Care homes could go out of business after Covid pandemic pushed ‘fragile’ sector closer to the edge, warns CQC report
- Nearly 1 in 6 care homes gave their residents substandard treatment last year
- In one area nearly 1 in 5 care homes are ‘inadequate’ or needing to improve
- CQC says figures mask deterioration in service that happened in some areas
- 500+ homes with 23,000 older residents in need of improvement for five years
- More than 1,200 once qualified as good but have fallen back into bottom levels
Care homes could go out of business after the coronavirus pandemic pushed the ‘fragile’ sector closer to the edge, the regulator said today.
The Care Quality Commission also found nearly one in six care homes gave their frail and vulnerable residents substandard treatment last year.
In one area, the proportion of care homes dismissed as ‘inadequate’ or needing to improve was almost one in five.
A scathing report from the CQC said that these figures masked the deterioration in service that happened in some areas.
It added that the pandemic ‘has pushed social care even closer to the edge’.
Care worker Jane Ward and resident Zoe McCullough on her rounds at Ashwood Court residential care home in Lowton, Warrington, in July. The above care home is rated ‘good’
A member of staff being swabbed at a care home as a clinical trial of a Covid-19 test in London
Chief executive Ian Trenholm said providers are still struggling to see the impact of Government-pledged money on the ground, adding: ‘These are businesses that were already operating on wafer-thin margins, Covid has made that worse, that money needs to arrive in days, rather than weeks and months.’
The inspection organisation said that more than 500 homes with 23,000 older residents have been continuously rated as needing to improve for years.
More than 1,200, with 42,000 residents, once qualified as good but have slipped back into the bottom ‘requires improvement’ or ‘inadequate’ levels of care home.
The findings were drawn up from inspections of care homes in the financial year that ended in March – the same month that lockdown began.
The CQC said that lockdown, during which nearly 20,000 care home residents died with Covid-19 within three months, had led to overburdened homes turning residents away, loneliness and stress because of visiting bans, and severe financial problems for owners of homes.
Mr Trenholm called for large-scale reforms. ‘Covid has pushed social care even closer to the edge, and we need to make sure that action takes place now,’ he said.
During the pandemic ‘the sector, already fragile, faced significant challenges around timely access to PPE, testing and staffing – and support was less readily available than it was for the NHS’, he added.
Across England, around four out of five of 23,546 adult care homes were rated as ‘good’ and one in 20 were ‘outstanding’ in the year to the end of March, the report said.
There were 186 homes newly rated as outstanding.
Of the rest, 15 per cent were said to require improvement and 1 per cent were ‘inadequate’.
The worst ratings were in the West Midlands, where 19 per cent were considered inadequate or to need improving.
The report said: ‘Some of the poorest services struggled to make any improvement.’
The CQC report was released as it took responsibility for choosing 500 homes that will be exclusively for patients who are discharged from hospital after testing positive for Covid-19 but are too sick or disabled to go home.
The first are due to open at the end of the month.