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NEWS RELEASE FROM THE Issued 11th October 2001 EAST MIDLANDS AND LINCOLNSHIRE LOCAL AUTHORITIES MAY BE
The warning comes from the Registered Nursing Home Association (RNHA), which says it cannot understand why councils such as Derby, Leicester, Nottingham and Lincolnshire should have been given proportionately less money than Brighton, Windsor and Wokingham. Fifty English authorities have been earmarked as 'priority areas', with the remaining one hundred receiving a reduced proportion of the total cake. The fifty favoured authorities are those where the Government perceives hospital bed blocking to be at its worst but, as the RNHA points out, the picture can and does change rapidly in any area of the country. Nor, says the association, is bed blocking the sole indicator of the crisis in elderly care that is sweeping Britain from north to south. According to the RNHA, the local authorities given a lesser priority for Government cash should be asking why they are not among the 'favoured fifty'. Said RNHA chief executive officer Frank Ursell: "Nursing homes provide long term care to many tens of thousands more patients than the NHS. We are, and have been for many years, the main providers. But rising costs and falling income mean that dozens of homes are going out of business every week because they cannot afford to continue. No area of the country is immune to this problem. If it carries on, we shall soon reach a situation where there is a dire shortage of places for older people, even if the money is available." Added Mr Ursell: "The fact is that you cannot provide high quality care for people for very dependent old people for an amount of money that would scarcely buy you bed and breakfast for the night in a cheap hotel. That is what nursing homes are expected to do for State-funded patients. Sadly, older people come at the bottom of the political pecking order. They get the crumbs from the table after everyone else has feasted." The RNHA believes more homes in many parts of the country will go out of business while the fees paid for publicly supported patients remain at an average of around ?48 a day. It is campaigning for a more realistic figure to be paid. The RNHA is concerned that the ten East Midlands and Lincolnshire councils getting a reduced proportion of the Government's most recent cash injection will be the least able to maintain, let alone increase, the necessary level of funding for State-supported patients. Northamptonshire and Peterborough are the only local authorities in the region to be included in the 'favoured fifty'. END Notes to editors: 1. The RNHA is the UK's leading representative organisation of the nursing home 2. On 9th October 2001, the Government announced that it would be giving local 3. East Midlands and Lincolnshire councils included in the majority group receiving For further information and comment, please contact: Frank Ursell, Chief Executive Officer, RNHA |
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The Registered Nursing Home Association, 15 Highfield Road, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 3DU
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Telephone: 0121 454 2511 Fax: 0121 454 0932 Freephone 0800 0740194 E-mail:
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