New publication by The Kings Fund – How Covid-19 has magnified some of social care’s key problems
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New publication by The Kings Fund – How Covid-19 has magnified some of social care’s key problems
The Kings Fund publish a new report examining some of social care’s key problems magnified by Covid-19
In 2019 The Kings Fund published the eight key problems facing social care
These included
- means testing: social care is not free at point of use like the NHS
- catastrophic costs: some people end up paying large amounts and even selling their homes to pay for care
- unmet need: many people go without the care and support they need
- quality of care: a wide spectrum of concerns, from 15-minute care visits to neglect and lack of choice and control
- workforce pay and conditions: staff are underpaid, leading to high vacancy rates and turnover
- market fragility: care providers go out of business or hand back contracts
- disjointed care: health and care is not integrated around the individual and causes issues such as delayed transfers of care from hospital
- the ‘postcode lottery’: there is unwarranted variation between places in access to care and its quality
“Now, the Covid-19 pandemic has shone an uncompromising light on the sector, its staff and the people of all ages who use its services. As the sector emerges slowly into a new normal, fearful of a second wave while still trying to make sense of the first, it’s time to take stock. Analysis is difficult because of the lack of up-to-date, quantitative data and the ongoing nature of the pandemic. Nonetheless, in six of those eight areas, Covid-19 has brought significant change and, if anything, exacerbated these challenges.”
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