- Home » Expat News » Elderly UK expats returning home caught in social care trap
Elderly UK Expats Returning Home Caught In Social Care Trap
| Published: | 2 Feb at 6 PM |
Want to get involved?
Become a
Featured Expatand take our interview.
Become a
Local Expertand contribute articles.
Get in
touchtoday!
British expats returning to the UK with serious health problems are facing a funding lottery harming their care home and social service needs.
It’s sad but true that expat life as a retiree with health problems can result in an unwelcome but forced return to the home country, but the state of social care in the UK is a lottery at best and collapsing at worst. A recent freedom of information enquiry revealed a massive lack of funding across over a hundred local councils which is preventing pensioners getting the care they desperately need. The survey showed three funding policies spread across the 120 councils surveyed, but all are failing to meet the needs of vulnerable old people.
The first and least generous involves a funding cap which will not be exceeded regardless of the amount required to provide care to the needy. The second is a funding cap which is allowed to be breached depending on the merits of individual cases. The third gives no published rates, but agrees case-by-case funding where necessary. Expats most affected by this mish-mash of policies are those who’ve returned home as they can no longer look after themselves overseas.
Understandably, the majority are searching for care home accommodation near long-term friends and family members but, in most cases, this isn’t possible due to spending cuts and mismanagement of available funds. Many care homes are cash cows for their corporate owners and charge unreasonably high fees for a far less than perfect service. Worries over care home services have been the subject of media attention for some years, especially as those the homes are meant to help may not be capable of fighting for their consumer rights.
Local authorities aren’t blameless either, with retirees and their families forced to bargain with bureaucrats on a regular basis simply to ensure adequate care. Of the councils surveyed, some 33 per cent refuse to breach their fixed limits, 50 per cent routinely went over their limits and just one-sixth used the case-by-case basis to allocate care.
Comments » No published comments just yet for this article...
Feel free to have your say on this item. Go on... be the first!
RECENT NEWS
From Ancient Trade To Modern Travel: Silk Road Tourism Surges Across Eurasia
The 30th Tashkent International Tourism Fair highlights Silk Road tourism growth, driven by flights, multi-country route... Read more
US Transport Chief Urges Passengers To Dress With Respect. Critics Say Clothes Arent The Problem
Transport Secretary Sean Duffy’s video campaign romanticises an era that never truly existed, critics say. Read more
Travel Disruption: Thousands Of Airbus Planes Grounded After Faulty Software Detected
Airlines have been forced to ground thousands of Airbus planes following a software problem possibly linked to an aircra... Read more
Is Vienna Dull? Austria Invites Entire Scottish Village To Find Out
Vienna is so eager to bust its ‘dull’ reputation, it has invited 100 Scots to experience the city’s highlights. Read more
Volcanic Disruptions Are One Of The Greatest Threats To Air Travel. Could New Forecasts Change That?
Advances in volcanic ash forecasting could transform the aviation industry, avoiding the mass cancellation of flights. Read more
Venezuela Withdraws Operating Permits For Six Airlines After Ultimatum Over Suspended Flights
The Maduro government has revoked the operating permits of Iberia, TAP, Avianca, Latam Colombia, Turkish Airlines and Go... Read more