Zusammenfassung der Ressource
K101 Block 1 Unit 1 "Who Cares"
- Informal
arrangement
- Family Member
- Neighbour
- Friend
- Terms such as
"Informal" and
"Unpaid viewed
as belittling to the
carer.
- "...The term 'carer' means
someone who looks after a
friend, relative or neighbour
who needs support because of
their sickness, age or disability.
It does not mean a
proffessional care-worker in a
nursing home, for example - or
someone employed by a
disabled person." DIRECT GOV
2006
- WHO IS A TYPICAL CARER
*STATISTICAL DATA FROM 2001*
- 6 million unpaid carers
equal to 12% of adult
population
- 58% women
- 42% Men
- Peak age for caring is between 50 - 59 years
- 68% provide 0 -19HPW
- 11% provide 20-49HPW
- 21% provide 50+HPW
- How do people become Carers?
- Family Obligations
- Only Child
- Closest relative
- Reciprication of care
- Person requiring care assists in other ways eg. Babysitting, Cooking.
- "Paying back" of caring role previously held by person requiring care (eg. parent)
- "Expected to do it"
- "Woman's work"
- Only Child
- Live with person requiring care.
- No one else to help
- Person has no family/ family live far away
- Isolated community
- Do not know what help is available or where to ask.
- Do not see themselves as "Carers"
- Often the amount of care and
support given "creeps up" on
the Carer - not fully aware of
how much they have taken on
and the demands that this
places on them and the
extended network.
- ADVANTAGES OF
RECOGNITION
- This is important to...
- CARER: If they wish to
apply for financial
support
- BUDGET HOLDERS:
So they can plan
what support is required in
which areas
- ORGANISATIONS:
So they know who
requires this
support
- EMPLOYERS:
They are legally
obliged to take
a carer's caring
responsibilities
into account.
- May be entitled to practical help and support
- Carer's allowance
- Support targeted to their needs
- "Proffessional Carer's" assistance
- "Home Responsibility Protection"
- pension is protected if unable to
work.
- Legislation places a duty on the local
authority to let Carers know what
support they are entitled to.
- Legislation makes it possible
for the Carer to have their
needs
(Caring/Training/Lesiure)
assessed - not just the person
requiring care
- Large step admitting being a Carer to
oneself as well as others
- DISADVANTAGES OF
RECOGNITION
- complicating factors
- TIME SPENT CARING
- Must be over 35 HPW
to meet Government
definition for financial assistance.
- May fluctuate or be difficult to measure
- LABELLING AND
IDENTITY
- May not want/accept "Carer" label
- Difficult to accept or
clashes/contrasts with percieved
role/identity
- INTERDEPENDENCE
- Caring may be recipricated - not just
"one way" caring
- Often happens within famiies
- NETWORKS
- Extended family may also be
assisting with care tasks
- Definition of carer focusses
attention on one person even if
there is a network of support
- May not qualify for any "outside support"
- May be unwilling to admit they
are a Carer either to themselves
or other people
- The person they care for may
be unwilling to accept they
are being cared for
- Caring role may fluctuate -
would qualify some times but
not others
- Places the onus, and
acceptance of responsibility
onto the Carer.
- Usually unpaid by
the person
requiring support
- May be eligible for
Carers Allowance and
other benefits,
however conditions
apply - may affect both
existing benefits not
only of carer but also
the person requiring
support.
- In 2006 - 6 million Carers in
this position
- SAVE THE GOVERNMENT BILLIONS OF
POUNDS IN CARING FEES
- Recognised role in legislation.
- Carers (recognition and Services) Act 1995
- First Legislation to officially recognise Carer
role - amended Social Work (Scotland) Act.
- Carers Equal Opportunities Act 2004
- Community Care and Health (Scotland) Act 2002
- Social Work (Scotland) Act 1968
- All current legislation covers carers
aged 18 and over - No legislation
at present for carers under this age
however in Scotland a new
Carers law is in the consultation
stages which will include young
Carers for the first time.
