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JB Nursing Home Model for Singapore

fengshuisifu

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http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2009/7/5/nation/4260041&sec=nation

Sunday July 5, 2009
‘Ray of hope’ that turned out to be a nightmare


KUALA KUBU BARU: We were hit by the stench of faeces and urine the minute we walked into the men’s block at Taman Sinar Harapan located in a secluded area of the town here.

Mr A, a volunteer from a non-governmental organisation who goes to the home every Sunday to clean and feed the residents, opened the locked door at the back of the block and we were stunned by what greeted us.

About 30 stark naked men were inside the room, either lying down or sitting on the wet marble floor. In one part of the room, we saw a pool of blood, still fresh and red, on the floor.


Half of the men were locked behind bars like animals in a zoo while the others were able to move about in the front portion of the room. Those in the “jail cells” were segregated so that they would not harm their non-violent roommates.

“Those who are accidentally placed inside the cells with the more aggressive residents would be beaten or abused,” the volunteer revealed.

Most of them looked no older than 50 but they were just skin and bones and some looked extremely frail. One resident was lying on his stomach on a wooden bench and had passed motion; we almost gagged at its stench.

Fans were installed inside the room for better ventilation but that was the only luxury the men had. There were no beds, no toilets and not even blankets to keep them warm on cold rainy nights.

Those who were not in the “jail cells” were given beds but without any mattresses or pillows. They were, however, chained to the bed frame with metal chains and a steel lock.

We were told by a volunteer that they were restricted to prevent them from hurting themselves. The volunteer also shared that the men were not given any clothing as they had used their shirts to strangle themselves or the other men in the past.

After a briefing by Mr A, we got down to work. We were put in charge of spreading mats and towels on the floor.

The volunteers were all given different tasks. A group of about six or seven men were in charge of bathing the locked-up residents, the women were in charge of preparing the food and feeding the residents while the rest (there were two children in the volunteer group) were in charge of cleaning up the place and washing their clothes.

The residents were hosed down with water and soap by volunteers dressed in construction boots and a water proof apron.


After that, the male volunteers carried the naked men to the front part of the building for us to towel dry them.

After sensing our discomfort, a female volunteer nearby said: “It’s okay, they’re just like babies, you know, they don’t know anything.”

We proceeded to wipe them dry one by one before we were told to feed them with the yong tau foo bought by one of the volunteers.

The food was mashed to bits and mixed with soup to minimise the need to chew and to make feeding an easier task. so that the residents only needed to swallow them.

As we fed them, some ate obediently while others were greedy and stuffed their hands inside the bowls to take out larger portions of the food.

Some volunteers reprimanded the greedy ones who crawled towards the table to help themselves to more food. We noticed that some of the mentally disabled residents liked to hit themselves repeatedly. When we tried to stop them, they would fight back or just hit their body against the floor.

Mid-way through feeding, some volunteers suddenly rushed over to a young resident whose head was bleeding profusely. We were told that the boy had slipped and fell.

The volunteers immediately dressed him up, put him on a wheelchair and sent him to a hospital nearby.

After mopping the floor, we took a break and noticed that the residents were taken back into their cells to be locked up again.

It was nearly 4pm when everything was done. The residents were all bathed, fed and the place was clean enough.

We asked the volunteers what would happen to the residents on weekdays when the group was not there to offer their help.


The naked truth: Some of the inmates who were caged up in the home.

“The caretakers don’t do much. There are only two of them while there are 50 residents. If it’s time to feed them, they would just walk one round with a bowl and feed whoever wants to eat. Those who don’t are left alone,” answered a volunteer.

She divulged that another charitable organisation had brought food for the residents but it was thrown away. “When the group asked why they did such a thing, the caretakers said that the residents would create a bigger mess if there was more food because they would defecate more often,” she said.

After the voluntary group had left, we stayed back to check out the other blocks.

The women’s wing looked cleaner and did not smell as bad but a handful of the women were seen walking about in the nude.

The two caretakers stationed at the block were seen watching TV and chatting.

We noticed that the women’s clothes were laid out to dry on a dirty floor caked with fungus. We walked over to the children’s block which seemed to be the best kept part of the home. It was decorated and there were proper beds. But the children were curiously quiet.

A volunteer claimed that the children were fed with cough syrup so that they would be sleepy and docile.

Related Stories:
A govt-run shelter for the disabled has, instead, become their jail
Experts slam caregivers for chaining mental patients to their beds
 

fengshuisifu

Alfrescian
Loyal
Sunday July 5, 2009
A govt-run shelter for the disabled has, instead, become their jail
By YUEN MEIKENG and ZALINAH NOORDIN



KUALA KUBU BARU: About 30 men, naked, some chained up, caged and covered in their faeces and urine – that is the scene inside locked rooms at the Taman Sinar Harapan home here.

