Old people auctioned off to care homes on the internet: Anger over 'cattle markets for grannies' as councils accept lowest bids to save cash

  • At least a dozen local authorities are listing vulnerable people's details
  • Ages and care needs including medication sent to up to 100 care firms
  • They pick which people to bid for - and cheapest offer nearly always wins
  • Expert Ros Altmann: 'eBay-style' system 'awful' and 'just uncivilised'
  • Health group leader: 'It's an absolute disgrace - it's like a cattle market'

The elderly and disabled are being ‘put up for auction’ by local councils on ‘eBay-style’ websites, with care firms then bidding to offer them a bed.

At least a dozen local authorities are listing vulnerable people’s details – including their age and what care and medication they need – before inviting bids from care homes in the area.

The bidding is sometimes open for only a few hours, at other times it can last for two or three days. The cheapest offer often wins.

Cattle market: At least a dozen councils are listing vulnerable people’s details – including their age and what care and medication they need – on eBay-like software and inviting bids from local care homes (file photo)

Cattle market: At least a dozen councils are listing vulnerable people’s details – including their age and what care and medication they need – on eBay-like software and inviting bids from local care homes (file photo)

Critics last night said the system was akin to ‘auctioning your granny’ and a ‘cattle market’, saying sensitive decisions about an elderly resident’s final years are being made by a computer programme that is only interested in costs.

It also means the patient or their family often does not see the care home, and that those running the home do not see the patient before they arrive.

One council has boasted of reducing care costs by almost a fifth using the system.

The auction-style process allows councils to circulate anonymised details of individuals to a large number of suppliers who then bid in an online auction for the contract.

As many as 100 providers can bid before the software produces a shortlist of the most favourable bids. Shortlisted bidders are then told where they are ranked in the process.

Online: The system uses a software called SProc.Net, which has been devised by Matrix SCM, a company based in Milton Keynes which last year said it was in talks with 30 other councils

Online: The system uses a software called SProc.Net, which has been devised by Matrix SCM, a company based in Milton Keynes which last year said it was in talks with 30 other councils

If they are in second position, they can adjust their bid – either by lowering the price or offering extra care services – so that they can move up to first.

Councils say quality is the first consideration, but figures obtained under a Freedom of Information request show 92 per cent of care packages commissioned on the system over a six-month period were awarded to the bidder with the lowest price, BBC 5 Live revealed.

Government adviser Ros Altmann: 'These eBay-style sites highlight the funding crisis for care'

Government adviser Ros Altmann: 'These eBay-style sites highlight the funding crisis for care'

Ros Altmann, a Government adviser and independent expert on care for the elderly, said: ‘These eBay-style sites highlight the funding crisis for elderly care. It is awful. The idea of bidding for a person is just uncivilised. These are not parcels, they are people.’

Janet Morrison, chief executive of the charity Independent Age, said: ‘Do we really want to treat older people as a “product” to be bought and sold this way? We are concerned that older people’s needs will lose out to price as the main reason for selecting a home.’

At least 12 councils use the auction-style systems. They include Kent County Council, Devon County Council, Southend Borough Council and Birmingham City Council. Dozens more are expected to follow suit.

Care companies bidding to offer a place have to state what services they can provide and at what cost before a computer system decides which company is the winner of the ‘contract’. Councils say the winning home is not forced upon patients, and that it is not always the cheapest bid that wins, with quality of care being the main consideration.

Birmingham has been using an online auction system since 2012 and says it has reduced its spending on care by almost a fifth.

It uses a software called SProc.Net, which has been devised by Matrix SCM, a company based in Milton Keynes which last year said it was in talks with 30 other councils.

Radio 5 Live also found that in some cases in Birmingham elderly people were being sent to homes which won the online auction despite being ‘zero-rated’ by the council on its own 0-100 scale of care quality – where scores under 60 are ‘poor’.

Les Latchman, chairman of the Birmingham Care Consortium, which represents care homes in Birmingham and commissioned the FOI request, said the system was forcing providers to offer lower and lower prices to secure the contract.

