Care home residents to have overnight stays without self-isolating on return

Residents Susan Crowe, 96, and Antonio Hernandez, 82, hug each other at Alexander House Care Home in Wimbledon, as coronavirus disease (COVID-19) restrictions continue to ease, London, Britain, May 17, 2021. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
Residents Susan Crowe and Antonio Hernandez hug at Alexander House Care Home in Wimbledon (Picture: Reuters)

Care home residents in England will be able to go out for more visits without needing to self-isolate for 14 days on their return.

This includes overnight stays with family and friends from next Monday, the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) confirmed.

And new residents entering a care home from the community will no longer need to isolate for 14 days.

But the requirement, due to be set out in updated Government guidance, will remain for residents entering a care home from hospital, moving between care homes and any other visit deemed ‘high risk’.

Care homes will need to conduct individual assessments to ensure visits out are not high risk, which take into account the planned number of nights away from the residence.

The changes will ensure new residents being admitted from the community ‘will have a less disruptive introduction to their new home’, DHSC said.

They will need to take a PCR test before they arrive, on the day of arrival and seven days later.

Minister for Care Helen Whately said: ‘I have heard first-hand from those living and working in care homes how difficult the restrictions around visiting have been and I’m incredibly grateful to everyone working in the sector who has helped reunite families safely.

‘Thanks to the continued success of the vaccine rollout, I am pleased we can now take another step towards normality, helping more people enjoy visits out of the care home while protecting them from the continued risk of Covid-19.’

Community coordinator Terence Surin hugs Pam Harrison who is a resident at Alexander House Care Home in Wimbledon, as coronavirus disease (COVID-19) restrictions continue to ease, London, Britain, May 17, 2021. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
Community coordinator Terence Surin hugs Pam Harrison as coronavirus restrictions continue to ease (Picture: Reuters)

Current guidance already says residents can leave the home for low-risk outdoor visits and visits to hospitals as outpatients, GPs, dentists, day centres, workplaces and educational settings without needing to self-isolate after.

But following any overnight stay, including a hospital visit, and on admission, it says residents are required to isolate for 14 days.

Last week a charity said it had applied for permission for a judicial review of the guidance at the High Court.

John’s Campaign says it is unlawful because it encourages providers to falsely imprison residents, and makes it likely that providers will not conduct individual risk assessments.

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