October 11, 2013

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Adult social care 'unfit for purpose' health experts warn

The adult social care system is "fundamentally broken" and "unfit for purpose" health experts warn today, amid calls for a radical shake-up for service provision.

This damning indictment of the system comes as the Care Bill returns to Parliament and is contained in a new policy paper issued by the University of Birmingham and Birmingham City Council, following an in-depth study of adult social care provision by local authorities across England.

Professor Jon Glasby, Director of the Health Services Management Centre, and lead author of the report, said: "Local authorities across the country are struggling to meet their responsibilities in a very difficult financial and policy context. With higher levels of need, higher public expectations and widespread cuts, the previous approach to adult social care feels fundamentally unfit for purpose."

The policy paper, entitled Turing the welfare state upside down? Developing a new adult social care offer calls for a new approach to adult social care.

The report also calls for:

The report states: "For many commentators, the adult social care system is fundamentally broken. This is not the fault of current workers, managers or policy makers – but there is strong consensus that we still have a 1940's system which is increasingly unfit for purpose in the early twenty-first century."

The study was based on a review of how local council websites frame what they do for local people and interviews with a series of leading national stakeholders and good practice examples.

Its aim was to produce a policy paper to guide ' thinking on the potential for a new adult social care "offer" to local people.

Professor Glasby added: "Rather than starting with deficits (things people can't do for themselves), we need to start with social capital and community resources (things people can for themselves and others, and everyday solutions that make sense to them). In future, adult social care needs to adopt more of a community development approach - working with individuals, groups and communities to build capacity and helping people to find new ways to achieve chosen lifestyles."

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