Daily Mail

Six care home patients a day face eviction over funding

- By Ruth Lythe

SIX seriously ill people a day are being stripped of vital care funding and face being turfed out of nursing homes.

Every year 21,000 sufferers of degenerati­ve and terminal conditions such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases are being reassessed over their care needs.

If they fail to prove their health needs are severe enough to qualify for financial help, the funding covering their nursing home fees is removed.

In the worst cases, elderly people are forced to leave their nursing home and move somewhere cheaper, a Money Mail investigat­ion found.

It comes after Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt unveiled a blueprint on Tuesday to transform care for the elderly.

He said pensioners were too often treated as ‘tasks on a to-do list’.

The Government is aiming to make £855million of efficiency savings from the NHS care funding budget by 2021.

Last night Tory peer Baroness Ros Altmann, a former pensions minister, said : ‘ Our social care system is broken – it isn’t fit for purpose. We are abandoning people who need help the most. For the fifth-richest economy in the world that is a disgrace.’ NHS continuing healthcare

‘System’s in a shambolic state’

(CHC) is paid to those with complex, severe or unpredicta­ble health needs. Recipients must go through regular reassessme­nts.

Funding can be snatched away if their needs are deemed to be social – such as needing help with washing – rather than healthcare-related.

The sick resident must then pay care costs themselves if their assets are worth more than £23,250. Often this means selling the family home.

A Money Mail investigat­ion revealed that 2,211 British people lost their funding following a reassessme­nt in 2016. The figures, which came from NHS Trusts that replied to Freedom of Informatio­n requests, showed this was a near-300 per cent increase on the total for 2013.

Matina Loizou, senior policy adviser at Parkinson’s UK, said: ‘The NHS continuing healthcare system is in a shambolic state. People are left hopeless and without support when they are already at their most vulnerable.’

A spokesman for a regional clinical commission­ing group where a dementia patient faced losing her CHC funding said it followed ‘national guidance’ for determinin­g eligibilit­y for care.

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