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Death inquiry urges review of funding

Posted: 24 July 2003 | Subscribe Online


An inquiry into the death of an 88-year-old woman soon after she was moved to a new care home has called for a national independent review of social care funding.

Violet Townsend died in February less than two weeks after she was moved from Magdalen House, Gloucester, her home for eight years. Gloucestershire Council could not afford to increase by £79 the £374.50 weekly fee it was paying to home owner Gloucester Charities.

The inquiry team, which was established by the council, concluded that the funding for residential and nursing care had "not kept pace with the growth in the market resulting from improved health care and subsequent changes in demography including longer life expectancy".
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It warned that the council could be "priced out of the market" unless additional funds were available to pay the fees needed to attract private capital investment in new homes. It has recommended that the inquiry findings be submitted to health secretary John Reid.

Liberal Democrat older people spokesperson Paul Burstow backed the calls for the government to commission an independent inquiry. It was "vital that residents of care homes have the security of knowing that what they regard as their home cannot be so easily taken away from them", he said.

Burstow presented a bill in the House of Commons last week to establish tenancy rights for care home residents to prevent them being evicted with less than a month's notice and to provide continuity of care when a home is closed.


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