Vulnerable man wrongly had care ended
Hillingdon Council withdrew care for the man, named only as Mr B in the report, after deciding he did not need it.
It has made a "symbolic payment of £300" for causing distress to the man, who has a learning disability.
Hillingdon Council said: "We accept the decision of the Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman and have met all the agreed actions in its report."
The ombudsman said that Mr B was receiving seven hours of weekly care, including help with meals, housework, shopping and appointments.
In August 2023, he told the council he was being bullied by a resident in his shared house. Shortly after the report, the council was told by his carers that Mr B could get to the shop himself, make a simple meal and sometimes cancelled care.
In May 2024, Hillingdon Council reassessed Mr B's care needs, and found that he had some difficulties saying words, memory problems, and could not always understand things said to him.
The council said it was unclear whether Mr B had been diagnosed with a learning disability.
It added that Mr B could give them all the information needed and decided he did not need carers to help. His care was ended in June.
In August, a learning disability assessment confirmed Mr B had a learning disability, an extremely low working memory, and some problems working things out. It also found he needed help to learn new things.
The council reassessed Mr B again in September and reinstated his care, stating: "Hillingdon Council can now understand how his learning disability affects him."
The ombudsman found that the diagnosis of a learning difficulty was not needed to find out whether Mr B had care needs.
The ombudsman said: "The council's failure to meet Mr B's care needs from mid-June to mid-September, is fault. This caused Mr B distress and uncertainty. It meant he did not have the support he needed."
A spokesperson for Hillingdon Council said: "We have apologised to and compensated the complainant for the faults it highlighted. As an organisation, we regularly review internal processes, such as how we assess eligibility of care, to ensure we best serve residents and meet their needs."
Listen to the best of BBC Radio London on Sounds and follow BBC London on Facebook, X and Instagram. Send your story ideas to hello.bbclondon@bbc.co.uk
Supported housing in crisis, groups tell Starmer
Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNBC
14 hours ago
- CNBC
Struggling to focus? It could be 'popcorn brain': What it means and how to fix it, from a Harvard doctor and stress expert
Nearly everyone is overloaded with information these days. In each minute of every day, 138.9 million reels are played on Instagram and Facebook, according to a 2024 report by Domo called "Data Never Sleeps." Consuming this much content on a daily basis has shown to have negative effects on a person's ability to focus. Since 2004, psychologist Gloria Mark has studied attention spans, and her research shows that people's attention when viewing a screen decreased from an average of two and half minutes in 2004 to an average of 47 seconds in 2016 — which is about the length of many videos on social media. But the impacts don't stop there. In Harvard physician Dr. Aditi Nerurkar's book, "The 5 Resets: Rewire Your Brain and Body for Less Stress and More Resilience," she discusses yet another side effect of information overload: "popcorn brain." Popcorn brain is when "our brains get habituated to this constant streaming of information, making it harder for us to look away and disconnect from our devices, slow down our thoughts, and live fully offline," Nerurkar wrote in her book. "While not a true medical diagnosis, popcorn brain is a growing cultural phenomenon." Here's how to gain more control over what you're consuming, and shift your popcorn brain. The concept of popcorn brain was created by researcher David Levy in 2011, and it can look like staying up-to-date with the news to frequently checking your social media to see who's engaging with what you're sharing. The overload of information can lower your productivity levels, affect your memory and cause you to feel more stressed. To get out of the loop of picking up your phone every few minutes, and ditch your popcorn brain, Nerurkar suggests four practices: Ditching your smartphone won't be easy when you first start, she acknowledged. It's important to have helpful alternatives for when you want to reach for your phone like a notepad, a fidget toy, a book or a quick exercise like walking around the room. "Rewiring your brain and overcoming your primal urge to scroll is a major feat," Nerurkar said. "In time, your stress will thank you because you'll be deciding who and what gets your attention, not a device in the palm of your hand."


