
Serious care concerns found at leading private nursing home group
Two leading doctors in gerontological care have described as shocking and disturbing undercover footage to be revealed in an RTÉ documentary tonight.
It examines standards of care in several residential facilities owned by Ireland's leading provider of private nursing homes.
The company at the centre of the allegations, Emeis Ireland – previously known as Orpea – has apologised to residents and their families for the distress caused by the failings identified in the RTÉ report, saying it has launched an in-depth review to immediately address all issues identified.
The investigation which focuses on two nursing homes – The Residence Portlaoise and Beneavin Manor in Glasnevin in north Dublin – uncovered multiple examples of care failings and neglect of vulnerable older residents.
"This is going to shorten people's lives and the lives that they have will be more miserable because of the situation that they're in," said Consultant Geriatrician Prof David Robinson.
"It's abuse – there's no other word for it."
Following detailed concerns raised by several whistleblowers, RTÉ Investigates had two undercover researchers simultaneously apply for and secure healthcare assistant roles at the Emeis homes. They both had all the required qualifications and were Garda vetted by RTÉ.
At The Residence Portlaoise, where up to 101 residents can be accommodated at a weekly cost of approximately €1,200 per week under the Fair Deal scheme, RTÉ did witness some staff provide good care but more often saw repeated instances of staff shortages impacting daily resident care.
The Fair Deal scheme is a state support system that helps cover the cost of nursing home care in Ireland, based on a person's income and assets.
This included large groups of residents being congregated together in day rooms, vulnerable older people being left unsupervised resulting in resident falls and day-to-day requests going unattended to for lengthy periods of time such as pleas to be put to bed or use the toilet.
"What we're looking at is largely institutional abuse and this is neglect in a setting which is supposed to be caring," Prof Robinson added.
RTÉ's undercover carer also witnessed multiple examples of poor manual handling with older residents frequently lifted under the arms and without the required use of proper handling equipment contrary to best practice.
On some occasions staff were hampered by a lack of available equipment, while in one instance management also instructed healthcare assistants not to use hoisting equipment in public areas for fear their poor technique would be seen by visitors.
"The shocking disappointing thing to me is that someone who clearly has an identified need in order to assist his transfers and mobility is not provided with the means by which that can occur," Consultant Geriatrician Rónán Collins told RTÉ Investigates.
"This patient needs this piece of equipment to be able to stand up safely and the equipment is not in his room – it should be in his room."
In Dublin's Beneavin Manor, which can provide care for up to 115 adults for approximately €1,400 per week with Fair Deal funding, another RTÉ researcher saw similar patterns of staff under pressure.
Here, despite regulations stating nursing homes must provide opportunities for residents to engage in activities, this rarely happened on the floor where RTÉ's carer worked.
Staff also faced constant challenges when it came to the supply of essential resources with recurring shortages of basic items such as towels, bedsheets, sanitary wipes and gloves.
"It's pretty shocking to be honest with you," Prof Collins said. "Really one would have to ask in terms of supply chains why staff don't have access to the equipment to do their job appropriately?"
"In healthcare what causes burnout is people who go to work and come home day after day feeling frustrated because they're unable to provide the level of care they knew they should be providing or wanted to provide," Prof Collins added.
At Beneavin Manor, RTÉ also witnessed the inappropriate handling of vulnerable residents with frail older people sometimes moved by their clothing instead of using the correct handling equipment mandated in their care plans.
"There's no regard for the person," Prof David Robinson said on seeing RTÉ's footage.
"It's prioritising expediency and expediency of care over the person's dignity and it's just not appropriate," Prof Robinson added.
Having witnessed repeated poor practices, RTÉ Investigates had both researchers hand in their notice and report all their concerns to management at the nursing homes and to the regulatory body, the Health Information and Quality Authority (HIQA).
HIQA told RTÉ both The Residence Portlaoise and Beneavin Manor have set out compliance plans to address issues at their homes with reports from recent inspections of both centres currently being finalised.
In a statement, Emeis Ireland said the evidence of poor care delivery, improper moving and handling of residents, and a lack of dignity and breaches of residents' rights are deeply distressing, adding that it does not tolerate any individual or systemic neglect or practices.
Offering its sincere apologies, the company said this is not the standard of care they expect and not what residents and their families deserve.
Emeis added it is fully committed to doing everything in its power to ensure the failings do not recur.
