A retired nurse has
accused care home staff of having 'blood on their hands' after her mother was
evicted and later died following complaints over her treatment.
Marjorie Pitman, 96,
who had dementia, was served notice to leave the luxury £1,000-a-week Avon
Reach Care Home after her daughters accused carers of 'unsafe' practice.
Maggie Pitman, 71,
claimed the home, in Mudeford, Dorset, had a huge turnover of staff.
She said staff took
too long to change her mother's soiled underwear, would not give her enough
water to drink, and increased the dosage of her medication unnecessarily,
leaving her drowsy.
But owners Colten
Care dismissed the concerns as 'unfounded' and gave the 96-year-old 28 days to
leave the home, where she had lived for three years.
Miss Pitman claims
the stress of the move to another home caused her mother to die eight weeks
later.
'For some reason they
just weren't prepared to take on board our concerns and do much about them and
it was easier for them to give the resident notice because they don't want the
aggro,' she said.
'She was so
distraught, she couldn't work out why we had moved her.
'Everyone said she
would live to 100. They have blood on their hands. We're left with the guilt
because we brought complaints and, because of that, they gave her notice. We
had to raise the concerns because it was unsafe.'
Mrs Pitman, a widow,
entered Avon Reach in August 2012. She had been suffering from mild vascular
dementia and mobility problems, and her daughters, Miss Pitman and Pauline
Darley, thought it would best if she was in care. The home was rated 'good' by
the Care Quality Commission (CQC).
But Miss Pitman, of
Hordle, Hampshire, claimed the poor care at the home forced her to care for her
mother every day. In summer 2015, Mrs Pitman was transferred to the Ocean
Breeze home, in nearby Barton on Sea, where she died.
Colten Care said Mrs
Pitman died 'some time' after she left Avon Reach. Mark Aitchison, chief
executive of Colten Care, said: 'The decision to serve notice was a last resort
and not taken lightly. It followed a continual succession of unfounded
complaints from Marjorie Pitman's daughters over a number of years.
'We investigated and
acted upon each complaint but once one concern was addressed, another would be
raised by the family, and then another, and so on. Frankly the situation had
become untenable.
'We invited the CQC
into Avon Reach to review our policies and procedures. They requested an
investigation, which revealed no concerns over care. Likewise, Mrs Pitman's GP
found nothing untoward. Complaints by the daughters against specific nurses
were made to the Nursing and Midwifery Council, fully investigated and again
found to have no substance.'
SOURCE: Mail Online, Tom Payne
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