News

Viewpoint: Social care needs space to flourish

Posted: 25 August 2005 | Subscribe Online


Disabled people and social care professionals welcomed the adult social care green paper. At last, here was a statement from the government that valued social care and social work and recognised the contribution both can make to enhancing the quality of life for disabled and older people, and to the government's agendas to tackle social exclusion and promote independence.

But where are we now? We are slipping back to the bad old days of adult social care and social work being seen as an adjunct to the NHS and being measured on how they deliver on NHS priorities.
Article continues below the advertisement



Social care and social work is much more than tackling acute hospital delayed discharges and being contained within the rather negative heading of Out of Hospital Services, which is the threatened title for the forthcoming NHS (and social care) white paper.

Social care and social work merit their own space and profile within political, policy and practice agendas.

Social care and social work have a tradition of working in partnership with disabled and older people, accepting and developing the social model of disability, developing an increasingly broad menu of assistance, and recognising people's capacity, competence and contribution while taking action to provide advice, assistance and, where necessary, protection. It is social work, in particular, which stays alongside people at times of distress.
Article continues below the advertisement



Social care and social work should be central to the government's ambitions. Disabled people, with their concern about patronising, paternalistic and sometimes disempowering services based on a medical model and clinical traditions, recognise the importance of social care and of social workers.

So, let's hope the care services minister fulfils the promise of the adult social care green paper. Social care may be the minnow alongside the NHS mammoth, but for disabled people it is the people who work in social care who are their allies.
We need to shout now and hope that this is a "listening government".

Ray Jones is director of adult and community services at Wiltshire Council and deputy chair of the British Association of Social Workers


Spread the word:   bookmark it! diggit! reddit!



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