This will include, according to the statement, a thorough examination of the management and oversight of medical supplies, housekeeping products and continence supplies across all its nursing homes.
It is also to review staffing allocations at both The Residence Portlaoise and Beneavin Manor.

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


The Irish Sun
7 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
True story of Heather Robinson kidnapped by serial killer uncle who hid bodies in barrels & called himself ‘Slavemaster'
THE woman who was kidnapped by a serial killer and sold to his family is having her story retold in a new movie. At just five months old, Tiffany Stasi was snatched from her mother Lisa, by killer John Robinson in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1985. Advertisement 9 Heather Robinson was 15 years old when she discovered the dark truth about her uncle and her true identity Credit: ABC 20/20 9 John Edward Robinson has been linked to the murders of eight women 9 Police found the bodies of Robinson's victims in barrels on his property in 2000 Credit: ABC 20/20 She would not find out the dark truth about her life and her sick uncle for another 15 years when he was revealed to be a serial killer whose victims included her own mother. It is the focus of a new film Kidnapped by a Killer: The Heather Robinson Story that airs tonight. Tiffany was brought up as Heather Robinson by her adoptive parents Don and Frieda Robinson. But in 2000, her uncle John Robinson, Don's brother, was arrested after bodies of multiple women were discovered in barrels on his property as part of an investigation into missing people. Advertisement read more on true crime It was then, when she was 15 years old, that Heather learned Robinson had kidnapped her and handed her to his family for an illegal adoption for which he got $5,500. Her biological mother, Lisa, met Robinson after she went to a woman's shelter following a split with Heather's dad. Robinson said he would help the pair find a home but instead he brutally killed her mother and sold the baby to his brother and sister-in-law who thought they were legally adopting her. He had claimed 19-year-old Lisa committed suicide in a hotel room. Advertisement Most read in The US Sun Exclusive By the time of his arrest in 2000, the then 56-year-old had been linked to the murders of eight women. He had a lengthy criminal record that included fraud and embezzlement and had tricked people with the alias of John Osbourne. My dad spied on my sister with hidden cameras & stalked her at work before she vanished at 17 - I'm convinced he killed her despite serial killer confession The depths of his depravity were not uncovered until a woman came forward accusing him of sexual assault and theft which led to a police search at his home near La Cygne, Kansas. He had already been named as a person of interest in a number of cases across Missouri and Kansas of missing women. Advertisement HOUSE OF HORRORS When cops scoured his farmland, they found barrels containing the decomposing bodies of Izabela Lewicka and Suzette Trouten. Lewicka was reported missing in 1999 and Trouten in 2000. The bodies of Beverly Bonner, Sheila Faith, and her daughter, Debbie Faith were later found at two storage units he rented in Missouri. After his arrest, Heather's DNA was tested which confirmed the truth about her adoption and the forged certificates. Advertisement In 2002, Robinson went on trial for the murders of Trouten, Lewicka, and Lisa Stasi, though her body was never recovered. He was found guilty of all counts and handed two death sentences and a life sentence as well as convicted for the kidnap and false adoption of Heather. A year later, he received more life sentences after pleading guilty to the murders of Paula Godfrey, Catherine Clampitt, Beverly Bonner, and Sheila and Debbie Faith. 9 Aerial view of serial killer John Robinson's home in Linn County, Kansas Credit: Getty Advertisement 9 Lisa Stasi's remains have never been recovered but Robinson was found guilty of her murder Credit: ABC 20/20 9 Heather, then Tiffany Stasi, before being snatched by Robinson Credit: ABC 20/20 9 Heather's story plays out in a brand new movie on Lifetime Despite two life sentences being overturned in 2015, Robinson remains on death row at the age of 81. Advertisement He was found to have been one of the first killers to use the internet to lure in victims, speaking to women in online chat rooms under the username "slavemaster". I'd be dead. I would be in that barrel. Heather Robinson Authorities discovered that with some of his victims, Robinson engaged in sadomasochistic sex and master-slave relationships before killing them, per In a rare interview with She said that while she was growing up, Uncle John "gave me this really weird, off-putting feeling in the pit of my stomach." Advertisement "It's like walking down a dark alley in the middle of the night while you know someone is behind you, approaching you closer and closer." Heather also claimed that just months before Robinson's arrest, she nearly ended up as one of his murder victims. At a wedding in Florida, she said he asked her sexual questions and offered to pay for a plane ticket so she could stay with him. Had she said yes, Heather said: "I'd be dead. I would be in that barrel". Advertisement Lisa's remains have still not been recovered with Heather continuing efforts to try to find her biological mother to have her buried on a family plot. Heather Tiffany Robinson was eventually legally adopted by Don and Frieda at the age of 18. Kidnapped by a Killer: The Heather Robinson Story airs on June 7 on Lifetime at 8/7c. 9 Kidnapped by a killer: The Heather Robinson Story airs on June 7 Credit: Lifetime Advertisement 9 Depiction of Heather and Uncle John in Kidnapped by a killer Credit: Lifetime


