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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.

Scotland sleepwalking into new social care crisis as unpaid carers reach breaking point

This news post is over 2 years old
 

Call for urgent intervention

Unpaid carers are being pushed to breaking point with many struggling to cope with the extra pressure COVID-19 is putting on social care services, warns Carers Scotland.

The charity is calling on the UK Government ahead of the comprehensive Spending Review to urgently invest in social care over the next three years to help unpaid carers across Scotland.

New research from Carers Scotland’s and Carers UK’s State of Caring report, which will be released in full next month, reveals many of the services that unpaid carers depend on to help their loved ones have reduced or closed.

Seven in 10 (70%) who use crucial day services have reduced or no access and only 16% of carers are confident that they would get the support they need in the next 12 months.

Nearly seven in 10 (66%) said they are worried services will be reduced and over half (51%) said they are worried about losing access to voluntary sector services because of funding constraints.

Nearly one in five (17%) unpaid carers who work said they would be forced to reduce their working hours or would be at risk of giving up work altogether if they do not get affordable and accessible care to support them working where needed.

Simon Hodgson, director of Carers Scotland, said: “Unpaid carers have been under enormous pressure for years but we are at a crossroads where without adequate funding for social care now, carers will be pushed over the edge.

“As any additional social care funding through the Health and Social Care levy will not start this winter, carers could be facing a difficult future.

“They will not be able to cope if we go on like this and the social care system they prop up would collapse without the care they provide. The Comprehensive Spending Review must recognise this and invest in our unpaid carers, or we risk sleepwalking into a new social care crisis.

The chancellor has the power to change carers’ lives significantly for the better if he funds social care properly now which will bring consequential funding to the Scottish Government to invest in care in Scotland.”

Carers UK estimates the number of unpaid carers increased by 4.5 million at the height of the pandemic to 13.6 million. Unpaid carers also saved the UK economy £193 billion a year during the pandemic.

In Scotland the number of people providing care increased 1.1 million people providing care, with a value of £10.9 billion - £43 million each and every day of the pandemic.

Even before the pandemic carers were severely impacted by a lack of the care services that they and the person they care for needed.

Research1 in 2019 found that as many as one in five carers received no support at all to help them manage their caring role and over two thirds of carers regularly had to use their own income or savings to pay for care or support services, equipment or products for the person they care for.