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Election policies

Posted: 28 April 2005 | Subscribe Online


Recruitment Talk takes a look at the three main parties’ social and health care policies that might impact on workforce issues. Also, because much of social and health care policies are devolved we also look at Scotland and Wales.

Labour
• Establish 3,500 Sure Start children’s centres by 2010 offering information, health care, family support and 8-6 pm child care.
• Extend the early education entitlement for three and four year-olds to 20 hours a week, with greater flexibility as to when the entitlement may be used.

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• Develop a new programme to work with parents supporting children’s early learning and development.
• Improvement to services for young people through the DfES five-year strategy, the Every Child Matters change programme and 14-19 reforms. The strategy includes more integrated children’s services; earlier identification of those at risk; greater choice of vocational routes post 14; and a crackdown on truancy and poor behaviour.
• Appropriate resources and support from trained staff for children with special educational needs in a mixture of mainstream schools and special schools.

The Conservatives
• Instigate locally run support schemes for new parents in the early months offering practical information and guidance as well as relationships support.
• Expansion of the number of psychiatric care places for adolescents.
• Suspension of the closure of special schools.

The Liberal Democrats
• Appropriate training for all teachers and teaching assistants working with children with special educational needs.
• Match Labour’s commitment to rolling out children’s centres and extending preschool entitlement to 20 hours a week.
• Create a Children’s Profession with early years teachers qualified to the same level as teachers.
• Provide training and communication networks for nannies and childminders in early years centres as part of their aim of encouraging greater use of childminders.

Health and social care are devolved to the assemblies. Here are what the parties are saying in Scotland and Wales.

Scotland
Labour
• It will expand the case management for people with long-term conditions to enable them to move out of hospital with help from their GPs. Labour will also continue with its Scottish policy of free personal and nursing care.

The Liberal Democrats
• The Lib Dems want to build on free personal care with investment in more community services and hospitals for older people.
• Creation of a fund for councils and health boards to improve care for older people by locating different services under one roof using powers in the Smoking, Health and Social Care Bill to allow better co-operation and joint ventures between councils and health boards to tackle delayed discharges.

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The Conservatives
• The Conservatives also want to address delayed discharge and will bring health-related social services under the control of the NHS in order to do so.
• They will also give people more control over their social care package, and in conjunction with their GP, to choose the care best suited to their needs from either the public or independent sectors.

Scottish Nationalists
• The Scottish Nationalist Party is critical of waiting times and wants more doctors trained and to keep services local. It will ensure that half of the membership of health boards will be lay members.

Wales
Labour
• Labour will continue cutting delayed discharge and build on free nursing care for people. From September 2005 they will begin to scrap homecare charges for the disabled.
• It will continue to fund and extend respite care, assess carers’ needs and reform NHS practices to make life easier for carers. And allocate necessary funds for this.

The Conservatives
• The Conservatives will give people more control over their social care and introduce a partnership scheme so that no one is compelled to sell their home to pay for long-term care.
• They also want carers who look after elderly or disabled relatives, including those suffering from long-term conditions, to have more support.

The Liberal Democrats
• The Lib Dems would create more intermediate care facilities to reduce the risks associated with cutting delayed discharge without the necessary support. The would also build walk in treatment centres open seven days a week to provide basic health care.

Plaid Cymru
• Plaid calls for more investment in the recruitment and retention of social care staff. It also calls for greater support for carers of people at home and free home care for disabled people.
• Plaid would extend nursery provision to give everyone the chance of a place for three to four year olds.
• It also supports free personal care for older people.



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