Category Archives: Carers

Sporting and cultural weekend of activities set to mark one year until London 2012

Will they have remembered carers and the disabled

19 July 2011

A raft of sporting and cultural activities are set to take place across the county this weekend (July 22, 23 and 24) as Norfolk County Council funding helps communities to mark one year until the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games begin.

The London 2012 Open Weekend will see events taking place on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday – with each using up to £500 worth of funding from Norfolk County Council to put on sporting and cultural events for local people to enjoy.

NHP is to run the Southern Cross care homes alongside Dr Chai Patel

Southern Cross landlord NHP to rescue 249 care homes

The biggest landlord to Southern Cross Healthcare says it will rescue 249 care homes across the UK by creating its own operating business.

 
 

5:45AM BST 19 Jul 2011

 

NHP is to run the Southern Cross care homes alongside Dr Chai Patel, the former boss of the famous Priory clinic.

Southern Cross Healthcare

The creation of the new business, which is yet to be named, helps to secure the future of more than half the Southern Cross care homes needing new operators.

Southern Cross, Britain’s biggest care home group, announced last week that it was beginning an “orderly closure” after its 80 landlords decided to take back their 752 care homes. The company had tried to cut its £250m rental bill because of falling occupancy rates and fees.

More delays on health and social care proposals!

Health and social care need equality

Dilnot proposals for social care divide the government, causing more delay to necessary reform, argues Peter Beresford

 

The proposals by Andrew Dilnot’s commission were described as ‘clever’, but now the coalition partners cannot agree on them. One of the words most often used about the proposals of the Dilnot commission was “clever”. As ever, social care, denuded of finance and political priority, was in search of some smart solution that would gloss over the essential reality of political life – that you get what you pay for.

This is now brought into sharp relief by the apparent inability of the coalition partners to agree on Dilnot’s proposals. After the report launch, we heard very positive and supportive responses from both Norman Lamb MP, the deputy prime minister’s political adviser, and the care minister, Lib Dem Paul Burstow. But this was not echoed by either the chancellor of the exchequer or the prime minister.