Area of Care
- Mental Health (7) Apply Mental Health filter
- Primary Care (7) Apply Primary Care filter
- Secondary Care (6) Apply Secondary Care filter
- Acute Care (5) Apply Acute Care filter
- Dementia care (3) Apply Dementia care filter
- Alcohol Misuse (2) Apply Alcohol Misuse filter
- Physical illness (2) Apply Physical illness filter
- Specialist services (2) Apply Specialist services filter
- Substance Misuse (2) Apply Substance Misuse filter
Outcomes of care
- Prevention (26) Apply Prevention filter
- Wellbeing (26) Apply Wellbeing filter
- Carer awareness (25) Apply Carer awareness filter
- Identifying carers (24) Apply Identifying carers filter
- Integration (17) Apply Integration filter
- Health inequalities (15) Apply Health inequalities filter
- Carers in employment (12) Apply Carers in employment filter
I work in
I work with
Type of carers
Location
Search (Professionals)
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It takes strong commitment from board members, senior managers from health & social care, advocacy groups, voluntary groups and carers to fully involve carers - it’s not the easy option.Outcomes:I work in:Location:
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Carer involvement and participation means carers being fully involved in service design, delivery and review – not simply relying on consultation. It places carers in a much more active role and should be based on power sharing.Outcomes:I work in:Location:
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The Carers Hub site is an initiative from Carers Trust to inform the commissioning and development of personalised services for and with carers by providing a central point for information sharing.Outcomes:I work in:Location:
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Examples of how carers might like to get involved in working with professionals.Outcomes:I work in:Location:
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People performing a role usually best understand it. Talking to carers can often give you information about the services you provide that you could not get in any other way.Outcomes:I work in:Location:
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Involving carers is not just about consultation, and it is not about one way of doing things. Use a wide ranging approach so that carers can pick who they engage with to maximise the participation of a wide range of individuals.Outcomes:I work in:Location:
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Carers involved in planning or training will appreciate having the chance to share their experiences with other carers or professionals involved with carers support. This can also help individual carers to have a less personal and more representative approach.Outcomes:I work in:Location:
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Carers are not a generic group, with common circumstances and problems. Staff should be trained and encouraged to avoid stereotypes.
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Approximately one in ten patients registered with a GP practice is likely to be a carer. Evidence shows that there’s a strong link between caring for someone and ill health. So it's important to identify carers and make sure they can access a range of support.Area of Care:I work in:I work with:Location:
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Without support, taking on a caring role can mean facing a life of poverty, isolation, ill health and depression. For the person they care for it can mean costly hospital or care admissions if the caring relationshipArea of Care:I work in:Location: