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Elderly people in England could be required to pay up to
£20,000 to guarantee basic social care and support if they
need it at the end of their lives, under Government proposals
released today.
The compulsory insurance scheme is one of three options for funding
a new National Care Service, designed to end the current "cruel
lottery" under which some elderly people have to sell their homes
and use up most of their savings to pay for care, while others pay
nothing.
Launching a consultation on the future of social care with a
statement in the House of Commons today, Health Secretary Andy
Burnham said he wanted to create a system which was "fair, simple
and affordable" to all.
He has already ruled out full state funding from general taxation,
on the grounds it would place too great a burden on people of
working age, and retaining the "pay for yourself" system, which is
unfair to those who need years of care for conditions like
Alzheimer's.
And he today called on the public to give their views on three
possible solutions:
- A "partnership" approach, under which the state would pay around a quarter to a third of the cost of basic social care and support, leaving individuals to find the remainder.
- A voluntary insurance scheme, under which the state would pay the same proportion, but would also make it easier for individuals to take out insurance - at an estimated cost of around £20,000 to £25,000 at today's prices - to cover the rest.
- Compulsory insurance for all, costing around £17,000 to £20,000 at today's prices and providing free care for all who need it.
The National Care Service would offer assistance with needs like
dressing, washing and moving around at home, but individuals who
need to go into residential care would continue to pay the cost of
accommodation and food themselves, whether they had taken out
insurance or not.
However, new national arrangements would allow for bed and board
costs to be deferred and paid as a lump sum after the individual's
death.
The Department of Health is also consulting on whether insurance
costs should be deferred until after death, paid in instalments or
handed over in a single lump sum when an individual reaches
retirement age.
Under all three options, those with little or no savings or assets
would continue to receive free care.
At present, apart from those on low incomes or disability benefits,
all elderly people are expected to pay for the full cost of social
care, which can eat up all their savings - including the equity in
their home - to a threshold of £23,000.
Around 20% need care costing £1,000 or less during retirement
but 50% need more than £25,000 and 20% more than
£50,000, while a few can run up bills of £200,000 or
more. The average 65-year-old today can expect to need care costing
£30,000 - with the burden on women averaging £40,400
and men £22,300.
Mr Burnham said the figures contained in today's Green Paper,
Shaping the Future of Care Together, were "indicative" but all
three options could be expected to cost the state around the same
as the current £14.7 billion annual budget.
He said the cost of care at the end of life was "the stealthiest
tax of all".
"It is a real injustice that people who have worked all their life
and paid taxes all their life, if they are unlucky enough to
develop a condition like Alzheimer's in later life, they get no
help to deal with the implications of that condition," said Mr
Burnham.
"The way we look after our older people defines what we are as a
country and I believe we can do better than we are today."
A National Care Service would get rid of "inequities and
inconsistencies" by ensuring care needs were assessed and paid for
in the same way everywhere in England and were based on personal
circumstances and needs, he said.
Consultation on today's proposals will continue until November, and
firm plans are expected to be published in a White Paper next year,
to be phased in over a number of years from 2014.
In a foreword to today's document, Prime Minister Gordon Brown
wrote: "The fact that as a nation we are now living longer is
clearly a cause for celebration, but it also means that the
pressures on our care and support system are greater than ever
before.
"A care and support system that reflects the needs of our times and
meets our rising aspirations is achievable, but only if we are
prepared to rise to the challenge of radical reform."
Mr Burnham said successive generations of politicians had
"flinched" from reform of the care funding system, but action was
necessary now because people were living longer.
There are now more pensioners than children in Britain, and the
burden on workers to cover state pensions and health care costs
will increase.
By 2026, it is estimated there will be 1.7 million more adults
requiring care and support in England. While there are currently
four people under 65 for every one over that age, by 2029 the ratio
will have dropped to three to one.
It is estimated that unless urgent action is taken, there will be a
£6 billion black hole in the funding of social care within 20
years.
"We know that the money in the system at the moment will not be
enough to pay for everyone's care and support in the future," said
the Department of Health in today's Green Paper.
"If we want to meet the needs of all those who require care in the
future, then as a society we are going to have to pay more for care
and support. The question is where this additional money is going
to come from."
The Government signalled yesterday that the legal retirement age of
65 is set to be scrapped or raised, allowing people to work for
longer if they want to.
The age from which the state pension is payable is also due to rise
to 68 for both sexes by 2046.
Jon Sparkes, chief executive of national disability charity Scope,
said: "We urgently need a fairer, flexible and more transparent
system where costs are spread more equitably, where people
understand what support they are entitled to, and where eligibility
is determined by need, not postcode.
"Whilst we understand there is no extra money in the pot, existing
funding needs to work harder and deliver more."
GMB national officer Sharon Holder said: "GMB want the Government
to support the option that residential care for the elderly is paid
for out of taxation - like the NHS.
"We consider that this is the only fair solution. It is a complete
lottery as to which one in 20 elderly people end up in residential
care. GMB figures show that 43.4% of those in care have to pay for
themselves which in itself is another lottery.
"For Labour to make a manifesto commitment to return the welfare
state once again to a cradle to grave service would be immensely
popular.
"The Tory party, who introduced care home charges last time they
were in power, will not support this. That would leave clear red
water between the parties on this important social policy."
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HealingMindN - http://bioenergeticspectrum.com
Commented 33 weeks ago
At least the UK's compulsory insurance scheme is focused on an age bracket as opposed to Obama's scheme of compulsory health insurance for everyone.
I think it's a great idea to extend the retirement age. No matter how old a person gets, they still want to feel useful. Some pensioners want to take it easy once they hit "retirement age." Old age is a matter of cultural perspective.
All people need throughout their lives - especially their golden years - is a healthy quality of life. I'm talking about keeping people alive and well - not alive and feeble their way mainstream medical practice does it.
IMHO, there's way too much money being pumped into mainstream medicine and not enough into alternative/complementary medicine. Holistic healing is far cheaper than mainstream medicine (including big pharma). Invest that money into holistic healing modalities for the elderly that will keep well and useful as well as alive.
Increase their quality of life. Keep them out of the rest home. Everyone spends less money for a better quality of life. Then everyone is happy.