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The voice of Scotland’s vibrant voluntary sector

Published by Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations

TFN is published by the Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations, Mansfield Traquair Centre, 15 Mansfield Place, Edinburgh, EH3 6BB. The Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations (SCVO) is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation. Registration number SC003558.

Hospice funding “on a knife-edge”

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80% of charity hospices are facing a financial deficit this year, with calls for an immediate increase in funding

Hospices across the country are facing a funding crisis.

Eight in 10 charitable hospices surveyed by Hospice UK say they are planning a deficit budget this financial year according to newly released figures issued today by the national hospice and end of life care charity.

It says funding for the UK’s 200 charitable hospices is on a knife-edge and that vital care for dying people needs to stop being so reliant on local fundraising such as community fetes and buying second hand clothes from hospice shops.

Earlier this year, two hospices were forced to close and others have had to cut services or jobs.

Hospice UK says that funding for the end of life care system as a whole, including hospices, is ‘broken’ and that a sustainable solution needs to be developed urgently, especially to meet fast growing demand for this care.

Earlier research by Hospice UK shows that more than 100,000 people are not able to get the support they need at the end of life across all care settings.

And more than 40% of care home residents, many of whom have complex needs associated with the end of life, are forced to pay for their care under current rules.

Charitable hospices need to raise around two thirds of their income themselves, largely from public donations, community fundraising and business sponsorship.

Tracey Bleakley, chief executive of Hospice UK, said: “We are gravely concerned about the financial situation of many charitable hospices. This is symptomatic of how the funding model for end of life care as a whole is broken. It no longer reflects the complexity of modern end of life care and what people actually need, nor the immense growing demand for this care.

“In the 21st century, end of life care should not have to rely solely on the goodwill and charity of local people and hinge on how many second-hand clothes and books are sold in hospice shops. We would not accept this dicey approach for maternity care services, we should not accept it for the critically important care provided at the end of people’s lives.

“The government needs to review the current funding model for end of life care urgently, otherwise more hospices will be forced to cut services and consequently dying people and their families, will be denied the crucial care they desperately need.”

Hospice Care Week runs this week (from 7-13 October) with a theme of This Is What It Takes. The campaign will celebrate the work of tens of thousands of many different staff and volunteers that help provide compassionate care free of charge to dying people and their families.