• The Guardian view on NHS politics: a truce is necessary but not inevitable | Editorial

    The Guardian view on NHS politics: a truce is necessary but not inevitable | Editorial
    Tribal hostilities run deep but there is no enduring solution to the healthcare crisis without bipartisan compromisePrime minister’s questions, when the House of Commons works itself into an adversarial frenzy, is not a forum made for non-partisan collaboration. So it was not surprising when, on Wednesday, a request that Theresa May convene cross-party hearings on the crisis facing the National Health Service had a mixed response.Mrs May answered Norman Lamb, the Liberal Democrat
  • Labour plans review of carer’s allowance after thousands forced to repay

    Labour plans review of carer’s allowance after thousands forced to repay
    Alison McGovern says UK would ‘grind to a halt’ without unpaid carers and confirms party will review system if it wins powerLabour will review the system of carer’s allowance if it wins the general election, the party has confirmed, after the Guardian revealed that scores of unpaid carers were being forced to pay back thousands of pounds for minor breaches of benefit rules.Thousands of carers have run up huge debts, been given criminal records and been forced to sell their home
  • Eileen Jarvis obituary

    Eileen Jarvis obituary
    My mum, Eileen Jarvis, who has died aged 92, devoted her life to fighting for the rights of women and children, first with the women’s liberation movement and as a volunteer for Women’s Aid reguges, and then as a social worker in three London boroughs.Her passion for social work stemmed from the poverty she had witnessed growing up in north Wales, as well as the tragic high-profile case of Maria Colwell, a seven-year-old killed by her stepfather in 1973. While raising her own daughte
  • Revealed: hundreds of vulnerable children sent to illegal and unregulated care homes in England

    Revealed: hundreds of vulnerable children sent to illegal and unregulated care homes in England
    Observer investigation finds that private companies made £105m despite not being registered with OfstedHundreds of extremely vulnerable school-age children in England are being sent to illegal, unregulated homes every year because of a chronic shortage of places in secure local authority units.An Observer investigation has established that councils placed 706 children, the majority of them under the age of 16, in their care in homes that were not registered with Ofsted, the children’
  • Advertisement

  • ‘Nowhere else is available’: how vulnerable children end up in illegal care homes

    ‘Nowhere else is available’: how vulnerable children end up in illegal care homes
    Harrowing court video hearings reveal plight of those unable to find a place in secure, registered accommodationThe judge sitting in the family division of the high court can barely hide his concern and frustration as he listens to a barrister acting for Kent county council update him about the plight of a vulnerable 14-year-old girl in an unregistered, illegal children’s home run by a private company.She is at risk of child sexual exploitation. In the past, she has run away, taken hard dr
  • ‘They’re heartless’: how one woman fell victim to the carer’s allowance trap

    ‘They’re heartless’: how one woman fell victim to the carer’s allowance trap
    Karina Moon, who is sole carer for her daughter most of the week, was told she needed to repay £11,292.75 or be prosecuted for fraudEx-ministers press Sunak on ‘persecution’ of carers who broke earnings rulesCarers in the UK: have you been threatened with prosecution for benefit fraud?Karina Moon vividly reacalls the telephone call that brought her to tears. She was stood, frozen, in the living room of her home in north Wales as a government official told her she needed to repa
  • It’s a rotten system that puts unpaid carers in the dock | Letters

    It’s a rotten system that puts unpaid carers in the dock | Letters
    A council’s benefits expert and a tribunal judge, plus other readers, respond to reports on how the DWP is persecuting carers for unwittingly breaching complicated benefits rulesI have worked in benefits for more years than I care to admit, although for local authorities rather than the Department for Work and Pensions. The news about the persecution of carer’s allowance claimants is not surprising (Calls to end ‘persecution’ of carers over UK benefits rule breaches, 9 Ap
  • Many aged care workers may wait until 2026 for full pay increase as Albanese government requests phased implementation

    Many aged care workers may wait until 2026 for full pay increase as Albanese government requests phased implementation
    Commonwealth requests Fair Work Commission phase in full 23% increase over two years to prevent workforce shortages elsewhereFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our morning and afternoon news emails, free app or daily news podcastAged care workers should wait until January 2026 for the full 23% pay rise ordered by the Fair Work Commission, according to the Albanese government.The commonwealth has requested that the commission phase in the increase over two years, from Janua
  • Advertisement

  • Tell us: how did Sure Start help you or your child?

