Tag Archives: carers

TWENTY years of offering support to people with learning disabilities

Learning disability charity rolls out celebrations near Leamington

Staff and users of learning disabilities charity Turning Point enjoying the 20th anniversary roller disco at the Sydni Centre.

Published on Tuesday 27 September 2011 11:58

TWENTY years of offering support to people with learning disabilities in Warwickshire was celebrated by charity Turning Point at a roller disco at the Sydni Centre in Sydenham.

Staff and service users from centres around the county, along with their families and friends, were joined by the mayor and mayoress of Leamington at the event.

Media group to launch commercial lottery

27 September 2011 Last updated at 12:36

At least £50m would go to health-related causes, which could include respite care and counselling for young carers

A new commercial lottery intended to raise £50m a year to tackle health inequalities will be launched later.

The Health Lottery, run by Northern & Shell media company which owns Express newspapers and Channel 5, will offer a £100,000 top prize.

It will donate over 20p per £1 ticket to charity, compared with 28p for every National Lottery ticket.

The charitable donation has been described as a “pretty disgraceful development” by a charity chief.

The results of years of underfunding for care

Don’t ask relatives to fill the elderly care gap

The idea that visiting hours could be extended so relatives can care for patients shows something is seriously wrong in the NHS

The RCN has suggested that visitors could tend to the needs of elderly patients.

The Royal College of Nursing’s suggestion that hospital visiting hours should be extended so visitors can tend to the needs of hospital patients, particularly older people, highlights, yet again, the inadequacy of UK care. With an ageing population and a woefully underfunded system of care, we are heading for a major crisis if we do not wake up to the challenges that are already upon us. When it comes to care for older people, a fortune is spent on the health service, but care is considered very much the poor relation.

Yet inadequate care of elderly patients can be just as life-threatening as inadequate attention to their medical needs. We read about pensioners dying of malnutrition in hospitals and of nursing staff so overstretched that they neglect the basic care needs of the elderly. This is a result of years of underfunding for care.