Marcus Leroux
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A 90-year-old war veteran suffering from ten complaints including bowel cancer, dementia and non-Hodgkins lymphoma has been denied NHS nursing care and told that he must pay the £600-a-week bill himself.
Eric Friar, who is almost blind and can hardly walk, served as an RAF navigator in India and Africa during the Second World War. He has been categorised as having “moderate” disabilities by his NHS trust, ruling out state funding for his care.
Mr Friar has been cared for by his wife of 60 years, Norma, since he first suffered from cancer in 1992. She is now unable to care for him as she has osteoporosis. Mrs Friar, 78, has been told that the State will contribute £40 a week to his care, because the couple have too much in savings.
Mr Friar, of Highnam, Gloucestershire, is in hospital with pneumonia. While there he has caught MRSA and shingles has been diagnosed. He cannot eat unaided, needs a catheter and is in constant discomfort.
Mrs Friar fears she will not be able to cope when he is discharged and cannot afford the £30,000-a-year nursing home cost. She said: “How bad has he got to be? We have never asked for anything in our lives. I’m angry, really angry. It’s an awful lot to for us to pay. I say to people now — spend the lot and let the Government pay for it.”
The NHS will contribute the weekly £40 towards costs until Mr Friar’s savings drop below £21,500. Then the State will provide more until his savings reduce to £13,000, when its contribution rises again.
Mr Friar’s case is regarded as falling into the third of four bands: critical, substantial, moderate and low. Mrs Friar said that nursing homes that would be suitable for her husband charged about £600 a week.
Gloucestershire Primary Care Trust said that to qualify for “continuing nursing care”, which is funded by the NHS, medical needs must be “complex, or intense, or unpredictable”. A spokesman for the trust said that it could not comment on individual cases but was sorry to hear that Mr and Mrs Friar were unhappy with the outcome of their case.
He added: “We always aim to work with a patient and their family in carrying out an assessment so we can be sure that all of the facts are available and our assessment is understood.
“Every assessment is based on individual need and in cases such as these, financial support is provided as a contribution towards meeting the patient’s ongoing nursing care. An appeals process is in place and this option is available if the individual or carer believes that the outcome is not the right one.”
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The rules say that where there is a dispute about continuing care funding, as there clearly is in this case, the family can ask for a review.
This means, as it did in my mother's case, that either the patient stays where he is in hospital or the NHS pick up the tab for nursing home fees WHILE THE DISPUTE CONTINUES.
In our case, the dispute continued and the nursing home fees were paid by the NHS until my mother was given full continuing care funding.
Unfortunately a lot of elderly people are panicked into selling their homes when they should be using the dispute process.. My mother was initially refused funding too but we got it though dogged persistence.
Once you've started paying then it's a much more difficult process to complain to the Ombudsman or resort to the law to get the money back.
Liz Carnell, Harrogate, UK
Another betrayal. £30,000 or £300,000 is cheap when you think the price Mr. Friar and his generation paid for our freedom.
Gloucestershire Primary Care Trust should collectively hang their heads in shame - and the so-called assessor might like to pay a trip to Afghanistan or Iraq and find the real value of real heroes for him/herself
Nick, Norwich,