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Jill Manthorpe Jill.manthorpe@kcl.ac.uk People with learning disabilities employing their own care workers: implications for professional practice Jill.

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Presentation on theme: "Jill Manthorpe Jill.manthorpe@kcl.ac.uk People with learning disabilities employing their own care workers: implications for professional practice Jill."— Presentation transcript:

1 Jill Manthorpe Jill.manthorpe@kcl.ac.uk
People with learning disabilities employing their own care workers: implications for professional practice Jill Manthorpe

2 The future? The Golden Age (Cortona) The Nightmare (Fuseli) 21-Nov-18

3 The (quiet) transformation of adult social care
‘Councils should provide personal budgets for everyone eligible for ongoing social care , preferably as a direct payment, by April 2013.’ Department of Health ‘Vision for Adult Social Care’, 2010, para 4.49 = Increases in number of people directly employed by people using services and carers Paid workforce may include family members/adult fostering/shared lives 21-Nov-18

4 Range of policy and practice challenges (parked)
How to allocate fewer resources fairly – use of outcomes Monitoring and review – light touch? Decisions about buildings based services – especially day care centres Whole context of reduced public expenditure 21-Nov-18

5 DP ~ IB ~ PB = SDS ~ ISF ~ PB ~ DP
Nationally 52.8% of eligible adults are using personal budgets to arrange their care and support, = increase of almost 40% on the previous year (June 2012)

6 So you want to be the employer?
Range of support from LA or ULO or others Benefits Role change Being the ‘boss’ Pitfalls and risks Taking on and letting go

7 So your mum wants to be the employer?
Many carers act as care/care managers Some carers receive indirect DP (suitable people) Support planning and planning their support Another form of care work but outcomes good

8 So you want to be a directly employer care worker?
Terms and conditions Friend or employee Managing relationships Stepping stone or career? Many employers? Oversight Support

9 Are people with LD different?
Yes, but only to a limited extent … Huge range and scale of needs Reliance on family/parents Cumulative impact of life events Multi-morbidity Citizenship? … been there … Managing the money (‘burden’) Higher average budgets... Keen on choice, control …

10 Implications for professionals
Being PB literate Knowing duty of care Changing landscape Relationship with other funding streams Monitoring & review Creativity Risk work Safety nets

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