DIE WELT

Health Care Scandal: German Dementia Patients "Kept Quiet" With The Wrong Drugs

To save time, money and staff, many German health facilities treat dementia patients with powerful drugs that serve no other purpose but to keep them quiet. By some estimates, the practice affects some 240,000 people in Germany.

Health Care Scandal: German Dementia Patients
In a Canadian nursing home. Similar facilities in Germany are facing grave accusations. (Vince Alongi)
DIE WELT/Worldcrunch


*NEWSBITES

BERLIN -- A growing number of German dementia sufferers are being treated with antipsychotic drugs that calm them down but do nothing to treat their illness. Critics have used the provocative term "chemical rape" to denounce the practice.

According to Professor Gerd Glaeske of the University of Bremen’s Center for Social Policies, handing out this type of medication without the permission of the patient or a relative of the patient is comparable to arbitrarily tying mental patients to a bed or chair.

Glaeske told Die Welt that many out-patients or residents of care facilities – possibly as many as 240,000 – are given drugs just to keep them quiet. “In these cases, the drugs ... save on personnel costs and give the homes greater profit margins,” he said.

Glaeske cites British studies which suggest that in two out of three cases, strong neuroleptic drugs are being prescribed when they shouldn’t be -- and wouldn’t be necessary at all if the patient was receiving the proper care for his or her condition.

A German social rights association called VdK recommends increasing the amount invested in care to stop this “mass phenomenon.” “Dementia patients are very care-intensive because they have a very strong need to move around, and often try to run away,” said Ulrike Mascher, the association’s president.  

In the next few years, many care homes in Germany are going to have to expand to deal with the country’s rising numbers of dementia patients. Pilot projects have shown that it is easier to care for patients in small groups of five as opposed to groups of 20, which is the approach taken in many facilities.

Germany’s Ministry of Health stated that while the medication prescribed to dementia patients is the responsibility of their doctors, new reforms planned by Health Minister Daniel Bahr are aimed to improve cooperation between doctors and care homes.

Members of Germany’s Social Democratic Party (SPD) have criticized the government, saying it bears a great deal of responsibility for this scandal. SPD critics say far too little has been done guarantee financing for proper care of dementia patients.

Read the full story in German by Anette Dowideit

Photo - Vince Alongi

*Newsbites are digest items, not direct translations

Editor's note: An earlier version of the article featured a headline we have since determined to be unnecessarily provocative.

Read more from DIE WELT.

All rights reserved ©Worldcrunch - in partnership with DIE WELT

comments powered by Disqus
DIE WELT


comments powered by Disqus



Thanks so much for reading Worldcrunch

We had fun making this video for you!

Please register to continue reading

Your Name
Your email address
Enter new password
Repeat new password
Choose a newsletter:

Worldcrunch This Week
Worldcrunch whileUslept

Connect to your Facebook Account
×

You have reached your limit of free stories

Please subscribe to continue reading




See my options



Only Worldcrunch offers:


Unique perspectives and exclusive reportages

Award-winning foreign language journalism in English for the first time

Understanding of the world from all angles





What readers say:


'Eye-opener'

'Original, Insightful'

'Quick and Quirky'

Your premium access to Worldcrunch is provided by

University of Central Lancashire

Please register to begin

Your Name
Your email address
Enter new password
Repeat new password
Choose a newsletter:

Worldcrunch This Week
Worldcrunch whileUslept

Connect to your Facebook Account