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Evidence scant on self-directed support despite positive findings

Adult social care is at a turning point. From April, councils in England will be judged on their ability to give people greater control and choice over their care, through self-directed support.

Maria Ahmed
Thursday 13 March 2008 10:51

Adult social care is at a turning point.

From April, councils in England will be judged on their ability to give people greater control and choice over their care, through self-directed support.

Under the government’s Putting People First concordat, councils must, by 2011, ensure many more users should be assessing their own needs and have set up a system for giving users personal budgets, providing a transparent allocation of resources for their adult care needs.

Personal budgets target for all users

In the longer-term, all users, apart from in emergencies, should be using personal budgets, with the possibility of extending these into other funding streams, through so-called individual budgets.

While the agenda is not new, evidence about what works is relatively slight and progress gradual, according to major research published today (Thursday) on in Control, a model of self-directed support hailed by the government as the way forward, which began in 2003 in six English councils.

In his foreword, care services minister Ivan Lewis says of in Control: “Its innovative and ground-breaking work has been a major factor in ensuring that self-directed support and personal budgets are now at the heart of a radical social care transformation which will begin this April.”

The findings, however, reveal many uncertainties beneath the rhetoric.

Unchartered territory

“If many more authorities - or indeed the national system - now seriously take up the goal of total transformation, we shall be in deeply uncharted territory,” the report by in Control experts says.

While results from in Control between 2005-7 are “encouraging”, only around 3,500 people - out of over one million adult social care users - are getting self-directed support from the over 100 English councils involved.

Despite the small base, the report’s findings are the strongest evidence yet that self-directed support can and does work.

Read the full story.

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Essential information on individual budgets

More information

In Control

Individual budget programme

 

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