The Daily Telegraph

Threat to care home patients in funding crisis

- By Dan Hyde CONSUMER AFFAIRS EDITOR

Elderly residents at nursing homes run by Britain’s largest care provider face having to be rehoused unless the firm’s funding crisis is resolved soon, it has emerged. Four Seasons Health Care is understood to have begun an emergency review after losing £25 million in three months.

ELDERLY residents at nursing homes run by Britain’s largest care provider face having to be rehoused unless the firm’s funding crisis is resolved, it has emerged.

Four Seasons Health Care is understood to have begun an emergency review after losing £25 million in the three months to June.

The company looks after 20,000 pa- tients at 450 nursing homes. According to reports, loss-making residences could be closed unless Four Seasons can obtain more funds from investors or the Government.

Executives have admitted that plans to introduce a national living wage next year will put at risk “hundreds” of homes run by private care operators.

In a letter to George Osborne, the Chancellor, Four Seasons joined Bupa UK, HC-One, Care UK and Barchester in warning that the extra costs “could see thousands of older people left without a home”.

The uncertaint­y facing elderly residents and their families has been compared to the crisis in 2011 when Southern Cross collapsed after running out of money to pay rent on its 750 homes.

Properties housing 31,000 elderly and disabled people were eventually sold off to rival operators, including Four Seasons.

According to experts such as Vernon Baxter, editor of Health-Investor maga- zine, none of the Southern Cross residents were “forced out on to the street” as the “market came together to provide an ordered solution”.

It is unclear whether Four Seasons residents will be as lucky. The company has insisted its business model is different from Southern Cross because it owns the majority of its properties, whereas Southern Cross rented them.

According to The Sunday Times, Four Seasons has already started selling properties it lets to other care home op- erators as the firm tries to stay afloat.

But a larger disposal of its properties might prove trickier. The entire care industry now faces greater funding pressures than in 2011 and other companies could decide against buying Four Seasons homes if they cannot see a way of making a profit. In such a scenario, residents may be forced to fall back on NHS facilities.

Ian Smith, chief executive of Four Seasons, said an unusual surge in winter deaths and rising costs meant the whole sector was “in urgent need of government attention”.

Just 85 per cent of its rooms are now occupied and its profits are being wiped out by interest on a £500 million debt.

John Kennedy, who conducted an inquiry into the sector last year, said: “The Government, regulators and care home providers need to come together to improve funding and pay, cut bureaucrac­y and inject humanity back into the system we rely upon to look after our loved ones and ourselves.”

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