Barnsley Chronicle

Adult social care bill edged up to £100m

- By Jack Tolson

BARNSLEY Council spent almost £100m on providing adult social care last year as spending on services across the country reached a record high.

Figures from NHS Digital show the total expenditur­e on adult social care in Barnsley was £92.3m in the year to March.

Of this, £22.8m was spent on council-run services and £69.5m on external businesses offering adult social care.

The majority of the funding – almost 75 per cent – went towards providing long-term care.

Barnsley Council can offset the amount it spends on providing care through various income and funding streams, such as investment from the NHS and joint arrangemen­ts with patients.

Last year, it received £14m, meaning its gross spending on providing adult social care sat at £78.3m – up from £67.8m in 2020/21.

Gross expenditur­e is used by the NHS to monitor how much adult social care costs local authoritie­s each year.

This includes patients paying for services themselves – which amounted to £15m in Barnsley in 2021/22.

Across England, gross spending on adult social care services rose for the sixth successive year, reaching £22bn – the highest point in real and cash terms since records began in 2005/06.

In his autumn statement, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt announced a further £4.7bn for adult social care up to 2024/25, aimed at aiding hospital discharge rates and freeing up beds, and providing local authoritie­s with more money for services.

But health think-tank Nuffield Trust said budgets are being stretched due to inflationa­ry pressures, and the system needs long-term funding to address severe workforce and capacity shortages.

Natasha Curry, deputy director of policy, said: “While spending on adult social care has risen for six years in a row, it followed steep cuts between 2010 and 2015 and has only just recovered to 2010 levels in real terms.

“Extra funding announced last week was welcome but it likely will only keep pace with inflationa­ry pressures.”

Ms Curry said increasing demand due to an ageing population and a growing number of working-age disabled adults and people living with long-term conditions is also adding to the stresses on the industry.

More than 12,500 new requests for care support were made in Barnsley last year, and increase from 11,075 the year before.

Ms Curry added: “The system needs long-term funding with a focus on addressing serious workforce shortages and limited capacity if we are to see tangible change in the quantity and quality of care available.”

The Department for Health and Social Care said it has ‘prioritise­d health and social care in the autumn statement’ with up to £7.5bn in investment made available in the next two years.

A spokespers­on added that the government is investing £15m in internatio­nal recruitmen­t and is running its annual domestic recruitmen­t campaign to address workforce shortages.

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