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May demands right to respite care and signals role for voluntary sector

Posted: 06 October 2005 | Subscribe Online


All carers should have the right to receive respite care and the voluntary sector would have a part to play, Theresa May, shadow secretary of state for the family, said this week.

She said costs would limit the right to respite care to begin with, but such support made financial sense because of the huge contribution carers made to society.

May told a Conservative conference fringe meeting that it would be expensive to implement, but that was where her thinking was going.

She wanted to get away from the postcode lottery that existed in respite care provision.
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"We have to begin by drawing a line in the sand and saying the value of work that carers do is such that it actually requires us to give something back," she said.

But she warned that the system must avoid being so state-driven that people became dependent on it.

May argued that the voluntary sector should be empowered to become more involved in respite care and also called for the direct payments system to be less bureaucratic.

The Commission for Social Care Inspection's chief inspector, David Behan, told the session that current ways of commissioning must change if the vision of personalised care was to be delivered.
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Behan said there were no specific qualifications for commissioners, who were often appointed because they were good managers.

Meanwhile, in her keynote speech to the conference, May said there was no place in the party for the small minority who did not consider women, black people or gay people their equals.


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