Thursday, March 25, 2010

Pfleger filmed as they struggled Seniors



Dusseldorf - The horror in the nursing home. Images that you will not forget. In Dusseldorf Admitted to a ward for severely ill patients.
Since is an old man (91), who sits helplessly in a wheelchair, rude on the floor and forth hergeschubst. A nurse pokes around a screaming woman with her finger in an open face tumor.
A tearful sobbing 81-year-old: "The boss has beaten me." And in the background laughing all the nurses broke through the misery.
These tasteless films have turned the nurses themselves. "Because we were funny," said health care assistant Julia G. (27) on Monday in court.
There has to be responsible, together with her ex-boss, the deputy head of the station, Kurt F. (48) because of abuse charges.
But it was not just about the mobile movie. According to the indictment is one half of a 78-year-paralyzed people have been captivated by their home regularly with a bathrobe belt to the bed.
A woman (95), which fought against the fixation, said to have been pressed against the wall, including the mattress. Of rough handling of patients and bruising was mentioned.
Julia G. denies this. In one case, a coma patient slipped. They've only quickly put him back into bed. By throwing could be no question. "Bruises I have not seen thereafter," the nursing assistant.
And the movies? "When you hear the whole day must be like the neighbors and yelling insults. Then you must take this with humor. "
The burden was enormous. Too few staff. "When you wash with 36 inhabitants four people to feed and must constantly rearrange because work remains lying," said Julia G. "And the hostel administration has only meant that we must accommodate ourselves to this situation."
A colleague from the layer had reported the events. So the whole thing came out. The deputy head of the station on Monday, wrapped himself in silence. The nursing home management company has fired the defendants in the meantime. The process will continue later this month.
Also of interest
Experts warn of massive staff shortages