- CARERS
ALLOWANCE
WWW.GOV.UK
*INFO CORRECT
2014*
- £61.35 PER WEEK
- Flat rate even if caring is done for more than 35 HPW
- MAY BE ELIGIBLE FOR FURTHER
BENEFITS
- Income related benefits
- Pension credits
- PAID DIRECTLY TO CARER HOW
THEY CHOOSE
- Every week
- Every 4 weeks
- Every 13 weeks
- COVERS ADDITIONAL CONTRIBUTIONS FOR THE CARER
- National insurance credits
- Additional state pension contributions
- Can also affect the benefits recieved by
the person being cared for - eg: Severe
disability premium or Council tax
reductions.
- Must meet the governments
definition of a carer to qualify
- CASE
STUDY 1:
Angus
McPhail,
Ann Walker,
Zoe Walker,
Bob Walker,
Yetunde
Unit 1
- PARKINSONS DISEASE
- CASE
STUDY 2:
David
Sinclair,
Veronica
Sinclair,
Unit 13
- MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS
- CASE
STUDY
3:
Anwar
Malik,
Hansa
Malik,
Unit 2
- DIABETES
- WHAT IS IT
LIKE TO CARE
- Demands skill
- Obligation
- Has consequenses for
"other" people - ie.
extended family
- POSITIVE
- rewarding
- Labour of love
- Stregthen relationship
- NEGATIVE
- Hard work
- Restricting
- Isolating
- Emotionally demanding
- Guilt provoking
- stressful
- WHAT IS IT LIKE TO BE
CARED FOR
- POSITIVE
- Enabling
- Maximises strength
- Strengthens relationship
- Promotes independence
- NEGATIVE
- Loss of power/control
- Lack of choice
- Feeling of burden
- Fear
- Isolation
- Changes dynamic
of relationship
- WHAT AFFECTS CARE
- QUALITY OF RELATIONSHIP
- Care takes place in the
context of the existing
relationship
- Particular emphasis on state of
relationship prior to caring
beginning
- Strengths and weaknesses of the relationship
are still the same and can be played upon by
either the carer or the person requiring
support
- CHOICE
- If positive then has better
outcome for both parties
- Not straight forward
- Complicated by outside factors
- Financial
- Social
- Lack of options
- SUPPORT
- INFORMAL
- May be non existant for some people with support needs
- FORMAL
- Entitlement to this support
- Unaware of support available
- The amount of either type recieved can make
a big difference to caring ability
- CHANGING FAMILIES
- PETER TOWNSEND: THE FAMILY LIFE OF
OLDER PEOPLE 1957
- Shared caring responsibilities amongst family members
- Almost half of interviewees
lived with younger family
members
- Most of the others had family nearby
- The average per interviewee was over
10 family members living within one mile
of them
- 85% of those
with children had
an adult child living
within this
distance
- Very few children moved away from parents
- People kept in
frequent contact -
only 4% of those
with children did not
see a child once a
week
- Caring tasks within families
were recipricated until the
person requiring care became
too ill or infirm
- "The two way traffic is an
essential feature of the family"
- Those with no
available family were
in the worst position -
most likely to require
state assistance.
- DENCH ET AL: THE NEW EAST END:
KINSHIP, RACE AND CONFLICT 1992-2005
- Ethnic diversity - 1/3 population Bangladeshi origin
- "Lot of lonely old peoole who don't see a soul"
- Living in 1 bedroom flats
- Family dispersed - leaving the area and moving further afield
- Young people leaving home
- Networks smaller (having smaller families)
- Families willing to care but
large pressure on them when
they try to do this
- CARING ONLY BECAME A
METTER OF PUBLIC INTEREST
DURING THE LATE 20TH
CENTURY DUE TO CHANGES
BETWEEN STUDIES