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Independent Living, not living alone.

Independent Living, not living alone. Alex Fox, Director Policy and Communications The Princess Royal Trust for Carers afox@carers.org. Personal budgets. Direct Payments Greater choice and control Employers not service users

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Independent Living, not living alone.

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  1. Independent Living, not living alone. Alex Fox, Director Policy and CommunicationsThe Princess Royal Trust for Carers afox@carers.org

  2. Personal budgets Direct Payments • Greater choice and control • Employers not service users • Low take up, particularly amongst older people, mental health, carers Individual Budget pilot sites • Brokerage • Resource Allocation Systems (RAS) e.g. In Control • Bringing together funding streams – could include NHS?

  3. Case studies - 1 A couple in their 80s both have multiple physical and mental health issues; the husband is registered blind and the primary carer. Their daughter gives them significant support. Social services provided support with getting up, which could vary between 9am and 12pm. Mrs T regularly spent time in a care home to give her husband much-needed breaks, but the separation distressed them both. Using an individual budget their daughter developed a support plan including employing an assistant during the week for domestic help as well as care, and their daughter helping at weekends; going to a hotel together for a break, with an agency visiting the hotel to provide care; and installing equipment to make things easier and reduce the incidences of Mrs T falling. Source: The Smith Institute and Anne McDonald for LGA

  4. Risks of personal budgets • System remains dependent upon effective assessments and decent entitlements • Barriers to pooling funding streams • Perceived as a money saver • Self-funding budget holders are currently poorly served • Provider market weakness could be exacerbated • Universal offer (outreach, information) needs core funding

  5. Case studies - 2 A gentleman with a learning disability who attended five days at a Day Centre was approached about having Direct Payments and told about the control he would have and the freedom to do what he liked. By the time the family were told about the proposal, he was enthusiastic about it and his family felt obliged to agree. He now has an assistant employed to help him with activities, but it transpires that the allocation can only provide four days a week and no holiday or sickness back up when his assistant is unable to work. His mother agrees that he has a more active life but she has had to reduce her hours at work and limit her own career aspirations to fill in the gaps in care.

  6. Risks – carers • The hidden workforce: 1.2 million care for 50+ hours p.w. • There are 6m carers with 2 million p.a. turnover. • More than 80% say caring has damaged their health. • Three out of four are worse off as a result of caring. • 3% of carers reported that they had lost their homes. • 50% give up work; retiring 8 years early on average. • 50% subsidise the costs of the cared-for person’s disability.

  7. Risks – carers • Carers have low entitlements themselves • Could be paid through personal budgets • Affected by changes in care packages and eligibility • Focus on individuals risks independence trade-off

  8. Current care funding mix • A personal budget administered by the Council (may include Community Care, Independent Living, Supporting People etc) • Disability Living Allowance/ Attendance Allowance for the disabled person administered by DWP. • Carers Allowance for the carer administered by DWP. • Entitlement to free NHS Continuing Care in some cases administered by the PCT.

  9. Benefits/ pension Work Housing Education/ training Outreach Health Participation, volunteering Family’s care needs assessed and supported Family potential and citizenship Leisure Mental health, relationships Choice & control Family’s self-care potential recognised and supported Safety/ risk taking Planning/ emergencies Parenting Unpaid family caring Information/ self-care training Peer/ community networks Towards a whole- family offer? • Three outcome areas (inner circle) cover family’s support needs, care resources and citizenship potential. • A range of possible services to meet the outcomes around the outside. • All of them require outreach, information (the middle band) to ensure offer is universal.

  10. The caring “tipping point” • Lower levels of care • shared across family • No health trade-off • Carers retain paid employment • Sustainable long term • High level of care • for a short time • Deteriorating health • Long term loss of employment • Care crunch

  11. Contact details:Alex Fox, Director Policy and CommunicationsThe Princess Royal Trust for Carers Email: afox@carers.org Tel: 07896291846 www.youngcarers.net www.carers.org

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