its shareholders. The firm’s shares are currently trading at about 11p. Before the profit warning they were changing hands for more than 200p.

• Funding for schools, meanwhile, is also under fire, which last month forced RM Group, the schools IT company, to warn that contracts worth £200m are at risk. RM’s shares plunged when the company warned that seven contracts would probably be scaled back after the government axed the Building Schools for the Future scheme, a flagship Labour plan to build new secondary schools and refurbish existing ones. Education secretary Michael Gove said all projects that had not reached “financial close” would be scrapped although there has been a backlash against his plans. Construction firm Balfour Beatty, however, said plans to cut spending on schools would not affect it as it has been positioning the business to take advantage of a construction boom in the power and energy sector.

• Last week Mouchel, which provides maintenance for Britain’s highways, warned that its full-year results would be at the lower end of expectations as a result of spending cuts. “Trading remains challenging in some areas given the uncertainty that exists in many public sector markets. We expect this situation to continue until the government’s announcement of the spending review on 20 October and probably for some months thereafter,” the company said.

• In July, Cable & Wireless, which provides communication services to large corporations as well as local authorities and government bodies, saw its shares plunge 17% after warning that spending in the UK public sector had “slowed very significantly”.

• Outsourcing group Capita, meanwhile, is hoping that the need of public sector bodies to cut costs could actually result in opportunities for the company. But in the short-term, the company, whose contracts include one with the BBC to collect the licence fee, said last month that “the current pressures on public spending may potentially affect growth … in a small number of our trading activities”.

Scheme to put more IT in care homes is underway

Original article: http://www.computing.co.uk/computing/news/2256481/scheme-put-care-homes-gets

A new £12m scheme aims to give disabled and elderly people in care homes more access to IT and the internet.

The Get Connected scheme is being funded by the Department of Health and aims to benefit as many as 22,000 care providers in the UK.

Individual applications for grants of up to £20,000 are being managed by the Charities Technology Trust (CTT), which has already received 359 applications in two days.

William Hoyle, chief executive of the trust, told Computing: “There is an assumption that once people are in a care home they no longer need to be connected to the world, we think this is wrong.”

Many care homes have access to a single computer which is used for administration and is not connected to the internet.

The Social Care Institute for Excellence is overseeing the scheme, which also aims to benefit staff who work in care homes.

The grants will also cover user training for care home staff and residents.

—–

Note that the closing date for initial applications for this grant is 10th September 2010. If you run a care home and would like us to help you apply for this grant please contact us. We can provide a range of services that would be covered by this grant. From installing wireless internet access throughout your care home to setting up additional PCs, this is a great opportunity to modernise your care home and have it covered by a grant.

Gang steals pension cheques from care home despite CCTV

Original article: http://www.bootletimes.co.uk/news/bootle-news/2010/07/15/bootle-crime-gang-steal-pension-cheques-hawthorne-lodge-care-home-100252-26857028/

A security camera system that won’t let thieves get away: http://www.leeds-cctv.com

A gang stole hundreds of pounds worth of pensioners’ benefit cheques from a Merseyside care home.

The burglars wrenched open a window with a crow bar and then climbed in to the office at Hawthorne Lodge in Bootle before ransacking the filing system and attempting to smash up the CCTV system.

The three-man gang fled with hundreds of pounds worth of benefit cheques which can be cashed at any post office.

Nearby Abbegale Lodge on Merton Road was also raided the same night when a gang stole an unknown quantity of cash from their safe.

Police said they were keeping an open mind on whether there is a connection between the two crimes on Monday night.

When the gang carried out their night raid at Hawthorne Lodge one pensioner was asleep in a room next door.

Hawthorne Lodge manager Pauline Lynes said: “They stole money from pensioners.

“That is how low they are.

“When I watched the CCTV footage of the gang in the office I was shocked. You see this type of think on Crimewatch but when it happens to you it is different.

“We are caring for vulnerable people.

“We not expect this kind of thing.

“Most of our residents are from the Bootle area and in their 80s and 90s.

