Author Archives: Maureen

Suffolk: New ways of delivering care on the way

Suffolk: New ways of delivering care on the way

Suffolk Family Carers chief executive Jacqui Martin Suffolk Family Carers chief executive Jacqui Martin

Thursday, September 5, 2013
9:00 AM

Home care for frail people across Suffolk could get a radical shake-up after a county-wide consultation over the next few months.

Meals on Wheels changes

The county is also looking at how it provides community meals services from September next year.

At present it provides 219,000 hot meals to about 725 customers a year. The cost of the meals is £1.4 million, and the £5.50 cost of the meals brings in £1.2 million – meaning the cost to the council is just over £200,000 a year.

About half of the meals have to be put on plates for the customer, 35% require diabetic diets, and 15% need “modified texture diets.”

Dr Murray said the council would be looking at how these meals were delivered – for those who were able to cope it might be better to deliver frozen meals that could be microwaved when needed. The cost of those is £3.20 each.

However because an increasing number of customers were very frail, that might not be a solution for many of those requiring the service.

Britain has become a ‘neglectful society’, warns care minister

The demands of modern life have turned Britain into a “neglectful society” in which has become the norm for older people to be left isolated, a minister has warned.

Care cap will only help small minority of elderly, officials admit

Norman Lamb: we have become a neglectful society Photo: Alban Donohoe

Norman Lamb, the care minister, said that elderly people are being starved of basic kindness and companionship because of extended family networks, which once underpinned society, have been increasingly dispersed.

Mr Lamb, who is spearheading wide-ranging reforms to the care system, said state intervention would not in itself be enough provide people with the “good life” in their final years unless people “step up” and play a greater part.

Addressing a conference organised by the Alzheimer’s Society in London, he also acknowledged that the home-care system is now so starved of cash that increasingly depends on “exploiting” low-paid carers, often immigrant workers, who “subsidise” their work from their own pocket.

Almost 300,000 people who suffer dementia only venture outside once a week

Dementia: hundreds of thousands who rarely go outside

Almost 300,000 people who suffer dementia only venture outside once a week at the most and tens of thousands have given up doing so altogether, a study has found.

 

Hundreds of thousands of dementia sufferers rarely go outside, a study suggests
 

Research by the Alzheimer’s Society highlighted how people suffering dementia feel increasingly trapped in their homes because of the difficulties of getting around.

The study called for a radical redesign of Britain’s cities – from shops to public transport – to accommodate growing numbers of people with conditions such as Alzheimer’s as the population ages.

It included a rare poll of dementia sufferers, completed with the help of carers, which found that more than two thirds are reluctant to venture outside for fear of becoming confused and getting lost or difficulties using transport or shops.