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More help for carers and patients urged

Posted: 11 March 2004 | Subscribe Online


Local authority care support services are frequently failing to meet the needs of people suffering long-term conditions and their carers, new research reveals.

A survey of 52 service users, carers and voluntary workers carried out by the Long-term Medical Conditions Alliance (LMCA) and Neurological Alliance reports that many feel care support workers regularly fail to offer adequate standards of care for the service user. Low status, pay and morale of care support workers are all factors in this.
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In addition, carers do not see themselves as properly valued and say they lack adequate support. Respite care is difficult to obtain and often does not meet people's requirements.

The findings show that people with long-term conditions say they often feel discriminated against and have little or no input into the care they receive. However, the attitudes and awareness of health and social care professionals were described as presenting the biggest barrier to access.
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The survey was carried out between September and December 2003.

David Pink, chief executive of the LMCA, said the findings showed the "vital need" for a keyworker to explain what services clients and their carers were entitled to and the support they needed. 

- Report from www.lmca.org.uk/pdfs/nsf_pdfs/LMCA_NSF_Report.pdf


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