    Tell us: how did Sure Start help you or your child?
    We would like to hear from people who benefited from New Labour’s early years programmeGordon Brown and other veterans of the last Labour government have called upon Keir Starmer to include a new Sure Start-style programme in his election manifesto after a study showed its benefits to children from low-income backgrounds.Sure Start was first announced in 1998 and saw the development of hundreds children’s centres across the UK. Continue reading...
  • The Guardian view on carer’s allowance: people who look after others should not be an afterthought | Editorial

    The Guardian view on carer’s allowance: people who look after others should not be an afterthought | Editorial
    The DWP’s system punishes claimants for payment errors. But it is the rules, not the carers, that are most at faultThe problems caused by attempts to reclaim benefit payments to carers, on the basis that they are ineligible due to increased earnings, are not new. Between 19,000 and 39,000 overpayments have been logged in each of the last five years. But this only makes the latest details of the heavy-handed manner in which these situations are being dealt with all the more dismaying. It is
  • Who are unpaid carers, and why have some had to repay large sums to UK government?

    Who are unpaid carers, and why have some had to repay large sums to UK government?
    Rules around earning limits for people in receipt of carer’s allowance risk them unknowingly racking up debt to DWPCarers threatened with prosecution over minor rules breachesAnalysis: Why are so many carers being taken to court?Unpaid carers provide support for loved ones – normally parents or children, who are disabled, frail or ill. There are an estimated 5.7 million carers in the UK. The majority of unpaid carers are women. The 46 to 65 age group is the biggest unpaid carer cohor
  • Who are unpaid carers, and why have some had to repay large sums to the UK government?

    Who are unpaid carers, and why have some had to repay large sums to the UK government?
    Rules around earning limits for people in receipt of carer’s allowance risk them unknowingly racking up debt to DWPCarers threatened with prosecution over minor rules breachesAnalysis: Why are so many carers being taken to court?Unpaid carers provide support for loved ones – normally parents or children, who are disabled, frail or ill. There are an estimated 5.7 million carers in the UK. The majority of unpaid carers are women. The 46-65 age group is the biggest unpaid carer cohort.
  • The financial, physical and emotional toll of being an unpaid carer | Letters

    The financial, physical and emotional toll of being an unpaid carer | Letters
    The government provides nowhere near enough support for people who care for their loved ones, writes Kirsty McHugh of the Carers Trust. Plus a letter from someone who cares for a partner with a mental health condition, and another from Jane Nation on the invisibility of disabled peopleYou’re right to praise Kate Garraway for shining a light on the financial, physical and emotional toll of being an unpaid carer (Editorial, 27 March). The government still provides nowhere near enough support
  • The right to carer’s leave in Britain is a step forward, but a system that relies on unpaid care is still wrong | Emily Kenway

    The right to carer’s leave in Britain is a step forward, but a system that relies on unpaid care is still wrong | Emily Kenway
    A week’s break would have made a huge difference to me when my mum had cancer – and so would recognition of carers’ vital roleFor the first time, employees in Great Britain are going to have the right to time off work for caring responsibilities. This change, which comes into effect tomorrow, will affect about 2.5 million people who are juggling employment with caring for long-term sick, disabled or elderly loved ones. I know first-hand why carer’s leave is sorely needed.
  • Lease electric cars to rural care workers, UK climate charity says

    Lease electric cars to rural care workers, UK climate charity says
    Possible charity highlights financial savings and environmental benefits for low-paid staffMinisters should consider a social leasing scheme for care workers in rural areas across the UK to use electric cars, a climate charity has argued, saying this would save often low-paid staff large sums, also bringing a big environmental boost.A focus group of carers in rural and semi-rural parts of the UK, carried out as part of the study, found that one woman earning less than £20,000 a year as a m
  • ‘If you want to abuse your workers, that’s fine’: UK modern slavery watchdog’s funding cut