RTÉ News
10 hours ago
- RTÉ News
28 people deported to Nigeria detained prior to flight
Twenty-eight of the 35 people who were deported to Nigeria on a charter flight from Ireland this week were held in custody prior to their deportation. The average length of their detention was 27 days. The figures were provided in response to a request to the Department of Justice by RTÉ's Saturday with Colm Ó Mongáin. In a statement, the Department said a person who is subject of a deportation order can be held for up to 56 days "for the purpose of ensuring their deportation from the State". It added that this was "to facilitate the procurement of travel documentation and the making of arrangements for the deportation flight". Details were not provided on where those deported this week were detained in advance of the flight to Nigeria. However, the Department said there are a number of "prescribed places of detention" which include Castlerea Prsion, Cloverhill Prison, Cork Prison, Limerick Prison, Midlands Prison and Wheatfield Prison. It is understood women detained prior to deportation are held at the Dóchas Centre in Dublin. Detainees can also be held at any garda station. Speaking on RTÉ's Saturday with Colm Ó Mongáin, Fianna Fáil Minister of State Charlie McConalogue said that in some instances it was necessary to detain people in advance of deportation, but this was "hopefully in a small number of circumstances". "The information I have in terms of the women and children involved, there was no detentions there, that there was a date given in advance," Mr McConalogue said. The breakdown of figures for the flight to Nigeria included 21 men, nine women and five children - indicating that at least some women were held in custody prior to their enforced deportation. Speaking on the same programme, Sinn Féin TD Eoin Ó Broin said: "There is no doubt that part of what the very high profile nature of Minister O'Callaghan has done is to try and distract attention away from their failures in terms of running an international protection system that is compassionate, that is human rights rooted, but also that is fair, efficient and ultimately enforced." Social Democrats TD Sinéad Gibney said the events of Thursday morning was "the stuff of nightmares" for the children deported - as well as the children who witnessed their friends being taken away by gardaí.


RTÉ News
12 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Bill Clinton says US needs presidential candidate who is 'willing to lose'
Former US president Bill Clinton has said the US needs someone to run for president who is "willing to lose" as well as wants to win. Speaking about his new book 'The First Gentleman' to Dearbhail McDonald on RTÉ's Brendan O'Connor show, he said a presidential candidate needs to show they are going to "lift our country out of the mire". "I think there is a significant majority of people who would support such an approach if they actually believed in the candidate and if you were effective enough to push back against the blizzard of misinformation that is in social media, the mainstream media and the endless array of new social media sites coming online," he said. "We're in a blizzard of information with limited ability for many people to sort through it and know what to believe and what not." Mr Clinton said that after the most recent US election, he believes many of the Democratic Party's leaders and would-be leaders "conducted themselves responsibly" but that voters and activists have continued to fight. "Especially since President Trump is so unlike his predecessors in his willingness to break rules and norms and take on courts and everybody else," he added. Mr Clinton said it is important to recognise that if a candidate does not have the votes to win a presidential race, they should focus on developing an alternative message and hope to win the next election. "I think we forget, the people who are so politically active, that people aren't paying attention. "They're making judgements and you have to trust the people to do this and then carve a path through to push what you believe in, but don't pretend that it's the next election. "I did not even announce for president until October of 1991, barely a year away. "Now we expect people to run from four straight years and we expect voters not to get bored because the media has got to fill all these days with news." Mr Clinton's book was co-authored by James Patterson - their third novel together - and revolves around a man named Cole who is facing murder charges while his wife is seeking re-election as president of the US. He said being a 'first gentleman' was the "only political job that I failed to secure".