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The Care Act: Assessment and eligibility

The Care Act: Assessment and eligibility. Paul Woods Social Care Group June 2014. Assessment. Assessment based on appearance of care and support Assessment must: consider person’s needs & outcomes they want to achieve; Consider if the person wants to carry out a self-assessment

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The Care Act: Assessment and eligibility

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  1. The Care Act:Assessment and eligibility Paul Woods Social Care Group June 2014

  2. Assessment • Assessment based on appearance of care and support • Assessment must: • consider person’s needs & outcomes they want to achieve; • Consider if the person wants to carry out a self-assessment • Appropriate & proportionate; • Whole family approach; • Involve the person needing care, carer and anyone else the person wants; • consider if the person needs help to participate in the assessment, advocacy?

  3. Assessment • Assessment must also consider: • Prevention; • Person’s own skills, wider support network or community. • Assessors must have appropriate training and be competent. • Specialist training to carry out assessment of people who are deafblind. • What further circumstances are there in which a person undergoing assessment would require a specialist assessor? Please describe why a specialist assessor is needed, and what additional training is required above the requirement for the assessor to be appropriately trained to carry out the assessment in question.

  4. Eligibility • National minimum eligibility threshold has been set through the Spending Review for 2015/16. • This will allow current practice continue in the vast majority of local authorities. • Eligibility threshold set in regulations. Engagement on first version of the draft regulations started last June: • DH held engagement workshops; • Eight workshops held: three in London, Birmingham, Taunton, Derby, Preston, Gateshead. Around 250 people, representing over 100 local authorities • The Care and Support Alliance engaged with people who use services and their carer’s; and • Nearly 400 users of care services and carers took part in the survey. • Comments received through the eligibility mailbox • 68 submissions from 63 respondents (34 third sector organisations, 24 local authorities, 5 individuals)

  5. Key Messages on Eligibility for People with Care and Support Needs

  6. Eligibility: Research Estimated eligibility under FACS: older people Estimated eligibility under national eligibility criteria: older people The Care Bill: reforming care and support legislation

  7. Eligibility: How the draft regulations have changed • Making clear the tests to be considered: (1) care and support needs (2) unable to carry out an activity (3) significant impact on the person’s well-being. • Requiring that an adult must require support to achieve some “basic care activities”. • The list of “basic care activities” includes “basic household activities” and now includes the adult’s ability to getting up and dressed and moving around their house. • Clarified the wording of the carer’s eligibility criteria. • Removed references to making carer’s eligible for support where they do not want to carry out a caring role. • Introduced a requirement to consider whether the carer or the person they care for has fluctuating needs. The Care Bill: reforming care and support legislation

  8. Consultation Questions: Eligibility • Do the draft eligibility regulations, together with powers to meet other needs at local discretion, describe the national eligibility threshold at a level that will allow local authorities to maintain their existing level of access to care and support in April 2015? If you believe they don’t please explain your reasons for this. • Do you think that the eligibility regulations give the right balance of being outcome- focused and set a threshold that can be easily understood, or would defining “basic care activities” as “outcomes” make this clearer? • Do the current definitions of “basic care activities” include all the essential care tasks you would expect? If not, what would you add? • Are you content that the eligibility regulations will cover any cases currently provided for by section 21 of the National Assistance Act 1948? • Does the guidance adequately describe what local authorities should take into consideration during the assessment and eligibility process? If not, what further advice or examples would be helpful? The Care Bill: reforming care and support legislation

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