    ‘If you want to abuse your workers, that’s fine’: UK modern slavery watchdog’s funding cut
    Government accused of undermining the fight against labour abuses after £2m real-terms cut to oversight budgetBritain’s labour abuse watchdog has had its funding cut by the Home Office despite a dramatic surge in exploitation in the care sector.The budget of the Gangmasters and Labour Abuse Authority (GLAA) has been set at £6.25m for 2024-25 compared with £7.7m last year, official figures show. Continue reading...
  • Finley Boden ‘should have been one of the most protected children’, finds review

    Finley Boden ‘should have been one of the most protected children’, finds review
    Baby murdered by his parents after ‘inadequate safeguarding’ by authorities in Derbyshire, says reportA 10-month-old baby, who was killed by his parents just 39 days after a court returned him to their care, should have been “one of the most protected children in the local authority area”, a review has concluded.Finley Boden died on Christmas Day 2020 after a period of “inadequate safeguarding” by authorities, who initially removed him from the care of his par
  • Home Office granted 275 visas to nonexistent care home, report finds

    Home Office granted 275 visas to nonexistent care home, report finds
    ‘Shocking’ system for awarding care worker visas leaves people at risk of exploitation, inspection report saysA damning inspection report has found multiple failures in the Home Office’s system for awarding care worker visas, including 275 granted to a care home that did not exist.The report found the whole regime of allowing care homes to sponsor visas to bring in workers from overseas was “shocking” in its implementation, and the net effect was “a system tha
  • Home Office granted 275 care worker certificates of sponsorship after ‘false’ application

    Home Office granted 275 care worker certificates of sponsorship after ‘false’ application
    ‘Shocking’ system for awarding care worker visas leaves people at risk of exploitation, inspection report saysA damning inspection report has found multiple failures in the Home Office’s system for awarding care worker visas, including 275 certificates of sponsorship granted to a care home without its knowledge and “using false information”.The report found the whole regime of allowing care homes to sponsor visas to bring in workers from overseas was “shocking
  • Care home residents enjoy theatre schools’ 50s-themed musical drama production

    Care home residents enjoy theatre schools’ 50s-themed musical drama production
    Residents from three Dorset and Hampshire care homes enjoyed a post-war Britain-themed production performed by a theatre school in Bournemouth.Care home residents from Castle Dene in Bournemouth, Elizabeth House in Poole, and St Ives House in Ringwood saw BIGLITTLE Theatre School’s musical drama show, The Trainmaster, at Bournemouth School for Girl’s performing arts centre. The story focused on a revered railway stationmaster, his family and the passengers, and was performed by the t
  • Siblings begin independent living journey at Grantham supported living service

    Siblings begin independent living journey at Grantham supported living service
    Conversion work has been completed on a house in Grantham which has enabled three adults to start a new life and live independently.  Radis Community Care will provide supported living services to the individuals in partnership with Golden Lane Housing, supported housing landlords for people with a learning disability and those living with autism. Siblings, Aiden and Shannon, have moved out of their family home for the first time this month to start living independently at this ne
  • Veterans enjoy exotic food and drink, and a Mad Hatter’s Tea Party

    Veterans enjoy exotic food and drink, and a Mad Hatter’s Tea Party
    The importance of a healthy diet has been highlighted by Royal Star & Garter during Nutrition & Hydration Week.Residents at the charity’s three Homes took part in cooking activities, taste tests and tucked into yummy foods, snacks and drinks, as part of Nutrition & Hydration Week, which took place between 11 and 17 March.Royal Star & Garter provides loving, compassionate care to veterans and their partners living with disability or dementia, from Homes in Solihull, Surbiton
  • St Mary’s Group Care Homes Recognised in Knight Frank’s Luxury Care Home Guide 2024

