Unfortunately from what I read, abuse of old folk in "care" homes is all too common nowadays, possibly as serious as child abuse. These people are often frail, senile & unable to defend themselves.
You're from the UK...yes?
Don't get me wrong...I certainly don't condone abuse, but if you were ever to work in a nursing home (what we call them in the US), and you thought that some resident with Alzheimers was just a harmless little old lady, you would be in for a rude shock!
Their families often put them in home for a reason. Take my grandmother for a case-in-point. She lived over 3 hours away. Her children took turns watching her for as long as they could. But finally, they had to move here up here. She didn't like that at all and would go into screaming fits about wanting to go home. They had to remove all the knobs from the stove so she wouldn't turn it on and start a fire (she would forget she had turned it on), they had to hide all the snacks, get her cigarettes away from her (she would fall asleep with them), and all kinds of things. As often happens, she lost the ability to tell the difference between day and night and consequently became a night-wanderer (the kids watching here often did not get much sleep.) When she broke her hip, they had to put her in a home (neither one could lift her).
And guess what? They were lucky! It's not uncommon for people with Alzheimers and other Dementias to become mean and violent. In cases where a home cargiver (usually a child of the elderly person) becomes abusive, it's not because they're ungateful "scum of the earth"...it's because they have an extremly difficult elderly parent to care for and have been overstressed and pushed to the edge.
Oh and the people who work in nursing homes are often paid little more than minimum wage. Their jobs have a higher rate of on-the-job injury than even construction and is more thankless than being a teacher (at least in the US). I tried that profession and left in a hurry. One aide almost got her arm broken by a violent dementia resident (nothing happened to him)...I got scratched, spat on, bitten, had relatives yelling at me (I had over 30 people to care for some days), and had to clean up fingerpainting.
Oh and when I say a resident "fingerpaints", I
don't mean they use "
paint"! Tell me they didn't do it to make trouble, and I'll hand
you the washrag to clean them up!
One lady would tell you to hold out your hand...she had a surprise for you (guess what it was, I dare you!) Whenever they served hamburgers, she would remove the meat patty and send one of her "surprises" back between the buns...they eventually stopped giving her buns with her burgers because of this.
I can't tell you the number of times we had to hold down a violent one, or get a man out of a woman's bed.
And if the home found themselves shorthanded one night, they would tell the aides they had to stay for the next shift...and they would loose their jobs if they refused (some of them were single parents). Nurse Aides are the ones who change the diapers, feed the infirm, and provide front-line care to those people...who were often put there because their famlies could not care for them. If a person becomes violent, home-health care agencies won't send people, and Adult Foster-Care won't admit them (or insist that they leave). Nurse Aides are overworked, overstressed, and often had vacation time denied because the home was short-handed (common to several nursing homes). Again, I don't condone abuse, but is it any wonder the Nurse Aides become abusive?
It's a vicious cycle for which there are few easy answers...
And on that note:
"Shoot the lawyers! More skin on HBO! L.H. Puttgrass signing off and heading for the tub!"