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Long-term care tied in red tape

Posted: 21 April 2005 | Subscribe Online


The current system of social care is failing under Tony Blair's government. Support is fragmented and patchy and assessment of need is highly complex and bureaucratic. Long-term care home places have decreased by 80,000 since 1997, yet the number of people needing them has increased. Government has increased the number of child care places, but for every one it has created, one has closed. Add to this the decision to merge the Commission for Social Care Inspection and the Healthcare Commission, marking the fourth change in social work inspection in seven years, and it is clear that Labour has failed to deliver.
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The Conservatives believe it's time for action. Action to allow professionals to get on with their jobs and to cut bureaucracy and unnecessary paperwork. The problem of bureaucratic regulation of the long-term care sector is considerable.

On our first day in office, we will instigate a full and extensive review into all long-term care regulations and abolish those considered unnecessary and which do nothing to enhance quality of care. No longer will care homes close against the will and instinct of their owner because they cannot afford the adjustments required to meet over-prescriptive regulations dictated from Whitehall. Care home owners and their staff will not have to spend their time filling in paperwork when they could be caring for their residents.

Under a Conservative government, resources in public health will be able to support change in social care provision. They will not be confined to NHS boundaries. We are determined that government stop fiddling about with the funding system.
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We are also determined to give Britain's carers more control over the support they receive. More respite facilities will lead to fewer people needing intensive or emergency care. It is unacceptable that carers often find themselves unable to get relief when they need it most, and unfair that carers are forced to top up the costs of respite from their own money. We believe there should be clear and consistent rights to respite and are committed to ensuring that more people have access to respite care and short breaks.

Theresa May is the shadow secretary of state for the family


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