Indianapolis Star
14 hours ago
- Indianapolis Star
Carmel Utilities plans to update communications after boil water advisory lifted
Carmel Utilities has lifted the boil water advisory for West Carmel, but not before the outage could fuel complaints about what some viewed as the city's lack of communication about the incident. The department has plans in the works to update its communications system. The advisory had been in place since the morning of Aug. 11 after a fire hydrant was unexpectedly blown off the water line, potentially contaminating the water supply. 'As anticipated, the test results came back absent for any bacteriological contamination in our system,' Lane Young, director of Carmel Utilities, said after the boil water advisory was lifted on the afternoon of Aug. 13. 'We trust this result gives our customers confidence in our system and the safe water we provide for their use.' The advisory affected residents within the boundaries of the Hamilton County border to the west, 146th Street to the north, 96th Street to the south, and U.S. 31 and College Avenue to the east. More Hamilton County news: Speeders beware: Westfield police plan increase in traffic enforcement Now that the advisory has been lifted, the Hamilton County Health Department is reminding residents within the boundaries of the advisory, or anyone who lost water pressure during that time, to take steps to ensure their water is safe for use. 'It's important to take a few minutes to flush and clean your water systems,' Amy Ballman, director of Environmental Health at the Hamilton County Health Department said in a news release. 'This ensures that any potentially contaminated water is cleared from your plumbing, appliances, and fixtures.' The Health Department recommends residents take the following steps: Some residents voiced frustration with Carmel Utilities on social media during the boil water advisory. Many were frustrated they were not alerted via text message or email about the situation. 'I only heard about it from checking social media,' said Annemarie Barr, who lives in Carmel with her family. Barr told IndyStar she could have been feeding her 3-month-old son the potentially contaminated water all day had she not checked social media after her husband said their home lost water pressure. Even Mayor Sue Finkam weighed in on one of the critical posts on the Carmel Social Media page on Facebook. "The communication process will be reviewed because it definitely can and should be improved," she wrote. Young, director of Carmel Utilities, admitted his department is behind when it comes to communication with customers. 'Our team did an amazing job operationally finding the issue and getting it corrected as far as water flow and getting water back in our system,' Young said. 'We did not have the communication vehicle to blast an e-mail or a text. That's something we're working on.' Soon, possibly over the next few days, Carmel Utilities customers will have an online portal for customers to pay bills, view their water usage, update their contact information and opt into email or text message communications, Young said.


Miami Herald
15 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Vets find ‘something no one expected' up kitten's nose. And it can be deadly
Unless you're a die-hard cat lover or veterinarian, chances are you haven't heard of a potentially deadly parasite that can find its way into the orifices of your favorite feline friend. The staff at a New York shelter unexpectedly stumbled upon this particular parasite up the nose of a tiny kitten they thought they were treating for an upper respiratory infection. 'Taylor is only five weeks old, but he's already shown incredible resilience!' the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) Serving Erie County said in a Aug. 13 Facebook post. 'He and his siblings were found outside by their current owner, and when he arrived at our Lipsey Veterinary Clinic, he showed signs of an upper respiratory infection. During his exam, our team discovered something no one expected — a cuterebra larva lodged inside his tiny nostril.' A cuterebra infestation isn't something to sneer at. 'They're larva from adult botflies that can burrow under a cat's skin or, more alarmingly, enter through the nose and migrate to the brain,' Cornell Cat Watch says. Dwight Bowman, a professor in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine, told Cat Watch that an infestation is 'more rural than urban and suburban.' But it is a high-risk infection. 'If it ends up developing its lesion in the skin and migrates deep into the cat's body, it is lethal. The effects are neurologic,' Bowman says. 'Less significant infestations are subcutaneous big maggots the size of the end of the thumb under the skin.' Owners should contact a veterinarian when finding one on or in their cat and not try to remove it themselves. 'If not removed, the larva will exit the skin in about 30 days, drop to the ground, pupate and become an adult fly,' Cat Watch says. This particular larva discovered in Taylor was found in time. 'Thanks to gentle, careful work from our veterinary team, the larva was safely removed while Taylor was sedated. Today, this small but determined kitten is resting, healing, and growing stronger each day!' the shelter said. Taylor is not currently up for adoption. For more information on other adoptable pets, visit the shelter's website. Erie County is about a 20-mile drive south from Buffalo.