It seems foreign worker are already causing disasters, though:
A senior coroner has since issued a warning about the inability of foreign health staff to speak English after hearing how carers looking after Mrs Rymell did not know the difference between 'bleeding' and 'breathing'. Their lack of English 'severely hampered' the call handler's response and made a 'meaningful' assessment of her condition 'virtually impossible', the coroner said. Following the call, Mrs Rymell's case was classified as 'serious' rather than requiring an 'immediate' response and when paramedics did arrive at the care home she was dead.
The inquest shows clearly that the practise of hiring foreign workers is not the amazing boon to the NHS that Labour claim it is:
The inquest concluded Mrs Rymell had died of misadventure as a result of her fall, a combination of her dementia and frailty and 'mechanical obstruction of respiration'.
But Mrs Marsh said she had been shown evidence that at least one the carers' understanding of English did not meet the standards required to work in Britain.'It transpired during the Inquest that one of the workers on the evening of the 8th August 2022 had never passed the SELT, so was not qualified or permitted to work in the UK.'
So, the care home was blatently breaking the law. At least the HSE has some teeth, so what action will it take?
There are 152,000 care worker vacancies in England, and care home inspectors often have found that a lack of staff means residents receive substandard, and sometimes dangerous, levels of care.
Sounds like an excess of staff - if the wrong sort - can also cause that.
2 comments:
They are either doctors or engineers. Mrs. Rymell was unlucky enough to meet an engineer. Had she needed to build a bridge, she would have been just fine.
"Mrs. Rymell was unlucky enough to meet an engineer. Had she needed to build a bridge, she would have been just fine."
😂
Post a Comment