1 / 13

The Care Act: Information & Advice

The Care Act: Information & Advice . Lucy Bonnerjea, July 2014. The Care Act: Information & Advice.

atira
Download Presentation

The Care Act: Information & Advice

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Care Act: Information & Advice Lucy Bonnerjea, July 2014

  2. The Care Act: Information & Advice • Local authorities will need to establish and maintain a comprehensive information and advice service about care and support services in their local area. • This will help people to understand: • How care and support services work locally • The care and funding options available • How people can access care and support services • Also how to prevent/ delay people’s need for support.

  3. Definitions • Information = the communication of knowledge and facts about care and support • Advice = helping a person to identify choices. Possibly including recommendations

  4. What else? • Local authorities must help people to benefit from independent financial advice, so that they can get support to plan and prepare for the future costs of care. • All information and advice must be provided in formats that help people to understand, regardless of their needs. • Formats may include a range of different types of information, and include working with partners to provide information on different services together.

  5. Statutory Guidance supports the Act • The Act requires local authorities to establish and maintain an information and advice service in their area. • The information and advice service must cover the needs of all its population, not just those who are in receipt of care or support which is arranged or funded by the local authority. • Information and advice is fundamental to enabling people, carers and families to take control of and make well-informed choices about their care and support. • Not only does information and advice help to promote people’s wellbeing by increasing their ability to exercise choice and control, it is also a vital component of preventing or delaying people’s need for care and support.

  6. What does the Guidance cover? • Ensuring the availability of information and advice services for all people • Who in particular might benefit from information and advice • The local authority role with respect to financial information and advice • The accessibility and proportionality of information and advice • The development of plans/strategies to meet local needs

  7. Accessibility • Must be open to everyone • Reasonable adjustments may be necessary • Various formats, including face to face contact • Various groups such as people with sensory impairments, socially isolated, with LD, with mental health problems • Content: what is available; how to access it; chocies; how to raise concerns

  8. Financial Information and advice • Important so people can make well-informed choices about how they pay for their care • LA should provide some of this themselves’ some of it should be provided independently; some by regulated financial advice organisations; So: • Some direct provision? • Some information should be independent of LAs • Some information should be from regulated financial organisations – where it involves information about specific financial products

  9. Should include: • Understanding care charges • Ways to pay • Money management • Making informed financial decisions • Facilitating access to independent financial information and advice

  10. Careful! • Large numbers of people with dementia no longer have capacity to make long term financial decisions themselves; • Should not be asked to; should not be referred to organisations which might not recognise their lack of capacity to make financial decisions; • Many need attorneys or deputies • Families cannot make financial decisions on behalf of people who lack capacity to make financial decisions • Not can the LA unless they have a court order from the Court of Protection

  11. A Plan or Strategy • LAs need to develop and implement a plan regarding their information and advice services • Should be aligned with CCG/Health services • Should be reviewed at agreed intervals • The review should be done with local people/ stakeholders • LAs should publish information about the effectiveness of their information service

  12. ConsultationQuestions • Views are invited about how local authorities should coordinate and target information to those who have specific health and care and support needs? • Does the guidance provide sufficient clarity about the active role that local authorities should play to support people’s access to financial information and advice that is independent of the local authority, including regulated financial advisors?

More Related