New Continuing Care Figures Show “Unbelievable” Local Differences
New Department of Health statistics obtained by Age Concern indicate the scale of the postcode lottery for continuing care.
{mosimage}The new statistics show that some Primary Care Trusts – who are responsible for deciding who gets and who pays for continuing care – record over 40 times more people continuing care as a proportion of their population than others. While local anomalies explain some of the most extreme figures, it cannot fully account for the scale of the differences.
Continuing care in a care home means that it is fully-funded by the NHS, which includes all accommodation, food and nursing and personal care costs.
At home it means personal care as well as health care is provided free. Anyone whose “primary need for care is a health need” should be eligible – but many unfairly miss out.
Rotherham; Newbury and Community; Ashton, Leigh and Wigan; Eden Valley; and Central Suffolk all give continuing care to just 0.5 people per 10,000 adults – this compares to over 15 PCTs that give over 20 people per 10,000 adults continuing care.
Some areas have worryingly low percentages of their populations getting continuing care – such as many PCTs in South Yorkshire, Nottinghamshire, Lancashire and Derbyshire.
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