THE DIRECTOR of a Dorset care home group is calling for the government to allow Covid-19 testing in care homes to be expanded to visitors to help preserve vital contact with loved ones.

Mandy Kittlety, managing director of Luxurycare, which operates five homes in Bournemouth and Poole, has added her voice to the growing campaign against isolation in care homes.

She is urging the government to give the care sector “the tools it needs” to manage the Covid-19 risk, while still maintaining visits which are so vital for residents’ mental and emotional health.

Mandy said: “Testing visitors, as well as residents and staff members, is the only way to close the circle, short of stopping visits altogether which we feel leaves residents, particularly those with dementia, feeling isolated and distressed.

“While we ask people to stay away if they are feeling unwell, we know that regular testing is the only way to pick up non-symptomatic infections.

“Identifying these ‘invisible’ cases, combined with our other measures, enables us to successfully prevent the spread of the virus – as we have already seen after two members of staff recently tested positive despite being free of symptoms.”

Luxurycare has in place robust infection control, including PPE for all staff and social distancing measures, and has asked families to name just one designated visitor for each resident.

As infection levels rise, care homes up and down the country are enforcing increasingly stringent restrictions such as only allowing families to see their loved ones through windows or Perspex partitions, or stopping visits altogether.

This fraught issue has hit the headlines, with new campaign groups fighting to #EndIsolationInCare, with some even mounting a legal challenge against the government guidance that restricts family visits.

Luxurycare says it has consistently sought to balance the dual priorities of managing the Covid-19 risk while continuing to prioritise compassion and supporting residents’ mental and emotional wellbeing.

Mandy said: “If we could offer nominated visitors weekly testing it would increase the safety of everyone in the home, at the same time as helping us stay open to visitors – something which is incredibly important for our residents and their families.”

“Everyone in this industry wants to do the right thing and manage the risks from Covid-19, but the longer this situation continues, the more evidence we see of the psychological damage caused by keeping residents apart from the people they love. It is heartbreakingly cruel.

“A balance has to be struck. We have done and continue to do everything in our power to make sure our residents can still safely see family members, but it seems to me that Covid-19 testing for visitors is the vital missing piece we need to get that balancing act right.”

Regular testing for care home staff and residents was introduced in July.