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Care homes in Swiss Jura stage ‘elderly Olympics’

Elderly people living in care homes in the canton of Jura took part in an Olympics-style event on Tuesday involving walking frame races and a darts competition.

Care homes in Swiss Jura stage ‘elderly Olympics’
File photo: Ethan Prater

The event was staged in Bassecourt by JURAnciens, the umbrella organization for the 12 residential care homes in the Jura, each of whom  selected ten residents to take part in the games, reported Le Matin.

The ‘Olympic flame’ was lit by a 99-year-old, said the paper, kicking off an event that saw participants compete across five disciplines: a slalom race for users of a walking (zimmer) frame, shooting basketball hoops, throwing darts, stacking polystyrene bricks and banging nails into a log.

The event may have had its tongue firmly in its cheek – it is anti-doping but not anti-medication, said the paper – but it also had serious ambitions, aiming to showcase the region’s elderly, forge links between care homes and get residents away from their rooms and into an active, social atmosphere.

“We have sparked a spirit of competition,” organizer Sylvia Moritz told Le Matin, saying that some participants took it very seriously and became worried they wouldn’t have enough time to prepare when told of their selection… six months ago.

Speaking to local radio station RFJ earlier this month, Moritz said since the training started it had really created a “dynamic” in the care homes, with residents discussing which discipline they were participating in and sharing tips over lunch.

And the event itself went down well.

“They are radiant, motivated, encouraging their teammates,” one care home worker told the station on Tuesday.

“It also sparks memories as many of them did sport when they were young,” she added.

Participants included 86-year-old Gilberte Chetelat, who managed 19 nails in two minutes, and 95-year-old Gisele Chaignat, who totalled 570 points in the darts competition.

Medals were awarded by Swiss Olympian and Jura native Eric Hänni, 77, who won Judo silver in 1964.

According to the Swiss Statistics Office, the canton of Jura has a relatively low number of people aged over 80 living in care homes, since the cantonal system favours supporting the elderly in their own homes.

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Spain’s prosecutors file criminal complaint over virus care home death

Spanish prosecutors said Tuesday they have filed a criminal complaint against a Madrid care home doctor and its director over the Covid-related death of a resident, in the first such case in the capital region since the start of the pandemic

Spain's prosecutors file criminal complaint over virus care home death
Photo: AFP

Madrid's public prosecutor's office said the two women are suspected of manslaughter and denial of medical attention in relation to the death in March of a woman in her 80s who had just moved into the home.   

Madrid was one of the hardest-hit cities in Europe by the first wave of the pandemic, and the complaint is expected to be one of several alleging inadequate care at retirement homes during the period.

In a statement, the prosecutor's office said the doctor and the director of the home, who were not named, did not follow the protocol set up by the Madrid regional government for caring for residents during the pandemic.

The doctor “disregarded” the protocol and did not call a hospital about the woman, despite her worsening condition, until eight days after she began having breathing trouble.

“Despite her rapid transfer to hospital, she died the following day from cardiac arrest,” the statement said.

The care home's director “was aware of the patient's clinical situation (but) did nothing” to ensure she received health care during periods when the doctor was absent, notably on the weekend before her death, it added.   

Amnesty International warned earlier this month that conditions at elderly care homes in the Madrid region and in Catalonia remained “alarming” despite improvements.

In a sharply worded report, it said the “vast majority” of residents had not been properly cared for during the pandemic.

The measures put in place by both regions were “inefficient and inadequate” and violated the residents' rights, it said.   

Spain has been one of Europe's worst-hit countries, with the virus infecting more than 1.7 million people and causing over 48,000 deaths.

Close to half of that number are believed to be elderly people who died in homes, Amnesty said.

At the height of the first wave in March, Spanish soldiers helping to fight the pandemic found elderly patients in retirement homes abandoned and, in some cases, dead in their beds.

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