    St Mary’s Group Care Homes Recognised in Knight Frank’s Luxury Care Home Guide 2024
    St Mary’s Group is proud to announce that two of its distinguished care homes, St Mary’s Riverside in Hessle and St Mary’s Lodge in Anlaby, have been named finalists in the Knight Frank Luxury Care Home Award 2024. This prestigious recognition places both homes among the top 100 care facilities in the UK, a testament to their commitment to luxury and quality care.Knight Frank Healthcare, renowned for its expert valuation and advisory services to the UK’s leading care oper
  • Transforming Care Through Digital Innovation: A Call to Action for UK Care Providers

    Amid a growing social care crisis, innovative solutions are not just a necessity but a mandate. The statistics are stark: dementia patients account for a quarter of all beds within the NHS, often facing prolonged hospital stays due to the complexities of their condition and a glaring lack of community care options. This situation is exacerbated by a significant workforce shortfall, with Skills for Care reporting an alarming 152,000 unfilled roles in adult social care in England for 2022/23.The r
  • Government has brought adult social care in England ‘to its knees’, MPs say

    Government has brought adult social care in England ‘to its knees’, MPs say
    Damning report on long-term care system blames uneven funding and a lack of a plan for failureThe government has brought adult social care in England “to its knees” with years of uneven funding and a “woefully insufficient plan” to fill thousands of staff vacancies, MPs have said in a damning report on a system that provides long-term care for 835,000 people.The public accounts committee said “chronic underfunding, rising waiting lists and patchwork funding” h
  • What happens when you put a nursery in a care home? - podcast

    What happens when you put a nursery in a care home? - podcast
    At Belong Chester, residents spend their days with nursery-age children. What effect does it have on the wellbeing of both groups? Helen Pidd reports“I think there’s something very natural about bringing young children and older people together, and yet in the UK it’s not the norm any more,” Helen Pidd, the Guardian’s north of England editor, tells Nosheen Iqbal.Is the UK missing out on the benefits of intergenerational living? Helen visits Belong Chester, a multige
  • Ed Davey: ‘We need a cross-party agreement on social care’

    Ed Davey: ‘We need a cross-party agreement on social care’
    Speaking ahead of the party’s spring conference, the Liberal Democrat leader challenges the Tories and Labour to find consensus on financial package for the NHSRishi Sunak and Keir Starmer have been challenged to sign up to cross-party talks finally resolving the impasse over social care, as part of a Liberal Democrat plea to “grasp the nettle” after years of failure.Ed Davey, the Lib Dem leader, said that his party would include in its forthcoming manifesto a promise to attend
  • Aged care workers to get 23% average pay rise as union heralds move as ‘one of the best outcomes’ ever achieved

    Aged care workers to get 23% average pay rise as union heralds move as ‘one of the best outcomes’ ever achieved
    Health Services Union secretary says new benchmark pay rate will make sector competitive with public health systemFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our morning and afternoon news emails, free app or daily news podcastAged care workers will receive an average pay rise of 23% after the Fair Work Commission delivered its decision in a long-running work value case.The commission’s expert panel said those involved in direct care including nurses and home care workers des
  • Aged care workers to get 23% average pay boost as union heralds move as ‘one of the best outcomes’ ever achieved

    Aged care workers to get 23% average pay boost as union heralds move as ‘one of the best outcomes’ ever achieved
    Health Services Union secretary says new benchmark pay rate will make sector competitive with public health systemFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our morning and afternoon news emails, free app or daily news podcastAged care workers will receive an average pay rise of 23% after the Fair Work Commission delivered its decision in a long-running work value case.The commission’s expert panel said those involved in direct care including nurses and home care workers des
  • UK home care workers cannot work as visa regime tightened, says employer

    UK home care workers cannot work as visa regime tightened, says employer
    Grosvenor says it is prevented from making 3,000 visits a week as it pays migrant workers to sit at home because permits not renewedOne of the UK’s biggest home care providers says it is paying dozens of migrant workers to sit at home and do nothing because the Home Office has not renewed key immigration permits.Thousands of workers, mostly from Africa, were welcomed into the UK to help fill the one in 10 care worker jobs vacant after the Covid crisis. But after scammers abused the system,

Follow @UK_Care on Twitter!