Legal Rights of Care Home Residents -a recent example of the law in action – Can a local authority put parents in different care homes?
Summary
David and Dianne Steene, experts in adult social care law, supported a client whose Local Authority was threatening to split up her parents who had been married for 60 years, by placing them in separate care homes.
Please give us a call for a free chat on 0203 653 0623, email reception@steenelaw.co.uk or complete a Free Online Enquiry and we will be delighted to help you.
The Situation
Our client’s parents were just about getting along at home supporting each other, but the mother had a fall and could not go back home. It was decided that due to her dementia, she needed a nursing home that had a CQC registration for dementia. On the other hand, our client’s father was frail but otherwise fine, however he could not manage without his wife.
The Local Authority’s solution was to send this couple, who had not been apart for more than a few hours in the past 60 years, to two separate care homes.
What Steene Law Solicitors Did
At Steene Law we specialise in acting for people who can no longer speak for themselves, typically as a result of Alzheimer’s dementia.
What the Local Authority did was ignore our client’s parents’ right to a private and family life (Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights). In practical terms, this means that we all have a right to maintain relationships with our loved ones. This includes the right to live with our family.
We wrote to the Local Authority pointing this out. Further ,we reminded them of the words of one of the most senior judges in the country, who said separating older couples and sending them to different care homes is both “shocking and inhuman”.
The Local Authority were not moved and therefore a more robust approach was required. We explained to Social Services that it was not a matter of sentiment; it was not a wish for our client’s parents to be kept together, rather it was their right.
We explained that Section 1 of the Care Act 2014, as well as the Human Rights Act, imposes a duty on Local Authorities to promote well-being. Well-being is a wide and broad concept, and it includes a person’s social well-being as well as having regard to domestic, family and personal needs.
The Result
Our threat to issue proceedings was sufficient and we were delighted that our client’s parents are now together in a double room in a care home that can meet each of their needs.
Should you have family members who are in the wrong care home or Social Services are threatening not to place them in the care home that you believe meets their needs, or you are being asked to pay a 3rd party top up to keep them together, call Steene Law for a free conversation.
Make A Free Enquiry
Please give us a call for a free chat on 0203 653 0623, email reception@steenelaw.co.uk or complete a Free Online Enquiry and we will be delighted to help you.
“From start to finish, David and Dianne provided an outstanding level of advice and support. They are extremely skilled professionals who offer a level of care that is exemplary. They provided a very safe pair of hands and they have my unconditional recommendation.”