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Home News

Frustration as care workers and community nurses still lack protective gear

Unions said many workers are being given only ‘the same protection that they use to make a sandwich’.

Joe Mellor by Joe Mellor
2020-03-31 17:45
in News
Credit;PA

Credit;PA

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Care workers and community nurses are still struggling to do their jobs safely and with adequate protective gear, with experts saying they are “frustrated at the lack of pace”.

Weeks into the coronavirus pandemic, unions said many care home workers remain without masks or hand sanitiser, with just plastic aprons and gloves for protection.

The PA news agency has heard examples of face masks being rationed out among workers due to short supply.

Care Home worker

In one case, a care home worker with a 22-month-old child was told he and colleagues would have to nurse sick residents despite not being issued with proper personal protective equipment (PPE), the union Unison said.

Another worker in a children’s home, who is down to her last bottle of hand sanitiser, said: “I’ve shared my own bottle of sanitiser with young people and colleagues, and only have enough to last one more shift. I worry I may take the virus home and give it my elderly mother.”

Unison assistant general secretary Christina McAnea said: “Care workers are being treated as though their safety and that of their loved ones doesn’t matter.

“They feel they’ve been forgotten about and are at the bottom of the pile despite doing a vital job.”

The GMB union said it is receiving hundreds of calls a day from social care workers concerned about a lack of PPE, while staff are sometimes expected to turn up even if they have Covid-19 symptoms.

Kelly Andrews, GMB care lead, said staff are being given a plastic apron and a pair of gloves –  “the same protection that they use to make a sandwich.”

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Mark Topps, a manager at Little Wakering House, in Essex, said he feels the care home has been left to cope by itself.

He has spent the last two to three weeks trying to order face masks, which have not yet arrived.

And on Monday he was forced to drive an hour and a half to replace a digital thermometer, which he paid almost £60 for.

Around 25% of his staff have had to self-isolate over the past few weeks, while one resident has potential coronavirus symptoms.

No staff or residents have been tested, and Mr Topps has set up a Change.org petition, with more than 200,000 signatures, calling for the Government to ensure all care workers are tested.

Gloves

The 32-year-old said: “I kind of thought well, he (the resident) could have it, and we could be going in with our gloves and our aprons but we don’t actually have anything else to protect us other than what we would normally use.

“I think the general feeling across a lot of social care is that we are just going to be left to it, to manage as best as we can, which is worrying.”

He added that he believes coronavirus will “spread like wildfire” if it does enter care homes, because of the lack of PPE, resources and support.

The Sue Ryder palliative care charity said it was experiencing “worrying” levels of staff shortages as employees self-isolate with suspected coronavirus.

The @NHS asking Sue Ryder to admit more patients with #COVID19 symptoms but our nurses are running out of PPE.
Continuous supply of #PPE is critical to protect our workforce.@CommonsHealth when will hospices receive urgent additional provision of PPE?https://t.co/TtzBCdBBws

— Sue Ryder (@Sue_Ryder) March 26, 2020

It does not have enough personal protective equipment for its community and hospice nurses and orders it places “continue to not be fulfilled”, it said.

Dame Donna Kinnair, chief executive of the Royal College of Nursing, said: “It is completely unacceptable that weeks into this crisis there would be nursing staff working in care homes or other community settings without personal protective equipment.

“They are just as vulnerable as those in hospital wards – they all work less than a metre away from potentially infected patients.

“Guidance for social care settings may be imminent, but we have been raising this point for weeks. I am frustrated at the lack of pace.”

“Kate was in the hospice over Mother’s Day. The guidance around coronavirus made the day quite difficult for our family. However, just like they always do, our children put their mummy first and still made an amazing effort to make her smile…" https://t.co/SxUgORgbTk pic.twitter.com/WOoTpfm6wC

— Marie Curie (@mariecurieuk) March 29, 2020

The Marie Curie charity, which supports people with terminal illness, said it is also struggling to access the appropriate protective gear for its nursing staff.

Rachel Power, chief executive of the Patients Association, said: “Care home staff deserve a lot of recognition for their work during the coronavirus crisis – many are living full-time in the homes where they work, and ensuring that residents don’t feel isolated while their relatives can’t visit.

“Staff shortages make this even harder, and clearly there should be full protection available for staff and residents, for the sake of everyone’s health.”

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