1 / 14

Spending on Free Personal Care

Free Personal Care for the Elderly: Reflections on Universalism Professor David Bell University of Stirling. Spending on Free Personal Care. 2011/12 Total FNPC Spend= £450m Total AA Spend = £481m AA Spend - Scotland/UK = 9%. Take up of Free Personal Care .

cianna
Download Presentation

Spending on Free Personal Care

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. Free Personal Care for the Elderly:Reflections on UniversalismProfessor David BellUniversity of Stirling

  2. Spending on Free Personal Care 2011/12 Total FNPC Spend= £450m Total AA Spend = £481m AA Spend - Scotland/UK = 9%

  3. Take up of Free Personal Care

  4. Care home clientneeding both nursing and personal care • England • Nursing Care – £109.79 pw • Personal Care – £0 pw • Attendance Allowance – £79.15 pw • Total - £.188.94 pw • Capital Limit - £23,250 • Scotland (over 65) • Nursing Care – £75 pw • Personal Care –  £166 pw • Attendance Allowance – £0 pw • Total - £241 pw • Capital limit - £25,250

  5. Older People’s Use of Health and Social Care in Scotland

  6. Spending on Health and Social Care for Older People

  7. Current Scottish attitudes to free personal care Individual Survey conducted by YouGov Dec 2013 n = 2032 Question The free personal care scheme should be scrapped and not replaced All older people, whatever their income, should continue to be entitled to free personal care The free personal care scheme should be replaced with a scheme available only to those on lower incomes. Don't know No opinion

  8. Attitudes to Free Personal Care

  9. Support for FPC by level of income

  10. Support for FPC by age

  11. Preferences for free tuition and FPC

  12. Income per household

  13. Reflections • Gatekeeper effects • Payments for personal care • AA claimants in Scotland = 132,000 in Aug 2013 • Perception and reality of universalism may be quite different • Free care in Scotland? • Not all universal benefits are equally valued • Support tends to be biased towards probability of benefit • Important to understand spillover costs/benefits of universal policies • Belief that universal policy provides universal solution can be misplaced • FPC does not fully insure against costs of care

  14. Age • All age bands that elderly people should have free personal care. • Younger people between the bands of 20 to 30 have the lowest support for means tested elderly care. • Preference for universal elderly care increases with the age of the respondents .

More Related