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Council chief wants dedicated minister.

Posted: 18 November 2004 | Subscribe Online


Older people should be given a national voice through their own government minister, a conference was told last week.

The call came at a conference on delivering better services for older people, organised with Community Care. Delegates were told that there had been much progress on improving services for this group at local level, but there needed to be a clearer lead nationally.

Local councils were improving services and joint working was taking off, said Local Government Association director of education and social policy John Ransford.
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"I think local authorities are responding much more to what older people are telling them they want," he said. "Going round the country, I really believe we are getting there on some of this."

But he said this was not reflected at government level. "There is no clear steer from government and there is no minister for older people in central government."

National director for older people Ian Philp said there had been solid progress on improving the health of older people in recent years, but there were serious financial pressures on the NHS and councils.
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He called for "a degree of tolerance at a time of change and turbulence" for organisations trying to improve services.

The conference was also told that joint inspections of older people's services by the Commission for Social Care Inspection, the Healthcare Commission and the Audit Commission were soon to be piloted to reduce the bureaucratic burden on organisations.


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