Tag Archives: ukcuts

Neighbours must help elderly more – Norman Lamb

1 January 2013 Last updated at 16:41

Neighbours must help elderly more – Norman Lamb

Elderly hand holding coins Ministers are considering a cap on social care fees

People should do more to help elderly neighbours and ease the pressure on care homes, the care minister has said.

Greater community support would prevent pensioners living a “dismal existence” and going into care unnecessarily, said Norman Lamb.

He told the Daily Telegraph local councils should be helped to rebuild a “neighbourly resilience“.

He also said a deal to cap personal spending on care fees would be unveiled in coming weeks.

The cap was a key recommendation of the government-appointed Dilnot Commission report into care in England, which said it should be set at between £25,000 and £50,000, with £35,000 the fairest figure.

Thousands of elderly needlessly in hospital

Thousands of elderly people are being kept in hospital needlessly after the number of district nurses fell by almost one fifth.

 

Delays in patients being discharged from hospital – often those who are elderly and frail – are frequently the result of a lack of NHS services in the community, such as district nurses

By , Political Correspondent

8:00AM GMT 31 Dec 2012

Official NHS figures disclosed that the number of district nurses working in England declined from 7,813 in May 2010 to 6,424 in August this year.

This represented an 18 per cent cut in the service, which provides nurses to visit elderly and disabled adults in their own homes, since the Coalition was formed.

The fall coincided with a marked increase in the number of days that frail patients spent on hospital wards because of a shortage of adequate community health and care services.

Care of the elderly: it's not too late to make Britain a good place in which to grow old

At this time of year as families gather, our thoughts turn to the nation’s elderly and how to provide for them fairly

 

The elderly need the cap on social care to be honoured and paid for fairly.

Over Christmas and New Year, families gather, take stock and compare notes. One family’s grandfather died after just retiring, but an elderly aunt, who has never taken any exercise, is living well into her 90s and racking up enormous care bills. It is never more obvious that life expectancy, even allowing for the inequalities of class, is still a roll of the dice. The healthy die of the unexpected, while the unhealthy can live well beyond their expected span.

Figures confirm the reality. You could be among the one in four people who, after they reach 65, will spend very little or nothing on their care before they die. Alternatively, you could be among the one in 10 with some endemic ailment who will spend more than £100,000 and, on current rules, be forced to sell your house to pay for the care. In an ageing society, this is beginning to become a politically hot issue.

Nor have the consequences of age and infirmity much to do with virtue, “striving” or your due deserts. If you have been dealt the wrong genes – dementia, say, or some crippling disability – you will be hit however virtuously you have lived, and the care costs could be explosive and long lasting. This is one of the brute hazards of life.