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Disabled man claims he was abused and neglected while living with support
patheur

Disabled man claims he was abused and neglected while living with support

“People have beaten me, denied me food and drink, sometimes for long periods of time.”

The Northland man was born prematurely and suffered cardiac arrest at just 2 days old, causing a catastrophic brain haemorrhage.

At 18 months he was diagnosed with cerebral palsy and uses an electric wheelchair, communicating through yes and no acknowledgments and very short sentences.

“The hardest thing is not being able to do anything for myself,” Sherman said.

“I can’t do anything and I have to rely on the people around me to take care of me.”

In a statement, he said that over the years some employees were unfriendly.

“They met the basic needs, but nothing beyond that. I experienced emotional abuse: people didn’t take me seriously or treat me like a human being.

“I felt like I was just a job for support workers rather than a human being worthy of attention.”

Sherman claimed that some support staff openly admitted that they did not like him and found him demanding.

“I was physically abused. “They beat me and, at times, they ran out of medicine.”

Celeste Sherman said she heard a caregiver hit her son when she picked him up one day for a family event.

“I saw the movement of his hand…I definitely heard the slap. It was one of those cases where you think, ‘Did I really see or hear that?’”

She asked Sherman if the caretaker had slapped him and he said yes and told her it had happened before.

Celeste called a meeting with management at the NZ Care home in Hamilton to express her concerns, but said they didn’t seem to believe them.

A spokesperson for NZ Care hit back at the allegation.

“We are extremely concerned about the 2018 incident of abuse that Michael Sherman reported experiencing while living in a home supported by NZ Care, which he recently raised.

“We apologize for any distress this has caused Michael and his family.

“We have zero tolerance for neglect and abuse of any kind, and we are taking Michael’s report very seriously.”

The spokesperson said that as a provider of disability support services, NZ Care had systems in place to provide disabled people and their whānau with opportunities to safely raise concerns of any nature with them.

“A thorough review of all of Michael’s records shows that the NZ Care team worked closely with Michael and his family during the four years he lived in the Hamilton home.

“According to our records, Michael’s decision to leave the service in June 2019 was unrelated to the reported incident.”

Celeste said her son was moved because of her concerns and he now lives in Kōwhai House, a private home in Hamilton created by the father of another disabled person.

Sherman gives presentations about his life and what it’s like to be disabled to healthcare students.

So far he has presented to NZMA health and wellbeing students, first-year Wintec occupational therapy students, representatives from Enabling Good Lives (a type of disability support funding) and staff from Idea Services in Paeroa.

“Overall, I’ve had very positive responses, especially from students,” Sherman said.

“The main thing they tell me is that students are moved by hearing a personal story from my perspective instead of hearing everything about caregiving in a textbook.

“A young man stood up and apologized on behalf of the people who had wronged me, thanked me for educating them, and said he can promise that he and his classmates will make sure nothing like this happens again.”

Sherman said the presentation, which includes slides, was read by her support worker and Kōwhai House manager, Melissa Hunt.

“I’m working with an (occupational therapy) student to make a voiceover that can be played instead of reading the presentation. “That way people can connect me more with the information, rather than it being a support worker doing the talking.”

Sherman hopes to continue telling her story, but said because her truck was broken down, she was relying on Driving Miss Daisy for transportation.

Disability Affairs Minister Louise Upston said the Government wanted the best for disabled people, their families and carers.

“Any experience of abuse and neglect is concerning.”

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