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Promised safety alarms not delivered

Tags: Community   Government   Safety   Security   South  

11 Nov 2008

Four out of five community nurses do not have access to a personal safety alarm despite a government pledge to fund mobile communication devices three years ago.

A survey by the nursing magazine Nursing Times found that 80% of community nurses have yet to be supplied with a device.

In March 2005, then health secretary John Reid announced that up to 100,000 NHS staff working alone would be able to use an Identicom device supplied by South Yorkshire firm Connexion2.

The pledge to provide alarms for community staff was reiterated by health secretary Alan Johnson in September 2007, when he announced an additional £97m for the NHS, of which £29m was to be spent on safety alarms.

Nursing Times said it understood that the government was now tendering for a private company to supply 30,000 alarms by April 2009.

Anne Duffy, chief executive of the Community District Nurses Association, said: 'These alarms should have been introduced a long time ago and I think that just giving alarms is not going to be enough.

"Community nurses need some kind global satellite positioning device to track exactly where they are and to get help to them as quickly as possible when they need it.’

Richard Hampton, head of the NHS Counter Fraud and Security Management service, told NT that trusts should not wait to buy personal safety technology for their staff. "If a health body has identified a need to protect their staff they should be providing it now," he said.

The survey of 400 nurses also showed that 86% of respondents felt they needed more protection when doing their jobs and that nearly 90% were worried they could be at risk unless they are given safety training in working in the community.

Related articles

'ID card' devices to protect lone NHS staff

 

 

 

Fiona Barr

© 2008 E-HEALTH-MEDIA LTD. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Reader's Comments
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1

Cheap 'screamer' alarms issued instead

12 Nov 08 15:11

My wife is a district nurs, -all her team had small screamer alarms given to them, about £3 in a cheap store quality. They wirked by either pulling a cord out, or by pressing a large red button on the front.

Within days, they had gone off in patient homes as the nurses bent down to the patient, causing grief and distress to staff and the poor patient, who was closer to the 90db screamer.

This happened a few times in different homes/surgeries.

One nurses car keys got caught up at night, pulled the chord out and then got lost in the dark, no way to turn the damn things off now. (battery cover has a screw).

She had to stamp on it to shut it up.

No-one came to help either, they assume its a car alarm, which translates as 'ignore me' into the Queens English.

Consequently, no-one uses one or even keeps them on their person anymore.

I'm not happy about it.

Now my daughter has been given one to go on her first placement as student nurse.

A Tazer might be of more use on the whole..................

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