Following a public tip-off via an email from London, The Star’s probe team went undercover to the government-run shelter that is tucked away behind the Kuala Kubu Baru Hospital and next to a golf course.

The home has about 200 residents comprising men, women and children, some of whom are mentally disabled and infirmed. What goes on within the four walls is shocking, and visits to individual rooms reveal even more horror – residents, young and old, naked and confined in cages.
 

fengshuisifu

Alfrescian
Loyal
Sunday July 5, 2009
Experts slam caregivers for chaining mental patients to their beds


PETALING JAYA: Chaining mental patients to their beds and leaving them to run in the nude is sheer abuse and inhumane, says Asean Federation for Psychiatry and Mental Health president Prof Dr Mohamad Hussain Habil.

He said caregivers who carried out such malpractice could be charged in court because they were not equipped with the knowledge to take care of the patients.

“There is also no excuse for welfare officers to be ignorant about the proper care for patients because there are training workshops available at the University of Malaya,” said Dr Mohamad Hussain who is also the university’s psychological medicine department head.

He said restricting patients’ movements by chaining them was not the way to prevent them from inflicting harm on themselves.

“The right way is to treat them with the necessary medication and not with physical restraint. The medicine would be able to help them minimise such self destructive behaviour and help their condition,” he said, adding that such actions stem from lack of awareness and knowledge.

Dr Mohamad Hussain was appalled to hear “horror” stories of patients being left in the nude because the caregivers were fearful that they may turn violent and use their clothes to hurt others.

He said caregivers must be aware of the latest medication to be given to the patients and that early treatment would help stop the disorders from deteriorating.

“Sometimes, the family of the patient is not aware that the condition is an illness that can be treated. They mistake it for something that will pass like mood swings,” he said.

“That is why it is important to bring the patient to a doctor to identify the true condition and how it should be dealt with,” Dr Mohamad Hussain added.

He said most chronic mental disorder patients who continuously took medicine were able to recover and function normally in life with the right type of care.

Dr Fadzil Man, a private psychiatrist also agreed that mental patients should be given medicine along with proper care such as counselling and other therapies.

Asked to comment on the standard of care mental patients in Malaysia receive, Dr Fadzil said there was still room for improvement.

On how mental patients were normally treated in wards, he revealed that the most common way was to sedate those who were hyper and caused harm to themselves or others.

“Of course, it’s been known that some private-run shelters and homes who take in mental patients do not provide the necessary and proper care for them.

“They (the mental patients) are treated in such horrible ways, sometimes worse than animals just because they aren’t able to verbalise their feelings and thoughts,” he said.

He told The Star that cases of patients being chained, undressed and caged up were not unheard of.

“Normally these patients are what we call the ‘critical’ ones and family members who can’t cope with them just leave them at shelters or sometimes completely abandon them.”
 

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Sunday July 5, 2009
A govt-run shelter for the disabled has, instead, become their jail
By YUEN MEIKENG and ZALINAH NOORDIN



Following a public tip-off via an email from London, The Star’s probe team went undercover to the government-run shelter that is tucked away behind the Kuala Kubu Baru Hospital and next to a golf course.

The home has about 200 residents comprising men, women and children, some of whom are mentally disabled and infirmed. What goes on within the four walls is shocking, and visits to individual rooms reveal even more horror – residents, young and old, naked and confined in cages.

Do u expect such investigative journalism from the 154th?
 

nickers9

Alfrescian
Loyal
This is what will happen when you put your old folks in JB.

The caretakers will not gave a fcuk to them. And they will not look after them properly like Singapore.

In Singapore, if the old folks are not looked after well, you can immediately feedback to the hospital management and they will look into it quickly.

But in JB, how often will you visit your old folks compared to them in Singapore?

You might visit them once per 3 months or less. So confirm the caretakers will not pay so much attentions to your Singaporeans old folks.

So just wait to see another Singaporeans old folks home abuse in JB.
 

fengshuisifu

Alfrescian
Loyal
the hero who proposed to set up nursing home in JB, need to look into the model available...cheap cheap cheap...!
 

johnny333

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
the hero who proposed to set up nursing home in JB, need to look into the model available...cheap cheap cheap...!




There are too many bureaucrates wannabee businessmen in the gov't.

What we need is a change of management in Spore, plain & simple. :rolleyes:
 

johnny333

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
u mean change the govt?


If you had asked me a couple of years ago, I would have said to kick out the dead wood like LKY & the others would buck up, pull their socks up, develop EQ, ,....

Now I'm more pessimistic, there exists a culture of self entitlement. The sad thing is that this is LKY's handpicked team :rolleyes:

Without drastic changes I don't see how things could improve :(
 
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