THE Mental Welfare Commission has said it is “disappointed” at the number of dementia patients in local hospitals who are given medication without it being part of their care plan.
The organisation has just published findings into how those with dementia are cared for in community hospitals after visiting 287 patients in 56 smaller hospitals across Scotland.
While the report found treatment was “generally good”, the commission raised concerns about the number of staff with specialist training and whether all patients were looked after in a suitable environment.
More than half (55%) of patients they saw had been in hospital for at least a month, with nearly one in five (18%) having been there for longer than three months.
The report said “more work could be done” to make hospitals “dementia friendly” – with five of the wards said to be “very or fairly unpleasant”.
Visits revealed one ward had no showers for the 12 patients who were in it while in another hospital the commission found a two-bed room used for two men with dementia opened onto a road – with this described as “far from ideal”.
An estimated 90,000 Scots suffer from dementia, with the commission looking at care in community hospitals because a “large proportion” of patients in them have the condition.
Just over a quarter (26%) of patients the commission saw had medication prescribed for them “if required” if they became agitated or distressed. However, more than half of this group did not have a care plan for the use of these drugs, the report added.
There were 57 patients where it was thought a care plan should be in place to deal with such behaviour, but who did not have one. However, 30 of these patients were being prescribed medication to be given “as required” for agitation.
The report stressed: “Where ‘if required’ medication is prescribed for agitation, we would also expect to see a care plan which sets out other interventions staff should use to minimise a patient’s stress and agitation.”
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