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Pledge to assess carers goes unmet

Posted: 05 June 2003 | Subscribe Online


Just under a third of carers have been assessed by social services despite a government pledge to appraise all of them.

Research by charity Carers UK published this week in the run-up to National Carers' Week finds that almost half of the carers who had not been assessed did not know about their right to an assessment.

A third were unaware of the reason for being assessed and a quarter saw the practice as pointless. This view was found to be intensified by some social services staff's negative attitude towards assessments.
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Charity chief executive Diana Whitworth said many local authority staff were unaware of the new legislation. She also blamed underfunding of the social care sector, with many councils saying they did not have the money to provide carers with adequate support.

The survey, which covered nearly 2,000 carers, also shows that more than half of those who were assessed did not receive any extra services as a result, even though two thirds of them felt they were not getting the support they needed.
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Carers UK is arguing for a legal duty to be placed on councils to inform carers in England of their right to an assessment, as is the case in Scotland and Northern Ireland. It also wants the government to propose action for the next phase of the National Strategy for Carers.

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