source : the age

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An elderly resident at a specialist dementia care facility catering for people with severe behavioural and psychological symptoms has allegedly been bashed by another resident in Sydney’s south-west.

The two residents were in a secure garden courtyard at HammondCare’s Southwood Cottage when the incident occurred about 9pm on Wednesday.

The facility on Judd Avenue, Hammondville provides specialist care for people who are unable to be cared for in mainstream aged care settings.

The 87-year-old injured resident’s daughter told 2GB on Thursday his family were still seeking details, but were shocked by the horrific injuries he suffered.

An 87-year-old man was hospitalised after being assaulted by another resident at a specialist dementia care home.2GB

“I’ve never seen anything like this before. I’ve never seen anybody this beat up,” she said.

HammondCare executive general manager Jenny Summerton said the injured resident and their family would be offered all support necessary.

“We are extremely sorry and deeply saddened that this has occurred,” she said in a statement on Thursday.

The resident was taken to Liverpool Hospital.

Police attended the facility on Thursday morning as they begin investigating the reported incident.

HammondCare is also preparing a serious incident report for the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission.

Commissioner Liz Hefren-Webb said the commission has been made aware of the assault.

“It is shocking to learn of any incident in a residential aged care service that has a serious impact on someone living there,” she said.

“Aged care residents have a right to receive safe, quality care, and aged care providers have clear legal responsibilities to prevent, minimise the risk of, and respond effectively to any incidents that may impact residents.

“This will be the focus of the commission’s investigation of the incident.”

HammondCare will face action if the commission determines it has not met its legal obligations, she added.

The commission was established in 2019 to enforce standards and manage complaints amid concerns over systemic issues in the aged care sector.

Alongside the commission’s responsibilities approving residential and home care providers, and aged care compliance, is the administration of the compulsory reporting of assaults.

More than 30,000 notifications for serious incidents involving unreasonable use of force in residential care were made to the commission during the 2024-25 financial year. The notifications come under a broad category, which also includes alleged, suspected and potential incidents.

The HammondCare facility was last audited in July 2024 and re-accredited until November 2027. No specific areas for improvement were identified in the audit.

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Jack GramenzJack Gramenz is a breaking news reporter at The Sydney Morning Herald.Connect via email.