Tag Archives: Older care

No help for the aged: Home carers axed for our old and most vulnerable

Elderly people are suffering as £1billion is slashed from councils

 

Cuts: Care funding is being slashed across the country

 

For our most vulnerable pensioners, home care visits are the lifeline that allows them to live with dignity.

But the Sunday Mirror can today reveal they have become the latest service to fall victim to the ­Government’s funding axe.

A fresh wave of cuts has led to the price of having a carer visit a sick or elderly person soaring by 10 per cent.

Carers help the sick, frail and ­elderly get up in the morning, get washed, dressed and fed. They also lend a hand with household chores and ­shopping.

Outrage as pensioner sees care home fees doubling to £125,000 a year

Sandford Station retirement village is charging a 76-year-old resident £125,000 a YEAR in fees

By Daily Mail Reporter

PUBLISHED: 11:48, 23 May 2012 | UPDATED: 11:59, 23 May 2012

Rocketing costs: Jacquie Heal, 44, from Bristol with the paperwork from the care home Sherwood Lodge where her mother is a resident

The family of a pensioner are furious after her care home fees were more than doubled to a staggering £125,000 a year.

Pamela Watts, 76, is currently paying £3,543 a month out of her savings to live at a care home in Sandford Station Retirement Village in Somerset.

But her fees are now being increased to £10,355 per month, of which the Government contributes just £432.

The home, run by the St Monica Trust, says Mrs Watts’ fees have increased because of her complex and challenging needs.

She has been given until July to decide whether to pay the increased fees – or move out.

Time to wipe away the whining about paid carers

The quality and quantity of care that’s on offer for older people was unimaginable a couple of generations ago

 

We need to connect the arm’s-length overclass with the hands-on reality of being a carer, says Stewart Dakers.

Doris, myself and Charlie are in the cafe across from the bus stop discussing the latest care home scandal involving the abuse of residents by carers. The newspapers are full of recriminations, interviews with ministers, Age UK and emoting relatives. It will not be long before I am “in care”, and so I have an interest in such incidents.

It has often appeared to me that there is an unpleasant taste of self-righteousness among the prosecution, and that they are out of touch with the realities of the care situation. Charlie, as usual, does not mess about: “They’re all bloody foreigners, them nurses. Don’t understand our ways.”

He’s spot on, though not in the way he means. The care staff don’t understand our ways, because most of them come from cultures that view the dislocation of elderly people from their families as barbaric.