News

'Shake up funding to head off crisis'

Posted: 21 November 2002 | Subscribe Online


The care sector will be hit by a crisis unless there is a radical review of funding, the King's Fund warned last week.

Speaking at the launch of Unfinished Business, which reviews the progress made in the care sector since last June, the report's author, Janice Robinson, said government initiatives, such as the £300m for building capacity and the 6 per cent rise set out in chancellor Gordon Brown's budget, were short-term measures made in response to other issues.

"The government has reacted to problems in the hospital sector," she said. "The connection has been made that we need to invest in social care to ease problems in hospital care. These are admirable short-term fixes to introduce greater stability but there are underlying capacity problems."
Article continues below the advertisement



The report recommends a "radical review" of funding, and efforts to tackle the low pay and status associated with work in the sector.

Robinson added that the General Social Care Council did not intend to introduce interim registration for care workers while the register was still being established, and highlighted that the risk of abuse would be higher with the increased use of direct payments.

Rodney Brooke, chairperson of the GSCC, added that even if 5,000 care workers were registered each month the size of the workforce would mean that the process would take 20 years. "We don't want the register next April to collapse," he said.

- Unfinished Business is available from website www.kingsfund.org.uk/eKingsfund/assets/applets/Unfinished_Business.pdf


Spread the word:   bookmark it! diggit! reddit!




Products and Services
  • RSS Feeds
  • Conferences
  • Jobs By Email
  • News
  • Blogss
  • Videos
  • Magazine Subscriptions
  • Podcasts