Gransnet forums

News & politics

funding of Care for the elderly

(172 Posts)
TriciaF Thu 15-Dec-16 20:59:53

I'm surprised someone hasn't started a discussion on this already. Although there have been similar topics in the past.
I have several thoughts about it, including the fact that it has become ridiculously expensive in the last 10-15 years - costs need to be reduced.
Also I think that families should help to pay more for the cost of the care of their relative than they do now, if they can afford it.
My experience is from arranging the care of my Mum in the early 2000s, (we had to sell her house),and anticipating that I might need it soon.

Anya Fri 16-Dec-16 10:41:01

There are many different issues here.

Why should those who haven't saved for their old age get free care, while those who have assets have to sell up?

Why should the elderly think it's OK to dump the cost of their care onto The State when they have assests they could use to fund care?

Why should adult children think they are entitled to inherit their parents asssets when they're not prepared to look after them in their old age?

I'm not saying these are necessarily my views just summing up the main issues.

Charleygirl Fri 16-Dec-16 10:41:59

I have no relatives, my house would be sold and any savings put towards my care. When the money runs out I have no idea what would happen. With luck I will drop dead in the street with no enthusiastic first aider near by.

vampirequeen Fri 16-Dec-16 11:15:09

We can afford to care for all our elderly in the way that best suits their needs. We simply have to cancel Trident and prioritise looking after people not having the potential to kill millions of them.

Lillie Fri 16-Dec-16 11:41:24

I agree, Anya, so many different issues and individual scenarios here, impossible to cover them all. In our case, an adult sibling took all the inheritance money in advance with the blessing of the parent, spent it, then dumped the parent and expected the other sibling to contribute towards the care! I'd rather help out the old man down the road or a perfect stranger, so it's not just a question of money or the inheritance which we will never see.

Mumsy Fri 16-Dec-16 11:51:15

In west sussex there used to be 'supported' sheltered housing, due to cut backs west sussex has cut this funding and theres no longer any support! there are now vulnerable residents who have no family that are no longer supported which need desperately need it.

morethan2 Fri 16-Dec-16 12:24:42

Oh Charleygirl that made me tchgrin I know I'm posting too much today. Its because I'm home with a stinker of a cold. So don't feel like doing to much apart from 'gransnetting

TriciaF Fri 16-Dec-16 13:54:49

grin, morethan2
Charleygirls idea appeals to me too. But husband says we're both going to go together. I wonder what he has in mind?
But to go back to Ana's reply on the first page -
'Why do you think family members should have to pay for their relatives' care?'
Why not?

daphnedill Fri 16-Dec-16 15:01:50

In British law, there is no such concept as a family, apart from spouses, once the children have reached adulthood. It works both ways. If relatives are responisble for care home fees, then parents should receive benefits for their stay-at-home unemployed children, but don't. Over 18s are independent adults in their own right. Parents have no responsibility nor rights regarding them.

What happens if families are estranged and have had no contact with children for years? What about step parents and parents who had no part in a child's life after divorce?

kittylester Fri 16-Dec-16 15:44:27

Some up to date figures - just for information.

At present my mum is in a care home and, because her assets are below a certain level (23K from memory!) she gets help towards her costs. The Care Home fees are currently around £1,100 per week and mum now pays around £800 per month. This is paid from her state and private pension, which she continues to receive.

When the state pension goes up, Mum is reassessed and her contribution goes up by more or less the same amount, so her bank balance remains more or less the same. She has very few other expenses except new clothes.

One of my brothers pays a weekly 'top up' which was £35 but may have increased.

If Mum lives long enough to reduce her capital to, I think, £11K, all her fees would be paid but one of us would still have to pay the top up! The resident is not allowed to pay the top up it has to be a family member.

When she first went into a home she had a fair bit of capital from selling her flat and paid the fees herself. That went fairly quickly!

Round here there are very few, if any, Council run homes and most good homes charge a similar amount.

Lillie Fri 16-Dec-16 16:15:46

Why can't the resident pay the top up from her capital kittylester?

kittylester Fri 16-Dec-16 16:31:17

I never got to the bottom of that lillie, unless it's a contingency plan for when the resident's money is completely gone. I think, actually, that you can refuse to pay it and the council absorb the cost but I'm not sure. We just agreed because the home was the one we wanted for mum.

Witzend Fri 16-Dec-16 16:53:30

I think the reason top ups are not allowed from the person's own funds, is that those funds will be depleted that much faster. I gather the threshold below which the person does not pay for their care (other than any pensions less something like £23 a week for personal expenses) is about £14000.

Of course some people will have a lot,less. After an aunt of mind died in her lovely care home (she was self funded) we were asked to leave all her clothes rather than take them to charity shops, since they had residents with hardly any cash and no relatives to buy them anything they needed. There were some pretty old nighties which I assumed they would not want, but they said please leave everything, someone will use it.
Should add, in case anyone is shocked at the thought of anyone wearing someone else's old nighties, that beyond a certain stage of dementia most people do not notice or care what they wear. My own mother had always been very smart and fastidious, but even in the earlier stages all that was a thing of the past.

sarahellenwhitney Fri 16-Dec-16 17:52:21

ANA. When you consider that the member of your family needing care is not someone you don't but could be your mum dad or a grandparent then yes.They looked after you? a bit of compassion would not go amiss.

sarahellenwhitney Fri 16-Dec-16 17:54:49

ANA Should be 'not someone you don't know'

Ana Fri 16-Dec-16 17:57:50

Goodness, what did I say to deserve that? confused

I agree with daphnedill's post of 15.01.

daphnedill Fri 16-Dec-16 18:30:06

I know absolutely nothing about Ana's relationship with her relatives, so this isn't personal in any way. What I do know is that some families are dysfunctional. They really aren't all Bisto families oozing caring and happiness.

