Council Fined Over Care Home Death Fall

A council has been fined £500,000 after a woman with dementia died following a fall at one of its care homes.

The 80-year-old victim, died in hospital a month after the fall at the care home, in Eckington, Derbyshire, in March 2016.
At Chesterfield Magistrates' Court, the council admitted failing to provide safe care and treatment. The authority is the first council to be prosecuted by the Care Quality Commission (CQC).
The victim, a former head of midwifery at Chesterfield Royal Hospital, suffered 12 rib fractures and a damaged lung in the fall. She died in hospital from her injuries the following month.
The court heard that the council did not have an up-to-date falls policy. No assessment of the woman’s needs had been carried out by staff and no measures had been put in place to protect her, despite her being a high-risk resident. There was also a shortage of senior staff due to restructuring by the council.
The judge said the fine would have been more had the authority not entered an early guilty plea, and questioned how it could have been allowed to happen at a care home rated as "good".
The council apologised to the victim’s family.
A statement released by the council said: "In this case, our actions fell below the high standards that we expect of ourselves and we are truly sorry for what happened. "
"The safety and wellbeing of our residents is our number one priority and we have worked extremely hard to address the issues involved in this tragic case."
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