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Written Question
Mental Health Services: Veterans
Tuesday 26th March 2024

Asked by: Steve McCabe (Labour - Birmingham, Selly Oak)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, pursuant to the answer of 14 March 2024 to Question 17495 on Mental Health Services: Veterans, how much funding has been allocated to the three social prescribing pilot sites.

Answered by Maria Caulfield - Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Business and Trade) (Minister for Women)

Prior to April 2023, Op COURAGE was formed from the three separate services of the Transition, Intervention and Liaison service, the Complex Treatment Service, and the High Intensity Service. Performance data for these services did not collect uniquely identifiable information on individual veterans, so it would not be possible to identify instances where a veteran had attended Op COURAGE for more than one course of treatment.

No data is held on the numbers of veterans with gambling addictions that have used Op COURAGE. Data analysed includes the primary mental health reason for referral to Op COURAGE. From April 2023, there have been no referrals to Op COURAGE with a primary mental health reason of gambling addiction. Since April 2023, less than 1.5% of referrals to Op COURAGE have been with a primary mental health reason of either obsessive-compulsive disorder or drug or alcohol difficulties.

Between August 2021 and September 2024, £339,000 has been allocated across the three social prescribing pilot projects which are in Cornwall, Durham, and Dorset. The National Health Service provides wellbeing support to all full-time carers. Veterans who identify as a carer are offered a Carer’s Assessment, which is undertaken by local authorities. The outcome of the Carer’s Assessment will inform a care and support plan, which is bespoke to the needs of the carer.

The Better Care Fund in 2023/24 includes £327 million for carers support, including short breaks and respite services for carers. It also funds advice and support to carers and a small number of additional local authority duties. There is no data on how much of that funding may have been used for veterans.


Written Question
Mental Health Services: Veterans
Tuesday 26th March 2024

Asked by: Steve McCabe (Labour - Birmingham, Selly Oak)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, pursuant to the Answer of 14 March 2024 to Question 17495 on Mental Health Services: Veterans, where the three social prescribing pilot sites are located.

Answered by Maria Caulfield - Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Business and Trade) (Minister for Women)

Prior to April 2023, Op COURAGE was formed from the three separate services of the Transition, Intervention and Liaison service, the Complex Treatment Service, and the High Intensity Service. Performance data for these services did not collect uniquely identifiable information on individual veterans, so it would not be possible to identify instances where a veteran had attended Op COURAGE for more than one course of treatment.

No data is held on the numbers of veterans with gambling addictions that have used Op COURAGE. Data analysed includes the primary mental health reason for referral to Op COURAGE. From April 2023, there have been no referrals to Op COURAGE with a primary mental health reason of gambling addiction. Since April 2023, less than 1.5% of referrals to Op COURAGE have been with a primary mental health reason of either obsessive-compulsive disorder or drug or alcohol difficulties.

Between August 2021 and September 2024, £339,000 has been allocated across the three social prescribing pilot projects which are in Cornwall, Durham, and Dorset. The National Health Service provides wellbeing support to all full-time carers. Veterans who identify as a carer are offered a Carer’s Assessment, which is undertaken by local authorities. The outcome of the Carer’s Assessment will inform a care and support plan, which is bespoke to the needs of the carer.

The Better Care Fund in 2023/24 includes £327 million for carers support, including short breaks and respite services for carers. It also funds advice and support to carers and a small number of additional local authority duties. There is no data on how much of that funding may have been used for veterans.


Departmental Publication (News and Communications)
Department of Health and Social Care

Mar. 15 2024

Source Page: £20 million boost for adult social care and unpaid carers
Document: £20 million boost for adult social care and unpaid carers (webpage)

Found: £20 million boost for adult social care and unpaid carers


Written Question
Carers
Tuesday 28th November 2023

Asked by: Lord Laming (Crossbench - Life peer)

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask His Majesty's Government what assessment they have made of the Carers UK report State of Caring 2023 — The impact of caring on: health, published in November; and what steps they intend to take in response.

