News

Charities round on top-up fees guide

Posted: 21 October 2004 | Subscribe Online


Older people's charities and care home campaigners have reacted with scepticism to government guidance intended to stop councils charging residents top-up fees.

Initially welcomed as a way to give residents a greater choice of care home (news, page 6, 14 October), the guidance has been described as "hollow" and a way of "passing the buck" from central government to councils.

It will place a duty on councils to give publicly funded clients the choice of care home as long as it meets their assessed need and the fees they charge are reasonable.
Article continues below the advertisement



Previously, councils could refuse to pay higher fees if a client refused the care home place offered to them by the council.

In such circumstances, councils could charge the resident a top-up fee for the difference between the two fee levels.

However, Help the Aged's head of public affairs, Mervyn Kohler, said that without extra resources from government councils were likely to fit the needs of clients around the available funds.

"These are fine words but, once you unpick them, local authorities will still decide who has to pay," he said. "A cash-strapped council will offer the best service it can, but this guidance won't change its behaviour. The cards remain very much in the hands of councils in how they interpret this."
Article continues below the advertisement



Fair care home fees campaign group NHFA said the guidance failed to solve the disparity between the fees councils were prepared to pay and care home providers' assessments of the true cost of care.

NHFA director Philip Spiers said the only solution was for the government to set regional rates for care fees.


Spread the word:   bookmark it! diggit! reddit!



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