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One-stop shop call for deprived areas

Posted: 18 March 2004 | Subscribe Online


The Institute for Public Policy Research has called for a network of care centres to be established to act as one-stop shops for people with multiple needs who need access to a range of services.

The think-tank warns that often services fail to recognise the inter-connected nature of people's needs or that individual's needs are closely related to factors in the wider community, such as poverty and social exclusion. As a result, many services work in isolation and people are failed by the system.
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"Rather than experiencing a single targeted intervention to meet their whole needs, they receive multiple interventions that lead them on an unpredictable and repetitive journey around different agencies," it says in a report published last week.

The report, written with social care charity Turning Point, highlights the "strong link" between living in a deprived neighbourhood and experiencing complex needs, and warns that this is not being addressed by existing models of service delivery.
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The think-tank suggests that new models of "connected care centres" are set up in the most deprived communities, building on the best attributes of Sure Start children's centres, targeting those who are most vulnerable to experiencing complex needs.

People could make self-referrals, although assertive outreach staff would target the "hardest to reach".

Meeting Complex Needs: The Future of Social Care from www.centralbooks.com 


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