Answered by Lord Markham - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department of Health and Social Care)

We are grateful to Carers UK for having undertaken the research for this report, and we recognise that caring is not always easy or straightforward. There is a wide variety of caring circumstances, experiences and needs among unpaid carers, and the enormous contribution of unpaid carers is reflected throughout Next Steps to Put People at the Heart of Care, published on GOV.UK in April 2023 in an online-only format.

On 24 October 2023, we announced our £42.6 million Accelerating Reform Fund to support innovation and scaling up in adult social care, and to kick-start a change in services provided to support unpaid carers.

We are also investing at least £2.3 billion extra funding a year in expanding and transforming mental health services in England by March 2024. This extra funding will enable an extra two million people, including unpaid carers, to be treated by mental health services within the National Health Service by March 2024.

We know that breaks and respite are important for unpaid carers. This year, £327 million from the Better Care Fund has been earmarked to provide short breaks and respite services and additional advice and support to carers, together with a small number of additional local authority duties.


Lords Chamber
Carers: National Strategy - Tue 12 Mar 2024
No Department present

Mentions:
1: Lord Evans of Rainow (Con - Life peer) Lords, we have set out our strategic approach for supporting unpaid carers in People at the Heart of Care - Speech Link
2: Lord Evans of Rainow (Con - Life peer) at the Heart of Care White Paper. - Speech Link
3: Baroness Wheeler (Lab - Life peer) week’s unpaid carer’s leave from work, and neither will they be first in line for the small amounts of respite - Speech Link
4: Lord Evans of Rainow (Con - Life peer) , providing care for a dependant. - Speech Link


Select Committee
Contact (for families of disabled children)
CSC0023 - Children’s social care

Written Evidence Feb. 06 2024

Inquiry: Children’s social care
Inquiry Status: Closed
Committee: Education Committee (Department: Department for Education)

Found: CSC0023 - Children’s social care Contact (for families of disabled children) Written Evidence


Scottish Parliament Written Question
S6W-23742
Friday 5th January 2024

Asked by: Sweeney, Paul (Scottish Labour - Glasgow)

Question

To ask the Scottish Government what steps it is taking to give unpaid carers access to at least two weeks of respite as a minimum.

Answered by Todd, Maree - Minister for Social Care, Mental Wellbeing and Sport

The National Care Service Bill makes changes to the Carers (Scotland) Act 2016 to deliver a right to personalised short breaks support for any carer who is not currently able to access ‘sufficient breaks’ – accessed via their personalised plan under the Carers Act.

We are working with a group involving carers, local and national carer organisations and social care practitioners to develop the guidance and regulations required to deliver a right to personalised short breaks support for carers who need it under the proposed legislation. As caring roles vary in nature and intensity, carers will need different amounts and types of support to achieve ‘sufficient breaks’, depending on factors such as the type of caring role, help from other family members and wider support.

Ahead of the proposed legislation, we increased the voluntary sector Short Breaks Fund by £5m to £8m in 2022-23, to expand easy-access short breaks support, and have maintained the fund at £8m per year since then. This is in addition to £88.4m per year Carers Act funding in the local government block grant.


Deposited Papers

Feb. 19 2008

Source Page: Better care, better lives. Improving outcomes and experiences for children, young people and their families living with life-limiting and life-threatening conditions. 54 p.
Document: DEP2008-0451.pdf (PDF)

Found: Better care, better lives.


Westminster Hall
Kinship Care Strategy - Wed 06 Mar 2024
Department for Education

Mentions:
1: Kevan Jones (Lab - North Durham) they are allowed to work and they are not under pressure.For example, we need a national system for respite - Speech Link
2: Robin Walker (Con - Worcester) Members have made, because they made them very well, but respite care is vital and I have to say that - Speech Link
3: Andrew Selous (Con - South West Bedfordshire) In England, 71 in every 10,000 children are in care, and only 15% are in kinship care. - Speech Link


Scottish Government Publication (Statistics)
Population Health Directorate

Dec. 05 2023

Source Page: The Scottish Health Survey 2022 – volume 1: main report
Document: Chapter 2: General Health, Cardiovascular Conditions and Caring tables (Excel)

Found: area deprivation and sexTable 2.8Caring prevalence and hours spent each week providing help or unpaid care