Within my own extended family, I know of a father who disowned his son, because he's gay, a son who emigrated to get away from a controlling mother, a mother who plays mind games with her children, sets them against each other and does her best to make them feel guilty. I know other people, whose relatives behave in similar or worse ways. I have known parents whose relationship with their children, even as minors, borders on neglect and children who treat their parents appallingly and can't wait to get their hands on any inheritance.

I don't believe children necessarily 'owe' their parents anything. I don't believe they should be part of the equation, unless the money is going to come out of an inheritance.

Witzend Fri 16-Dec-16 18:41:22

With the best will in the world, relatives sometimes need more care than family can provide at home. Especially now, when so many people in their 50s and 60s still need to work, it may simply not be possible to look after someone who a) can't safely be left even for short periods, b) is up and down half the night, banging and shouting (like my FiL) so that nobody in the house ever gets anything like a proper night's sleep.

It makes me cross when people imply that anyone who puts a relative in a care home is too selfish or uncaring to look after them themselves. People who like to pontificate about this might try looking after someone with at least moderate dementia, on their own, for a month, and see how they get on.

GinnyTonic Fri 16-Dec-16 18:44:34

This is a very complex subject, but I feel qualified to comment, having cared for Mum for 37 years in our home. Yes, I now have to pay top up fees to ensure my Mum remains in a reasonable ( not luxurious , but very caring) care home. To those who say categorically that relatives should pay I would ask if they ever consider the financial and emotional strain which may have already existed , long before the relative went into a care home. ( do they realise that a Carers allowance cannot be claimed alongside a state pension , just as one example). More importantly, I am frustrated by observing that some relatives simply close their eyes to the fact that the person in the Care Home can benefit so much from a chat or simple entertainment, which the carers do not have time to provide. Yes, we need a better funding solution, but lets start a campaign to recognise that being in a Care Home does not mean an end to laughing, singing and living in general.

GinnyTonic Fri 16-Dec-16 19:05:01

Couldnt agree more Witzend. Its wonderful to see the way professional Carers treat everyone with dignity and deal with some really difficult situations with great tact and patience. Its difficult to be patient 24hrs a day when all you want is a reasonable nights sleep. Mum gets care my DH and I could no longer provide and she is so much happier. She self funded until her money fell below the State threshold. Thank heaven we dont live in London, so the topup we pay is ( at the moment) not too onerous, but not a way we thought we might be spending some of our pension.

Synonymous Sat 17-Dec-16 00:58:26

I would agree that this is a very complex subject but I would reiterate that the problems of cost have only got so bad since care homes have been privatised and profits are king. sad

Jane10 Sat 17-Dec-16 07:34:23

We sort of developed a sort of mix and match approach to my mothers care. My sister and I were both working and mum wanted to stay at home. So we split the various things that had to be done from direct personal care to all the admin and dealing with health issues between us. We directly employed a lovely lady to be with her when one or other of us couldn't be. Eventually she couldn't face another winter in her own house. We found a brilliant care home. It had superb facilities and kind staff. It was run by a charitable trust so any profits went straight back into the home for the residents benefit. It really couldn't have been better.( I'd like to go there myself one day. Sadly it closed last month.)
Mum died only a few months later. I think the combination of care we gave her worked well. However, we're all so different. One size definitely does not fit all. I like the sound of these retirement complexes. Fingers crossed for the future. Its about all we can do!

Jane10 Sat 17-Dec-16 07:36:21

When I was in Bangladesh I was anxiously asked if my son was married. When I told them that he wasn't the response was 'But who will look after you when you are old?'
Who indeed? sad

Leticia Sat 17-Dec-16 08:00:24

I have already told my children that they are not to be responsible for me when I am old. It is not why I had children.

Grannyknot Sat 17-Dec-16 08:07:29

Reading this thread the oft-heard expression "I don't want to be a burden to my family" springs to mind. sad

I think re ana's question "Why not?" is a fair response. Caring for an elderly parent or relative is common in many cultures and countries.

But I accept that circumstances differ - my MIL is cared for in my SIL's home (not in the UK) with round the clock carers assisting - not everyone has that choice or the finances to support that.

I know that caring for someone with dementia is a different kettle of fish. (And I do have experience of that).

A complex issue.

kittylester Sat 17-Dec-16 08:16:47

Mum went into one of those homes with graduated care it was hopeless and was beginning to look very expensive. We moved mum after she 'escaped' and was found by a very kind man as she walked along a main road, in her slippers, pushing her Walker and coaters.

To me the problem appeared to be the mix of people who were only slightly affected by dementia and people who were much further along the road together with people who were largely healthy.

When mum needed extra care - to ensure she took medication and to help her wash, the cost per unit of help was horrific and charged in 15 minute increments.

Not that the cost was an issue at that stage but it seemed a very mercenary system.