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We need a culture of respect for the elderly



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AT FIRST sight, the conviction of the nurse Colin Norris for murdering four of his elderly women patients by injecting them with insulin can be dismissed as just another of those macabre but random incidents that life throws up.
It would be easy to pigeonhole Norris as merely another twisted mind who used the accident of a career in the medical profession to wreak human misery – similar to Dr Harold Shipman, who was convicted of murdering 15 of his mostly elderly patients, t
hough the real total was probably over 200.

But we have to ask ourselves why it seems so comparatively easy for people such as Norris and Shipman to go on killing without suspicion arising earlier. Part of the explanation is that Norris and Shipman preyed on the elderly, and our society is too ready to assume that the death of an older person is probably "natural". Of course, chronically ill people in their late eighties stand a higher risk of natural death than people in their twenties. But there is another hidden social calculation being made: are we not sometimes thinking that the life of the elderly is less important?

Worse, there is a growing problem of physical and mental abuse of the elderly – especially the elderly in care. Colin Norris's pathological hatred of the elderly is merely an extreme example of a twisted culture that is becoming all too prevalent. Last year, a House of Commons inquiry estimated that as many as 500,000 elderly people in Britain are being abused by relatives, carers or strangers. An earlier survey, by the Community and District Nursing Association, found that nine out of ten nurses working in the community have come across cases of abuse of an elderly person – most often by the chief care-giver.

No doubt Colin Norris is an aberration, but the lack of dignity we afford our older people in the care system contributes to the ability of such freaks to kill without being discovered quickly. We may never be able to stop the odd psychopath from killing, but we can create a better system of professional care for the elderly that gives them better protection.

Unfortunately, the trend is in the opposite direction. Last year, the Scottish Commission for the Regulation of Care, the independent regulator established by Holyrood, reported a significant rise in complaints against care homes for the elderly. One reason may be that care for the elderly can be regarded (socially and politically) as a necessary chore. Yet by 2031, more than a quarter of the population of Scotland is going to be over 65.

Most of us will be elderly one day. The elderly deserve respect and they deserve civilised treatment. We need better training of carers, coupled with a rigorous regulatory regime that fines agencies which breach the commonsense rules for looking after the elderly.

That may not prevent another Colin Norris or Harold Shipman, but it may ensure they are caught more quickly.





The full article contains 504 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

Lisa@whereforcare,

UK 04/03/2008 11:55:47
This is an interesting article and raises some very valid points regarding care of the elderly. I would suggest however, that in light of your comments regarding the increase in complaints against care homes for the elderly, might it not be a case that complaints are increasing because of the very fact that we are beginning to appreciate our elder generation more and that we are waking up to the fact that standards of care that we might have deemed acceptable 10 years ago are in fact not so? We live in a time when we have much more information at our fingertips about what could be deemed 'good' and less acceptable care, could it be that complaints are increasing because we know the elderly deserve better so we are demanding better?
2

AkinUK,

Northumbria 04/03/2008 12:58:38
We are trying to treating the symptoms of a grave underlying disease. The grave disease is that Britain has left the God that made it a great country. She has become too clever, so the society is breaking down. There is no respect for the family unit nor is there family life. Anything goes provided you are not caught. No tolerance, never accept you are wrong, blame others and take no responsibility. Everybody is perfect so we need no God to direct our affairs or instruct us!!
3

subrosa,

05/03/2008 00:56:49
Some of the abuse the elderly receive from carers is purely through frustration and lack of support. We expect a family member to give up their lives to support their elderly relative but with no knowledge how to do the job.

I've met carers who are housebound with elderly relatives and only get out a couple of hours a week and I know one personally who looks after his failing father, lifting and carrying and doing everything he possibly can to help his father, with little support from the services. Their attitude is 'he does ok'. The man's never had a holiday or even a weekend away for over 3 years. His courage and fortitude amazes me but he's the first to admit it would be easy to hit back when he's hit. Luckily he says he's not hit often just when his father's in very severe pain.

So we do have many unseen caring people but if they're not shown much respect how can their failing relatives be shown any?

I disagree with you #2. Religion doesn't come into this. Our society has changed in the last 50/60 years and families no longer live near each other. Our politicians and health experts have witnesses the change of family culture and done little about it. The days are gone when a daughter gives up her job to care for a parent as was expected back in the early 1900s.

 

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