Today (Monday 4 November) the Health and Social Care Committee
launches its inquiry on the costs of not reforming adult social
care.
It has been estimated that 161,000 hours of homecare could
not be delivered between January and March 2024 because of
staffing capacity, and in 2023 there were approximately 250,000 people waiting for a
care assessment in England.
The provision of social care has been a challenge for successive
governments, yet despite multiple reviews, many significant
reforms have not been implemented and reform of social care
remains a key issue to be addressed.
The first inquiry of the newly appointed Commons
Committee will examine the cost of inaction, investigating
the cost to individuals, to the NHS and to local authorities. It
will also seek to establish the cost of inaction to the Treasury
and the wider economy, for example when people stop or reduce
their working hours while they are waiting for the care they
need, or become full time unpaid carers.
The Adult Social Care Reform: the cost of
inaction inquiry will consider social care for both older
adults and working age adults.
The Chair of the Health and Social Care Committee, MP, said:
“Our social care system is in crisis. Over the years there
have been many reviews and proposals, but successive governments
have failed to tackle the problems, because they think reforms
cost too much.
“But this ongoing inaction has a cost. No one is talking
about the costs we are all accepting by not reforming the
system. A cost to patients and their families, a cost to
the NHS, a cost to our local authorities, and a cost to the wider
economy and the Treasury.
“This inquiry will investigate just how much the ongoing
inaction on social care reform is costing us all.”
Call for evidence
To inform its inquiry, the Committee is now accepting written
evidence submissions that respond to the following questions by
11 December 2024.
- How much is inaction on adult social care reform costing the
NHS and local authorities, and what impact does this have on
patients and the public?
- What NHS and local authority service reforms are not
happening as a result of adult social care pressures, and what
benefits are patients and the public missing out on?
- What is the cost of inaction to individuals and how might
people's lives change with action on adult social care
reform?
- Where in the system is the cost of inaction on adult social
care reform being borne the most?
- What contribution does adult social care make to the economy
and HM Treasury and how might this change with action on
reform?
- To what extent are the costs of inaction on adult social care
reform considered by the Government when evaluating policies,
including within the Budget and Spending Reviews? How should
these costs be assessed and evaluated?