Search is Powered by Google
Aid / Disasters News

UK Dept of Health allocates £4.5 million to boost direct payments to 44 charities

Main Category: Aid / Disasters
Article Date: 14 Jun 2004 - 14:00 PDT

email icon email to a friend   printer icon printer friendly   write icon view / write opinions   rate icon rate article
<A HREF="http://www.mlclick.com/mlcl.php?aid=3934233BD2D210B4366019BE49DC8759" target="_blank"><IMG SRC="http://www.mlclick.com/mltr.php?aid=3934233BD2D210B4366019BE49DC8759&b=2" WIDTH="300" HEIGHT="250" BORDER="0" alt="Doctors, nurses and people like you responding to crises, sustaining hope - IMC You can help. Click Here."></A>


Current Article Ratings:

Patient / Public:not yet rated

Health Professional:not yet rated

Article Opinions: 0 posts

UK Health Minister Stephen Ladyman, today allocated funding of £4.5 million to 44 charities to create and boost schemes encouraging people to take up direct payments (cash in lieu of social services).

This announcement marks the completion of the second round of successful bids for the Direct Payments Development Fund. Working in partnership with local councils, voluntary organisations over the next 18 months will encourage people to exercise choice and control through the use of direct payments. The partnerships are expected to be up and running by 1 September 2004. The first round of successful bids was announced in August 2003.

Projects from the first round have been promoting direct payments in a number of innovative ways. For example,

-- Gateshead Crossroads are using 'social telephony' to get people into networks to talk about direct payments and support each other.

-- In Salford, the Council for Voluntary Services are developing elected user groups, trained to provide advocacy and support to their peers.

-- Equalities in Waltham Forest have employed outreach workers to go into mosques, churches, hospitals, doctors surgeries and voluntary organisations to talk to people from black and minority ethnic communities about direct payments.

Direct payments are key in the Government's commitment to promoting independence and freedom of choice for those needing care and support. By giving individuals money in lieu of social services people have greater choice and control over their lives, and are able to make their own decisions about how their care is delivered.

Dr. Ladyman said:

"We are pleased to announce today the successful bids to the second stage of the Direct Payments Development Fund. This Government has provided £9m over three years to enable voluntary organisations in partnership with councils to actively establish direct payments as an option for people across the country.

"We know that direct payments have made an enormous difference to people's lives. For example, a woman in Hampshire has told us that she had nearly been driven to distraction by 'carers' she had been sent under her domiciliary care arrangements. She explained that she needs a lot of intimate personal assistance, and had found it difficult to allow 'carers' to provide that degree of personal care and when it was different people nearly every time she found it extremely upsetting. She now has a direct payment and employs a personal assistant that she has known for a number of years. She now says that she is alive again and feels in control of her life.

"It is stories like this that make me realise how valuable direct payments are and how important it is for Government to ensure that people are able to exercise much more control and choice in their lives. "

Related links

Download Successful bids (PDF, 152K)

Introduction to direct payments

Notes to editor

1. Direct payments (cash in lieu of social services) for adults of working age were introduced in April 1997, through the Community Care (Direct Payments) Act 1996. They were extended to older disabled people in 2000. Since April 2001 (Carers & Disabled Act 2000) direct payments have been available to carers, parents of disabled children and 16 and 17 year olds.

2. The Direct Payments Development Fund was announced in October 2002, to encourage investment in direct payments support services. £9m over the next 3 financial years is being targeted at national, regional and local voluntary organisations, in partnership with local councils, to enable them to play a significant role in the development and promotion of direct payments.

3. The Health and Social Care Act paved the way for a variety of changes to the way in which direct payments schemes operate, and regulations that came into force on 8 April 2003 put a duty on councils to make direct payments to individuals who consent to and are able to manage, with or without assistance.

4. For more information on direct payments please visit the above link.

5. The successful bids can be seen at the above link.

6.. For public enquires, please contact the Department of Health Public Enquires Line on(+44) 020 7210 4850.

Contact
Press Office
Phone
Shima Islam
020 7210 5375

UK Department of Health Press Release




Customized Homepage Weekly Newsletters Daily News Alerts
Home About Us News Licensing Free Website Feeds Free Tools & Content Links Tell a Friend Accessibility Help / FAQ Article Submission Contact Us
Psychiatry Urology
Bipolar Diabetes Schizophrenia

add medical news today to your facebook

medical news gadget

Add to Google


developers
website gadget code
website news code
medical news rss feed links


MedReader RSS Reader

customize your homepage


These are the most read articles from this news category for the last 6 months:
Top Article Star
AIDS Epidemic Far From Over Says UN
10 Jun 2008
A new report by United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to be released today, Tuesday 10th June, at UN headquarters in New York, says that the global fight against HIV/AIDS is making significant progress, but...


When the Pain Just Won't Go Away
When the Pain Just Won't Go Away

If pain lingers for months and interferes with your life, chances are you are dealing with chronic pain. Depression and anxiety often go along with chronic pain. Getting a proper diagnosis is the first step to treating it successfully.

more videos are available in our health videos section.