Category Archives: Older care

A minister for older people would be a victory for all generations

Intergenerational squabbling over housing is missing the point, all generations should welcome the Commons’ decision

 

 

“This isn’t about pitting old against young,” said Anchor chief executive Jane Ashcroft

With the media drawing battle lines between young and old, last week’s vote in the Commons urging the government to consider appointing a minister for older people could be seen as a victory for the greys.

The debate, prompted by a 137,000-strong petition presented to Number 10 in November, follows increasingly frenzied reporting about which generation is faring the worst in the economic crisis. But, as attendees at a Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF) consultation on housing policies for all generations heard, such intergenerational squabbling is missing the point.

The consultation, a result of a partnership between St George’s House and the JRF, brought together senior figures to consider what a fair housing deal across the generations would look like.

How to fund care for the elderly – that is Britain’s most urgent challenge

After months of delay, the white paper on social care will be published within a fortnight. Disastrously, it will be a fudge

We are living longer, and we need the help that all too often there aren’t family members around to provide.

What’s the biggest decision facing the coalition? Lords reform? A euro referendum? Punishing greedy and incompetent bankers? No, no, no. Let’s talk instead about David.

David was in the Royal Navy and worked hard until he was 70. Now aged 76, he’s done all the right things … well, except for one thing – which is to suffer from a severe neurological disorder. He needs carers four times a day for dressing, washing and feeding, and can only get a shower once a week. Recently, his wheelchair brake broke and his carers refused to lift him out of his chair and into bed for health and safety reasons, so he spent three days sitting in it.

I spoke to David last week. After half a century of hard work, his payments for the care he needs – shared with his local authority – have recently risen from £260 to £324 a month, and he struggles to pay the bills from his dwindling savings and pension. Nobody told him it would be like this.

The point, of course, is that almost all of us are David, potentially. We live longer, we are infirm for longer, we need the help that all too often there aren’t family members around to provide. This is the huge question mark in the later stages of most lives – how will we cope and how will we pay?

LET’S FIGHT FOR THE ‘FORGOTTEN GENERATION’

Grandparents can care for the young but who will care for the elderly

Tuesday June 26,2012

By Esther Rantzen

TEN MILLION people in Britain are without a voice, without an advocate, without rights of their own yet these 10 million have spent their lives earning the right to respect and advocacy and their voices desperately need to be heard. They are the Britons over 65 who have given so much to our country.

Many worked hard, brought up families, scrimped and saved during the war years and are still proud and uncomplaining. Many are being parents all over again – a recent survey suggested 25 grandparents a day quit their jobs to help their own children raise families.

In these tough times, with more new mums having to go out to work to support the family, it’s grandparents who are being relied on to look after the children and ensure continuity at home. Yet despite most willingly doing all they can for the family they remain unpaid, unrecognised and somewhat forgotten – not by their children and grandchildren but by society and, more specifically, the Government.