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Behind the headlines

Posted: 02 May 2002 | Subscribe Online



Our regular panel comments on a topic in the news.

Spending on social care is to go up 6 per cent a year for the next three years, thanks to the chancellor's Budget. That equates to an extra £2.4bn, or £3.2bn if you include extra funding announced earlier. But how will the money be spent? On improved salaries to help alleviate the recruitment crisis? On more services for clients? On getting older people out of hospital more quickly or on fines for not doing so? On paying off the overspends afflicting a good many social services departments? Of course, the money was accompanied by high expectations of social services performance.  There will be financial incentives for more joint working, including the care trusts, and there will be an all-powerful Commission for Social Care Inspection to ensure that the new cash is used effectively.

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The commission, which will combine the Social Services Inspectorate with the infant National Care Standards Commission, will be independent.  Unlike the SSI, an arm of the Department of Health, the commission will be directly accountable to parliament through its independently appointed commissioner.

Julia Ross, social services director and primary care trust chief executive, London Borough of Barking and Dagenham
"We must stop thinking separately about funding health and social care - any improvements made to one have a direct impact on the other. We should be as delighted with the extra NHS money as we are with the cash allocated to social services. It's a major, radical step change. We can now move forward confidently knowing that public services are supported. I'm totally opposed to the so-called fining for delayed discharges - it'll just suck money out from social into acute care."

Bill Badham, programme manager, Children's Society
"It's a lot better than what used to get meted out to those most in need. We have expansion in social care, with emphasis on a better deal for families and the NHS. Much more must be done to tackle child poverty and bring equality of access to public services. The new Commission for Social Care Inspection sounds good: integration is excellent as long as inspection standards are not diluted."

Felicity Collier, chief executive, BAAF Adoption & Fostering
"We welcome the chancellor's investment of £2.7m to tackle child poverty, the creation of the child credit, and the linking of future increases of the credit to earnings rather than prices. However, there are still 3.9 million children living in poverty in the UK and tackling this will require sustained action over a long period. We also welcome the above-inflation investment in social services, but we must question whether even this level of funding can realistically meet the scale of the challenges ahead."

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Bob Hudson, principal research fellow, Nuffield Institute for Health, University of Leeds
"Delivering the NHS Plan is the most important official publication on social care since the NHS Plan itself. Overall, the budget and this subsequent publication constitute excellent news on the financial front, though the plea for spending on social care to match that on health has not been met. But in important respects social care is still being treated as an adjunct to the NHS. Policies like cross-charging could spill blood rather than cement partnerships, and Milburn is still hinting darkly at compulsory care trusts."

Martin Green, chief executive, Counsel and Care for the Elderly
"I broadly welcome the new money and also the moves to penalise local authorities over slow discharge, but I hope the quality of the discharge process will be taken into account. I welcome the merger of the SSI and the National Care Standards Commission, but it should have been done at the start of developing the NCSC. It is my view that these moves will end in the demise of social services departments as we currently know them."



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