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A
survey of 128 care home managers and nurses by the Queen’s Nursing
Institute charity found that one in ten of the institutions was ordered
by NHS bosses to introduce DNRs without permission from the residents,
family members or fellow staff, in order to free up hospital beds.
A
fifth of the survey respondents also said that they received residents
from the hospital sector who had tested positive for Covid-19 during
March and April.
An unnamed
respondent told the researchers that care homes “were advised to have
[DNR orders] in place for all residents”, adding: “We acted in
accordance with medical advice and resident wishes, not as advised by a
directive to put in place for all by a clinical care group
representative. We challenged this as unethical.”
Report author Professor Alison Leary has described the findings as “worrying” and is calling for a public inquiry.
“These decisions were being made by NHS managers not clinicians,” Leary, a professor of healthcare and workforce modelling at London South Bank University, told The Telegraph.
She
added that “the way the situation for care homes has been handled needs
a retrospective view, particularly because winter is coming, which is
always a difficult time” for the elderly and other vulnerable people.
Full Article & Source:
NHS care homes told to put ‘Do Not Resuscitate’ orders on all residents at Covid peak
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