Government guidance for the Care Act: undermining ambitions for change?

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Abstract

The UK Government claims to be creating a historic change to social care in England through the Care Act by putting people in control of their support. However, this is fundamentally contradicted by the draft guidance published to support the Act. This amounts to a formula for maintaining the prevailing resource-limited approach to assessing and meeting needs. This reality is obscured by a welter of choice and person-centred rhetoric. However, it need not be like this. Councils with a genuine commitment to being person-centred could refer directly to the Care Act to create an alternative future, while service users and their allies could bring about systemic changes if they use the Act to establish new rights.

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Slasberg, C., & Beresford, P. (2014). Government guidance for the Care Act: undermining ambitions for change? Disability and Society, 29(10), 1677–1682. https://doi.org/10.1080/09687599.2014.954785

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