New inspections raise the bar on dementia care

03 June 2008

A new report published today raises the bar on the care of people with dementia living in care homes.

A new way of inspecting, used by CSCI inspectors for the first time, focuses on the needs of people who cannot easily communicate and gets under the skin of the real relationship between staff and the people they care for. Using the new technique, inspectors observed the interactions between staff and people with dementia in 100 care homes across England.

Launching the report, See me, not just the dementia: Understanding people’s experiences of living in a care home, CSCI Chair Dame Denise Platt said:

“People with dementia are often unable to communicate easily. This new way of inspecting, developed in partnership with the University of Bradford, is unique, and lets us look beyond the surface of routine care practice to understand people’s emotional well-being, and how staff relate to them.

“This is helping us to raise the bar and drive improvements in the quality of care for people with dementia. We have developed the new inspection technique in partnership with the University of Bradford.”

CSCI Chief Inspector Paul Snell added:

“The quality of life for people with dementia living in care homes is hugely affected by the way in which care staff communicate and empathise with them.

“Much depends on a care home’s leadership and ethos, and the quality of training and support given to staff.”

CSCI’s study will contribute to the forthcoming Government consultation on dementia that will have high quality care as a key objective.

Notes for Editors

  • Inspectors used a new method called SOFI (A Short Observational Framework for Inspection), to watch the interaction between people with dementia and care home staff. SOFI is based on Dementia Care Mapping first developed by Tom Kitwood and recognised as a powerful way of evaluating the quality of care from the perspective of the person with dementia.
  • The report published today: See me, not just the dementia: Understanding people’s experiences of living in a care home is available on CD-ROM as well as on paper. The CD version contains a number of video clips of interviews with people with dementia, care staff, inspectors and others talking about their experiences.
  • Find out more about the 'See me, not just the dementia' report
  • CSCI is the inspectorate for adults’ social care in England, responsible for regulating and inspecting all social care providers - whether in the public or independent sector, and for assessing the performance of local councils in delivering their adults’ social services functions. The Commission’s primary aim is to improve social care by putting the needs of people who use care services first. The Commission is chaired by Dame Denise Platt DBE and has five Commissioners. The Chief Inspector is Paul Snell.

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Created: 6/2/2008 Last updated: 6/3/2008