“I have contacted a fraud officer at the Department of Work and Pensions about the stolen cheques.

“But, the thieves will have cashed them by now, I’m sure.

“They knew they were being filmed and we think they tried to steal the hard drive.

“What is most worrying about this is that the gang could have walked straight from the office in to the home where our residents were all sleeping.”

A spokesman for Merseyside Police confirmed officers were investigating break-ins at Abbegale Lodge and Hawthorne Lodge during the early hours of Tuesday morning.

Anyone with information should Call Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

To get security cameras for your care home and a system that STORES IMAGES OFF SITE please visit Kaleton Ltd.

Use of cameras to monitor care in nursing homes is subject of controversy

Original article: http://news.illinois.edu/news/04/0727cameras.html

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — The proposed use of Web or video cameras to monitor the care of residents in nursing homes has kicked up a storm.

Proponents of the cameras, dubbed “granny cams,” say their use in nursing homes could weed out abusive employees and document incidents of substandard care.

The controversy has its roots not only in the march of technology, but also in the surge of Americans who are entering nursing homes. About half of Americans currently 65 or older will be admitted to a nursing home at least once, writes Selket Nicole Cottle in an article in the Elder Law Journal, which is published by the University of Illinois College of Law. This tide is only expected to rise as baby boomers approach their golden years.

At the same time, about 30 percent of the nation’s 17,000 nursing homes have been sanctioned for deficiencies that put their residents at risk of harm. About one in 20 nursing home residents suffer from abuse, according to the Florida Agency of Health Care Administration, and this figure appears to understate the problem because many instances of physical and sexual abuse go unreported.

Although no law expressly prohibits the use of cameras in nursing homes, there are various practical barriers to their widespread use, including the strong opposition of the nursing-home industry.

About a dozen state legislatures have granny-cam legislation under consideration. Earlier this year, New Mexico joined Texas in allowing nursing home residents or their representatives to install monitoring cameras in their rooms.

Under the laws, a resident must let nursing-home operators know ahead of time of the placement of the camera. If the operator is not notified or if the equipment is not open and obvious in the room, the camera is considered covert surveillance and illegal.

Use of such cameras is a positive step in reducing the potential for elderly abuse, Cottle, an editor at the journal, concluded. In particular, Web cameras hold the greatest potential for restoring public confidence in nursing homes by giving family members access to “real time” or to recently stored footage.

Commercial outlets now sell Web-camera systems to the elderly at prices from $629 to $1,584, depending on the specifications of each camera, plus a $20 monthly fee to access the server and $10 a month for a data-only line to upload images.

“Certainly some families have the financial means to provide this quality of technological protection, however the majority of Americans do not,” Cottle wrote. To be effective and properly regulated, granny-cam technology should therefore be mandated for all nursing facilities.

“Mandating the use of granny cameras in nursing homes will ensure that all nursing home residents are equally protected,” she wrote.

While not trifling, the cost of installing equipment in a nursing home is on par with the cost of updating recreation, housekeeping or food services. And some of the cost would be defrayed by lower liability insurance premiums, according to Cottle.

What’s more, surveillance equipment has advantages for operators by reducing unwarranted or frivolous litigation and minimizing their legal responsibility in cases of resident-on-resident abuse.

Cameras also could monitor many of the basics of resident care, such as drug administration and diaper changing. By linking the camera feed to the Internet, nursing homes could handle routine assignments more efficiently.

But because of understandable concerns over privacy, Cottle advocates placing the surveillance systems in the hands of independent companies, which would then monitor the equipment and be responsible for making the data available online.

“In this way, families can check on their loved ones and nursing homes can check on their residents, and everyone will sleep a little better at night knowing that the independent source is regulating and reviewing the tapes should any problems arise,” Cottle wrote.

“This service, like the cost of the cameras or of the tapes, is an added institutional cost that the nursing home will incur. Nevertheless, it is likely the best option to preserve the integrity of the tapes and ensure that only families and authorized officials gain access to them.”

Cottle’s article is titled, “Video Surveillance in Nursing Homes.”

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