Elderly care funding 'causes misery'
By Richard McIlroy
5live Report 8 September 2007, 23:27 GMT 00:27 UK
Next year will see more pensioners in the UK than children and ever more people will be facing up to huge bills for the cost of continuing care of the elderly.
For individuals, the magic number in England is £21,000. If you have assets of more than that to your name, you are liable to pay for your own funding.
Many elderly people faced with the costs of long term care have been forced to sell their homes or transfer their property and other assets to their children or other relatives.
The 5live Report has found that the system is a quagmire of red tape and bad advice, with rules being interpreted differently across the country.
Journalist Liz Penney and her sister were faced with looking after their parents who both needed care at the same time. Naïvely they used £50,000 of savings to pay for their father's care.
It was only after that had dried up, that they discovered he could have had that care for free as the savings were in their mother's name. But they couldn't get the money back
Family impact
"We were very angry about that," says Liz.
"It's driven my sister and I close to despair and exhaustion for two and a half years.
"We've more or less ignored our own children. We've had to throw all our own energies into our parents.
"And it's heartbreaking to see your parents to go into a pitiful decline and not be able to help them fully."
Owain Wright, head of care funding at Saga, encounters similar stories all the time.
"I think it is generally held that the system at the moment is not working for the majority of people," he said.
"Mainly because, if everyone who should get it did, then the system would crumble.
"Also the criteria are not great so we're finding Primary Care Trusts finding ways to deny people continuing care when perhaps a reasonable person might say they're eligible."
Simplified rules
In October, the government will implement new rules intended to provide a simplified national standard for who will foot the bill for looking after millions of pensioners.
The aim is to standardise decisions on who is eligible for continuing care.
The Care Service Minister Ivan Lewis says the new system will be "fairer and more convenient for both patients and professionals".
The government expects the new system will cost up to an extra £220 million in the first year of operation.
But the overall cost of looking after all the elderly in the UK runs to £42 billion a year according to the charity CareAware.
While acknowledging that the changes will go some way to ease the funding gap, critics say there are still millions of families facing financial meltdown to ensure that their loved ones receive the right care
Those with the most serious conditions are entitled to fully funded continuous care. But it can be very difficult to prove.
BBC News
By Richard McIlroy
5live Report 8 September 2007, 23:27 GMT 00:27 UK
Next year will see more pensioners in the UK than children and ever more people will be facing up to huge bills for the cost of continuing care of the elderly.
For individuals, the magic number in England is £21,000. If you have assets of more than that to your name, you are liable to pay for your own funding.
Many elderly people faced with the costs of long term care have been forced to sell their homes or transfer their property and other assets to their children or other relatives.
The 5live Report has found that the system is a quagmire of red tape and bad advice, with rules being interpreted differently across the country.
Journalist Liz Penney and her sister were faced with looking after their parents who both needed care at the same time. Naïvely they used £50,000 of savings to pay for their father's care.
It was only after that had dried up, that they discovered he could have had that care for free as the savings were in their mother's name. But they couldn't get the money back
Family impact
"We were very angry about that," says Liz.
"It's driven my sister and I close to despair and exhaustion for two and a half years.
"We've more or less ignored our own children. We've had to throw all our own energies into our parents.
"And it's heartbreaking to see your parents to go into a pitiful decline and not be able to help them fully."
Owain Wright, head of care funding at Saga, encounters similar stories all the time.
"I think it is generally held that the system at the moment is not working for the majority of people," he said.
"Mainly because, if everyone who should get it did, then the system would crumble.
"Also the criteria are not great so we're finding Primary Care Trusts finding ways to deny people continuing care when perhaps a reasonable person might say they're eligible."
Simplified rules
In October, the government will implement new rules intended to provide a simplified national standard for who will foot the bill for looking after millions of pensioners.
The aim is to standardise decisions on who is eligible for continuing care.
The Care Service Minister Ivan Lewis says the new system will be "fairer and more convenient for both patients and professionals".
The government expects the new system will cost up to an extra £220 million in the first year of operation.
But the overall cost of looking after all the elderly in the UK runs to £42 billion a year according to the charity CareAware.
While acknowledging that the changes will go some way to ease the funding gap, critics say there are still millions of families facing financial meltdown to ensure that their loved ones receive the right care
Those with the most serious conditions are entitled to fully funded continuous care. But it can be very difficult to prove.
BBC News
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