Councils urged to champion free personal care for over 65s

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Independent Age has urged local councillors to back the public’s call for the government to introduce free personal care for over 65s – something that is available in Scotland, but not in England.

The older people’s charity argues that the social care cap proposed by the government at the last General Election will not help 90% of older people and will do nothing to invest in the quality of care.

It says that free personal care will change that, for a similar cost to the cap, and address the social care challenges that local government are struggling to address by:

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  • Providing a social care guarantee that people want and need;
  • Providing better value for money for the taxpayer;
  • Reducing the need for residential care placements, which are funded at high cost by local government;
  • Supporting family carers to spend more time providing emotional support; and
  • Enhancing the integration of health and social care.

A recent YouGov poll found that 74% of adults in England aged 18-64 want free personal care for all older people, and 69% would be willing to contribute more to fund it.

In addition, there is growing parliamentary support for free personal care. A recent ComRes poll for Independent Age, which surveyed 116 MPs in England, found that three quarters of them (74%) agreed that free personal care, paid for through a social care contribution, should be provided to all older people needing it.

This reinforces the recommendations of the influential Health and Social Care and Housing, Communities and Local Government select committees’ joint report setting out the case for free personal care to be introduced, paid through a social care contribution.

George McNamara, director of Policy and Influencing at Independent Age, commented: “The introduction of free personal care is affordable and would lead to a fairer system for older people and address many of the social care challenges with which local government is struggling.

“Free personal care will increase accessibility to the support that older people want and need. It can be delivered at a similar cost to the government’s poorly targeted, high cost, cap on care costs, which will only benefit around 20,000 older people.

“The growing support for free personal care by the public, health and care leaders and parliamentarians shows how this policy could deliver the transformation in social care that is desperately needed.”

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