Category Archives: ukcuts
Get your windows clean and help family unpaid carers
Friday 10 May 2013
Get your windows clean and help the carers
Getting Kilkenny’s windows gleaming for summer, local company McCreery Contract Cleaning is launching its new ‘Reach & Wash’ window cleaning system with a fundraiser for family carers.
All companies and homes who book window cleaning services with McCreery Contract Cleaning from May 7–10 inclusive will see the full cost donated to the Carers Association, Kilkenny. To book the service, Freefone 1850 211 863.
There are 4,055 family carers in Kilkenny. Many are living in very difficult circumstances having faced a number of recent cuts in services and payments, including cuts to vital home help hours and an almost 20% reduction in the Respite Care Grant in Budget 2013.
“Having cared for my own mum, I have a huge respect for the work of family carers,” said Jennifer McCreery of McCreery Contract Cleaning.
WEST NORFOLK: Dementia patient angry at cutbacks
Sunday 5 May 2013

WEST NORFOLK: Dementia patient angry at cutbacks
A mental health patient has criticised planned cuts in dementia services as a money-saving operation.
Norfolk and Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust announced two weeks ago that staff numbers in Dementia and Complexity in Later Life services in West and Central Norfolk would be cut from 178 to 137.
The redundancies were said to be part of a four-year strategy involving “huge and complex” changes including new local commissioning arrangements and financial restraints caused by the recession and public spending cuts.
A former patient of the Fermoy Unit in Lynn, James Cramp, 69, of Columbia Way, was concerned about job cuts at the Chatterton House dementia unit and the Fermoy Unit at Queen Elizabeth Hospital.
Past carers need more help to enable them to return to the work place
Informal Carers: The forgotten employees
01 May 2013
Providing unpaid care for disabled, sick or elderly relatives and loved ones is often a physically and emotionally challenging task for the individual. Informal carers not only reduce the burden on the social care system and therefore the economy, but they often do so with very little support (financial or otherwise) for themselves. This group are also often excluded from the job market, with over a million UK residents providing 50 or more hours of care a week, more than full-time working hours. For those who have fewer hours of caring responsibilities, a lack of flexibility in the workplace may also make continuing work impossible. A survey by Carers UK (in 2011) found 44% of carers reporting that they had been pushed into debt as a result of the extra costs of caring or of giving up work or reducing working hours to provide care.