Category Archives: ukcuts

Disabled person’s care cash stopped after Council declared them dead !

A disabled Norfolk person had their care cash stopped after a council official incorrectly recorded them as being dead.

Richard Wheeler Friday, July 6, 2012
6:30 AM

A disabled Norfolk person had their care cash stopped after a council official incorrectly recorded them as being dead.

The individual also had their blue badge disabled parking pass cancelled after the error, which has forced Norfolk County Council to review how it notes deaths of patients.
Care staff are due to be issued with new instructions telling them to making sure they write down who tells them of a person’s death and how it happened. The culprit for the initial error has not been found.

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?

Unpaid carers cost economy £5.3bn, charity warns

27 June 2012 Last updated at 09:12

Over 300,000 carers in England have left employment to provide unpaid care

Carers who give up work to look after others cost England’s economy about £5.3bn a year, the charity Age UK says.

It says an unfit care system means people often have to give up work to help the elderly or adult disabled.

The figure was calculated on the lost earnings and forgone taxes of more than 300,000 unpaid carers.

The government says its long-awaited white paper on social care is “imminent” and will include funding changes to “transform care”.

Michelle Mitchell, charity director general of Age UK said: “For many people, caring for a loved one is second nature and they wouldn’t have it any other way.

“But carers should never be forced to sacrifice their own financial security and wellbeing due to the lack of service provision and support from public services.

“Care cannot wait any longer – this is the government’s last chance to get it right and set their political legacy for generations to come.”