Jul 12, 2019

Daughter of abused grandmother pleads for nursing home cameras at royal commission

The fourth day of the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety hearings in Darwin heard damning evidence and a desperate plea from a former journalist urging all Australians with relatives currently living in nursing homes to install surveillance cameras in the rooms of their loved ones.

Lisa Backhouse, gave detailed testimony outlining the alleged abuse and neglect of her 86-year-old mother, Christine Weightman, while she resided in nursing homes in the Brisbane area.

According to Ms. Backhouse, her mother was physically assaulted on multiple occasions by nursing home carers who have since been stood down and found saturated in her bed and highly distressed. 

The commission also heard allegations that Ms. Weightman was left lying on the floor of her room for nearly 45 minutes after a fall, and graphically disturbing images revealing the effects of appalling incontinency care were also shown. 

Lisa Backhouse spoke to news cameras outside of the Royal Commission hearing, sharing her thoughts on her mother’s experience 

“The incidents that she endured over the last six months, I believe have certainly contributed to her demise.” 

Suspicious about the quality of her mother’s care, Ms. Backhouse installed surveillance cameras in the bedroom of her mother’s Brisbane based nursing home, which revealed disturbing footage of Ms. Weightman sleeping through one of Brisbane’s coldest nights without a blanket and only a pillow covering her legs. 

Ms. Backhouse also alleges that surveillance shows her mother left completely unchecked for large periods of time including 10 hours with no visible signs of interaction.

“If you have an elderly, vulnerable resident in an aged care centre in Australia today, go out and buy yourself a surveillance camera, and put it in their room,” said Lisa Backhouse.

“I think we really need to shine a light in some very dark corners in the Australian aged-care sector.” 

“If the facility tells you not [install surveillance], do it anyway.

Ms. Backhouse did not reveal the name of the Brisbane aged-care centre where her mother’s abuse allegedly occurred, but she did reveal that her mother was actually still a resident there.

“The regulator has to be given punitive powers in order to be able to fine and penalise nursing homes that fail in their duty of care,” Ms. Backhouse said.

“And boards need to be held personally and criminally responsible for also failing in their duty of care.

“This is the only way we are really going to be able to force change on the sector.”

In her statement, Ms. Backhouse described the “current situation (in aged care) is heartbreaking at best, criminal at worst.”

“When we look back in years to come, much like the orphanages of yesteryear, this will be our country’s greatest shame,” she said.

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  1. This is crazy or, to put it more delicately, this is not the answer to a complex solution.

    Take one point. Holding Boards criminally responsible for the actions of staff. Does this happen in any other industry? If I was a Board member and this became law my first act would be to resign. I suspect that would be the action of many, if not most, if not all. I base this on my discussion with others in the industry.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Aged care worker cleared of strangling charge over biscuit dispute

A Canberra aged care worker accused of “strangling” his co-worker when she accidentally over-ordered biscuits, has had his charges dismissed. The incident occurred when a then 17-year-old staff member ordered biscuits without first checking stock levels. When her 68-year-old co-worker, Lakshman Senanayake, discovered the mistake, he grabbed his younger colleague by the throat, and yelled “I... Read More

Government releases 10,000 new home care packages

The government will spend almost $1 billion to help 10,000 older Australians remain living in their homes for longer. The government’s Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook (MYEFO) will include an $850 million investment to reduce the waiting list for in-home care, one of the key recommendations of the aged care royal commission’s Interim Report. In... Read More

How Aged Care Changed My LIfe

Tom and his family share with what it’s like for them from the sandy shores of Sandringham, Melbourne. Tom was living alone in Nathalia before moving in with his son and daughter-in-law. During this time Tom’s family had planned to go away for four weeks and therefore arranged for Tom to stay in respite. Tom’s... Read More
Advertisement