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Policy statements The quality of care services, whether provided in the home or in a residential setting, is of great importance to older people and is therefore a key focus of our work. Key elements of quality are the promotion of dignity, choice and control and consistently recognising and meeting the needs of older people. In the 2006 White Paper 'Our Health, Our Care, Our Say', the Government committed to changing the focus of care and health services to the community, moving away from the reliance on institutional and hospital based care. Help the Aged fully supports this policy direction and are leading the way in keeping the Government accountable to this. Crucial to this agenda is the continued development and support of low-level preventative services as well as innovation in the more intensive forms of home care and new models such as extra-care housing, to more traditional residential care. The key concern must be offering older people choice. In this section you will find information on our work to improve access to quality care. You will also find information on our efforts to ensure that social care services are adequately funded, and on our position on paying for care. Help the Aged is working to tackle the problem of elder abuse. More information can be found in the Elder Abuse section under Equality and Rights. For information on our work on human rights and care please visit the Human Rights section under Equality and Rights. Help the Aged has set up a specific programme of work to improve the quality of work in care homes. To access the website for this programme please visit www.myhomelife.org.uk or look at the Reports section of this page for the materials produced. The information in this section relates the Charity's lobbying and campaigning work on the issue of social care and paying for care. If you would like practical information on how to get help in obtaining or paying for social care, please visit the main Help the Aged site. Self-Directed Care (January 2008) Meeting Care Needs in the Community (October 2007) OfCare (September 2007) Care Homes and Long Term Care (April 2008) Health and Social Care Bill (April 2008) Low Level Social Care (September 2004) Response to the Government Green Paper Shaping the Future of Care Together (November 2009) Putting people first (November 2009) Fairer Contributions (April 2009) CQC Statement of Involvement (March 2009) Safeguarding Adults; a review of the ‘No Secrets' Guidance (February 2009) The Help the Aged and Age Concern response to the Department of Health consultation on the renewal of arrangements surrounding the safeguarding of vulnerable adults. 'No Secrets' was the previous guidance issued by the Department of Health for Local Authorities, setting out their responsibilities for safeguarding. Help the Aged comments on how this guidance operates in practice, what can be done to prevent abuse, and how to define abuse. Care, Support and Independence (November 2008) The Help the Aged response to the Government's call for stakeholder input to the reform of care and support provision in England. The future regulation of health and adult social care (June 2008) The Help the Aged response to the Department of Health's consultation on the framework for the registration of health and adult social care providers. Review of Fair Access to Care Criteria (May 2008) Common Assessment Framework (August 2007) The Help the Aged response to the Proposals for the Common Assessment Framework. Help the Aged were members of the Assessment and Care Planning Policy Collaborative set up to help steer the development of the CAF. This was not a public consultation. Key lines of regulatory assessment (KLORA) (July 2006) Proposed changes to the Regulatory Framework for Adult Social Care (January 2006) Proposed Changes to Residential Care Charges (March 2006) Independence, Well-being and Choice: A Vision for the Future of Social Care for Adults in England (July 2005) Help the Aged response to the Government's Green Paper on social care. Social Policy Age Information Network (SPAIN) response to consultation on Green Paper on social care (July 2005) Consultation response by the Social Policy Age Information Network (SPAIN) coalition of charities to the Government's Green Paper "Independence, Well-being and Choice: A Vision for the Future of Social Care for Adults in England". Making Safeguarding Everybody's Business: A Post-Bichard Vetting Scheme (July 2005) Help the Aged response to the proposals to create a centralised vetting and barring scheme for people working with vulnerable adults. Proposed change to residential care (February 2005) Response to the Department of Health consultation on proposed changes to residential care charges, including information on personal allowances, capital limits and pension credit. Helping services to change lives (January 2005) Response to Social Care Institute for Excellence (SCIE) on the proposed establishment of Care Services Improvement Partnership. Learning from complaints (January 2005) Response to the Commission for Social Care Inspection consultation on the second stage of the complaints procedure for social services, focusing on concerns of older people receiving less support from social care services. Personalisation in Social Care (March 2009) This paper briefly introduces the systems of social care provision in France, Germany, the Czech Republic and the Netherlands, all of which operate on the basis of personal budgets. The systems are linked by the common principles of user choice and control to which the UK currently aspires. On Our Own Terms; The challenge of assessing dignity in care (October 2008) The Challenge of Dignity in Care: Upholding the Rights of the Individual (October 2007) Underfunded, undervalued and unfit (March 2007) My Home Life - Executive Summary (November 2006) Also available on the Help the Aged website, this is a summary of the full report 'My Home Life, Quality of life in care homes' (2006), published by the Policy Press. My Home Life Literature review (January 2007) - Updated September 2008 What Price Care (July 2005) Based on a workshop for Action on Elder Abuse conference. Older people join social care inspectors in examining care homes (September 2006) A new ‘Experts by Experience’ programme has been announced, where older people employed, trained and supported by Help the Aged work alongside inspectors from the Commission for Social Care. (Policy Update) Bill to help protect vulnerable older people forges ahead (August 2006) Report calls to end means-testing in social care (May 2006) Damning report published on care services for older people (April 2006) Government releases paper on changes to community health and social care services (February 2006) Social care services fail to meet older people's needs (January 2006) Options paper seeks fairer ways to pay for care (September 2005) |
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