Speaking out: Emma Knight said her brother James, who had learning difficulties, was one persona affected

Speaking out: Emma Knight said her brother James, who had learning difficulties, was one persona affected

‘This reverse tendering is something that compromises quality and undermines ethical practice,’ he said. ‘If you are going to keep lowering the price, something has got to give.’

Mike Gimson, chairman of Moundsley Healthcare Group, said: ‘It’s an absolute disgrace what is going on in Birmingham. It is more like Hereford cattle market than it is a caring service for the elderly.’

A Birmingham council spokesman said: ‘The well-being of all our service users is paramount and we only award care packages to providers who are able to demonstrate that they can meet the needs of individuals.’

Another critic of the system is Emma Knight, whose brother James, 46, has learning difficulties and had lived in the same care home in Exeter for 28 years. When it closed, Devon County Council circulated his details by emails to care homes which were then invited to bid to offer him a place.

The details on the email included information about his ‘mood and well-being’ and medication. His family say other information which could easily identify him was also included.

Miss Knight, 44, of Ottery St Mary, said: ‘We had no idea his details were being shared. This sort of tendering should be stopped.’

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2945079/Old-people-auctione...

Views: 50

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Sick!  Soylent Green is not far behind.

RSS

"Destroying the New World Order"

TOP CONTENT THIS WEEK

THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING THE SITE!

mobile page

12160.info/m

12160 Administrators

 

Latest Activity

Евеліна posted a status
"цікаво, воно цитатами виділяє, як моє особливе "я""
13 hours ago
Евеліна posted a status
"на роботі, сонце світить, потрібно перепочити."
13 hours ago
Евеліна posted a blog post

Ключові слова в тексті: як органічно їх вписати в статтю

Що таке ключові слова і чому вони важливіКлючові слова — це слова або фрази, які користувачі…See More
13 hours ago
Евеліна is now a member of 12160 Social Network
18 hours ago
Burbia left a comment for pohonemas33 team
"Quit promoting gambling on another site"
21 hours ago
tjdavis posted a photo
21 hours ago
pohonemas33 team commented on DTOM's photo
Thumbnail

Orwell - Football, Beer & Gambling

"kalau kamu cari tentang trik dan tips main slot online biar gampang menang, coba cek di situs…"
Wednesday
pohonemas33 team commented on tjdavis's photo
Thumbnail

DejaVu

"coba iin main game slot online di situs POHONEMAS33"
Wednesday
tjdavis posted a video

I, Pet Goat VI by - Seymour Studios | I, Pet Goat 6

I, Pet Goat VI by - Seymour Studios | I, Pet Goat 6It's time for great JihadI presented the events in the Middle East as an animated short film based on the ...
Tuesday
tjdavis posted a photo
Monday
rlionhearted_3 posted photos
Monday
tjdavis posted a video

Official Trailer NOVA '78 directed by Aaron Brookner and Rodrigo Areias

NOVA '78 is a documentary about New York City's 1978 Nova Convention, the legendary counterculture gathering featuring William S. Burroughs, Patti Smith, Fra...
Sunday
Doc Vega posted blog posts
Feb 21
tjdavis favorited Burbia's video
Feb 19
tjdavis favorited cheeki kea's photo
Feb 19
tjdavis posted a video

Peter Sellers - The Party (opening scene)

HQ HD "Does that include television sir ?" ... is still the best trolling paradigm in a movie.Support this channel: https://www.patreon.com/MusicPoints#Pet...
Feb 19
Doc Vega posted blog posts
Feb 19
Snakedaddy favorited Parrhesia's video
Feb 19
Doc Vega commented on Doc Vega's blog post The Rabbit Hole
"Cheeki kea, I pray that the insanity doesn't deepen and there's been an attack by some 18…"
Feb 18
Burbia's blog post was featured

Disgraced Former CNN Anchor Don Lemon Arrested

No longer an employed journalist, Don Lemon had been seen with far left agitator, Nekima Levy…See More
Feb 18

© 2026   Created by truth.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service

content and site copyright 12160.info 2007-2019 - all rights reserved. unless otherwise noted