Wheelchair users and people who access aftercare services
under the Mental Health Act will soon have a right to a
personal health budget, the government has announced.
Personal health budgets allow people to choose their own
health and care support, which could include:
- specially adapted wheelchairs designed to maximise
independence
- a choice of personal assistants who can be specially
trained to meet the individual’s needs
- technology, equipment or even an assistance dog to reduce
the need for support from a carer
Over 40,000 people currently benefit from personal health
budgets, and the government plans to increase this to up to
200,000 people by 2024.
As well as extending the legal right to wheelchair users and
people who access aftercare services under the Mental Health
Act, the government will look to give personal health budgets
to:
- people with ongoing mental health needs
- veterans
- autistic people
- people with learning disabilities
- people receiving adult social care support
Personal health budgets are planned and agreed between
individuals and clinicians, giving people greater choice,
flexibility and control over their health and care support.
They have also been shown to join up health and social care
services in local areas and to help reduce pressure on
emergency care.
Last year the Department of Health and Social Care and NHS
England consulted on extending
the right to a personal health budget. Nearly 9 out of 10
respondents supported the proposals.
Increasing access to personal health budgets is part of
the NHS Long Term Plan,
which aims to extend personalised care to 2.5 million people
by 2024. This will partly be achieved through personal health
budgets and social prescribing, which is when people are
referred by their GPs to local community or voluntary
activities.
Minister for Care said:
I’ve seen first-hand how personal health budgets can give
people a new lease of life, granting them the ability to
enjoy their lives to the full. These budgets help to join
up health and social care services, improving people’s
experiences and outcomes whilst ensuring value for money
for taxpayers.
We are therefore extending access so many more people can
benefit, a key part of our NHS Long Term Plan which will
see personalised care become the norm for millions more.
James Sanderson, NHS England Director of Personalised Care,
said:
The NHS Long Term Plan will see more than 2.5 million
patients benefit from measures like personal health budgets
and social prescribing, which mean people have more choice
and control over their health, wellbeing and treatment.
Dealing with long-term health problems means moving away
from a one-size-fits-all approach, and towards more
tailored care, with 1,000 social prescribing workers in GP
surgeries, closer working with voluntary groups and most
importantly asking patients what support they need to live
independently and well.