£40m funding gap for free personal care
AN extra £40 million a year is needed to fund Scotland's policy of free personal care, a new report said today.
But three quarters of that could be found straight away if the Westminster government handed over the money it is saving by not paying attendance allowances.
A review of free personal care found the policy was sound but also called for greater consistency and transparency and better planning. The review was conducted by Lord Sutherland, former principal of Edinburgh University and architect of the original policy.
He said the policy was popular and, he believed, affordable.
But he identified a funding shortfall of around £40m a year.
He said the UK government should not have withdrawn the attendance allowance funding, estimated at £30m a year, when free personal care was introduced. He said: "Clearly in Westminster they didn't like this policy."
The full article contains 149 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
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Last Updated:
28 April 2008 1:36 PM
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Source:
Edinburgh Evening News
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Location:
Edinburgh
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Related Topics:
Health of the NHS