Carers in north east Somerset will be able to take more breaks from their caring responsibilities thanks to lottery funding.
The Carers’ Centre charity has won £298,471 from the Big Lottery Fund’s Reaching Communities programme.
Carers in north east Somerset will be able to take more breaks from their caring responsibilities thanks to lottery funding.
The Carers’ Centre charity has won £298,471 from the Big Lottery Fund’s Reaching Communities programme.
The £72,000 cap on elderly care costs in England, due to be introduced in 2016, will benefit one in eight people, the government has said.
The revelation came as the government set out details about how it will work.
It confirmed there would be a deferred payment scheme under which the local council would pay care fees and claim them back from the estate after death.
Labour said the details would not help elderly and disabled people struggling to get the support they needed now.
Ministers say the cap on costs is a solution to the elderly care crisis, but the level at which the cap is being set is twice what was recommended, meaning the numbers benefiting will be restricted.
Heatwave: But experts are warning people to be aware of the risks
10:39am Thursday 18th July 2013 in News By Tarik Al Rasheed
The Met Office has put out a “level three” alert which is triggered when conditions deemed dangerous to health are reached.
A level three alert is triggered when conditions deemed dangerous to health are reached
The A&E department at Worcestershire Royal Hospital is already experiencing huge numbers of heat-related attendances while experts at Public Health England are warning that the scorching temperatures could potentially be deadly if proper precautions are not taken.
A level three alert is issued when “threshold” temperatures have been hit on consecutive days and the night in between.
These vary from region to region, but in the West Midlands the daytime is 30C and the night-time is 15C.
The current weather warning is just one step below the highest level four alert – classified as a national emergency – where the scorching temperatures continue for so long their impact could extend beyond the health and social care sectors, potentially even impacting on infrastructure such as transport and power.