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Anonymity Policy

 

The gist is...If you have a serious comment to make anonymously...email it, don't just post it.


Truly anonymous comments - where the writer is unknown - are not published unless they are unexceptional.

Comments or articles where the authorship is known but are offered for publication anonymously are considered on their merits. (Email Steve or Donna in confidence.) There are some circumstances where it is necessary to be close to a particular situation to be able to throw light on it but to write about it publicly would jeopardise the author's position. In that case, the decision to publish an item anonymously hinges on the question of whether or not it is informed opinion that will add insight to, or might start, a debate on a particular topic.

Unsubstantiated allegations of illegal behaviour or substandard products, for example, would not be posted unless they could be independently verified, in which case we would probably publish them ourselves.

Just because a post, article or comment, etc. is published on Telecare Aware readers cannot and should not infer that the editors agree with the author, anonymous or not.

Steve Hards
Donna Cusano
Editors
steve.hards@telecareaware.com
donna.cusano@telecareaware.com

Telecare Soapbox: Clients who need, but decline, telecare

Friday, 14 October 2011 13:21

Trevor Drage, Assistive Technology Manager Adult Care and Support, in Cornwall, UK, chews over the issues of potential telecare clients who refuse the service and how to reduce refusal rates.

"No thanks, please give the equipment to someone who needs it".

From time-to-time we have clients referred for telecare who would clearly benefit from it, but who decline the service. They have the right to do that, of course, but there is always the lingering doubt about why they would do so and whether we could have done more to sell (in the nicest possible way) the service to them.

First, is it possible that they do not understand what the service is about and the equipment involved? It is all too easy to slip into using technical terms and product names which have no meaning at all to the person. Where possible, taking equipment to the assessment improves understanding and also allows the assessor to check that, for example, where a pendant is required the person is able to press the button.

The value of professional and personable assessors cannot be underestimated in these situations. We are all too frequently one of many services talking to people and families at a time of great change and worry. Taking time to understand the individual and their situation will not be time wasted. The assessment is about them and not the equipment.

Involving family and trusted friends can reassure the individual and sometimes a clearer picture of the situation emerges. How many times has a telecare service been turned down because the customer is concerned about disturbing family and friends and being a burden? (Currently in Cornwall we are reliant on family and friends for response.) By involving family they can allay these fears and state their own concerns that if telecare is not installed they do not have the reassurance that everything is ok.

Sometimes refusal is cost related, particularly when considering a telecare package that includes additional sensors. It may be appropriate to reduce the telecare package which could reduce the effectiveness of the safety net it provides, but still reduces the risk that the individual lives with. However, cost is not always the key factor in declining the service: during the Whole System Demonstrator programme a significant number of people turned down the service, and it was free.

Perhaps it is completing the forms that is the concern: telecare application form; VAT exemption form; direct debit form; service contract, etc. It is likely too that these are not the only forms to be completed at the time telecare is required. So not only are simple, clear forms needed but the person may need support to complete them.

It's not rocket science! Just simple steps that enable individuals to be supported to receive telecare where needed and not be declined because of not getting the basics right.

Trevor works for Adult Care and Support and can be contacted via This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

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