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Robert Bullard Press Clipping
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Tackling unpaid carers ill health
Posted: 24 October 2007
writes Robert Bullard
The health of the UK's six million carers suffers as a direct result of
unpaid caring work. Indeed, according to In Poor Health, a survey of the
impact of caring by Carers UK in 2004, the more hours a carer provides,
the more likely it is that they will be in poor health. This is
particularly so for those providing more than 50 hours a week, which is
the case for nearly 21% of carers.
Using statistics from the 2001 Census, the survey revealed that by far
the worst reporting of ill-health by carers was in Wales, where nearly
one in four carers (24%) providing substantial care also suffered from
ill-health.
Part of the problem is that some people don't see themselves as carers,
don't want help, or rarely ask for it. "People don't realise they are
getting stressed - mentally and physically," says Wendy James, a GP
partner at the Ashleigh surgery, Cardigan, in Wales. "They feel they
haven't got time to go to a doctor until they reach a crisis, and as
result they end up in hospital."
But a new project, Ceredigion Investors in Carers, of which James's
practice is a participant, has won a Welsh social care accolade for
raising awareness of carers and their needs among GPs, and providing
them with help and support.
The project follows a succession of similar initiatives in the area. Its
three partners are the Cardigan Health Board (Wales' primary care trust
equivalent), the county's social services department, and the Red Cross
Carers Fieldwork Project, which delivers some services for the council.
Awards
Particularly impressive has been the framework of good practice - with
its bronze, silver and gold awards - that the project is establishing
among GPs. Within 12 months of the project's launch, 14 out of the
county's 16 practices have signed up to the scheme and secured bronze.
To get their rating, practices have to show they are actively
encouraging patients who are carers to identify themselves, for example
through a dedicated notice board, information on their website, or when
registering new patients. That way doctors should be more alert to
carers' possible health needs, and carers should be closer to help when
they need it.
Practices must also have someone leading on carers' issues, and have
their policies for carers summarised in a protocol. They also have to
demonstrate carer awareness. For example, a carer must be given some
flexibility in their appointment time, and, if they are looking after
someone with severe needs, they may need to wait somewhere more suitable
than a waiting room.
"We've never had anything like this for carers, and it's not something
we would have thought of doing," says James. She believes it has been
useful for her practice to pull together all its information on carers
into one file. That way it reminds staff where they can refer patients,
and what support is available.
As well as setting standards among GPs, the project organises a monthly
support group for carers, which may include a speaker on a health or
financial issue, a book-swap, or just tea and a chat.
Pauline Palmer and Jean Whitmore are both registered at the same
practice, and have been looking after their mothers (aged 101 and 93
respectively) for more than 20 years. The women met through the project,
as did their mothers.
Meeting others in similar situations has been one benefit of the
project, says Whitmore. Her mother needed respite care when she had to
go into hospital, but she wouldn't have wanted to go if she hadn't known
she could meet Pauline's mother there through the care home's day
centre.
"People don't think of you as carers - they just think it is your duty,"
says Whitmore, who sighs at having had to spend her retirement as a
carer. "You cannot go anywhere, especially at short notice there is a
long waiting list to get help from anyone and if you are ill you are
stuck."
It will take more than the project's resources to tackle the multitude
of issues facing carers - the physical demands and financial strains,
the stresses and isolation - but their feedback on the Ceredigion
project is positive. "They call it their little oasis," says James. "It
gives them a place where they can meet other carers and get support."
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