What were the aims of the new community care policy? How has the policy been implemented? How far have the aims of the policy been achieved?
These are just some of the questions addressed by the authors of this book. They trace the implementation of the 1990 community care legislation in five local authorities between 1992 and 1994. The book suggests that central government's main aim was to bring social security spending under control. Services issues were always secondary. Nevertheless, implications both for clients and services have been important and often unintended. Local authorities have faced considerable difficulties in implementing the legislation.
The process is followed in five local authorities, one county and four London boroughs. Local authorities were faced with a mass of central government guidance and a number of key changes to make. It traces three changes in detail: the implementation of the purchaser/provider split and the creation of a social care market, the introduction of care management, and efforts to collaborate with health authorities. The book compares how the authorities tackled these issues and examined why they approached the tasks so differently. It also analyses the way in which social services departments have changed in the process and the extent to which we are seeing the end of the 'Seebohm' Departments.
Implementing the New Community Care will be of interest to students of social policy, health and social welfare and social work.
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Jane Lewis is a Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford and Director of the Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine.
"...a valuable account." - Community Care (Generation of PM publication page 118) "...a very useful starting point." - British Journal of Health Care Management "...well-researched." - Professional Social Work "Lewis and Glennerster provide considerable assessment and analysis - a hard act to follow." - Journal of Social Work Practice "...an important contribution to current debates and I shall certainly be including it among the essential course reading for my students." - Sociology of Health and Illness "The 1990 NHS and Community Care Actushered in a set of reforms which was as complex for social care as for health care, and even now, 3 years after full implementation, we are only dimly aware ofmany of the implementation issues. Lewis and Glennerster have made one of the first serious attempts to explore the process of implementation." - British Journal of Health Care Management "...a valuable contribution to our understanding of the implementation of community care." - Ageing and Society "As would be expected from authors such as Professor Howard Glennerster and Professor Jane Lewis, their publication is excellent." - Journal of Interprofessional Care "...the authors' fluent style and their wealth of well presented detailed case material, set against the framework of informed social policy commentary, made the reviewer's task an enjoyable one. This is a book to be recommended to everyone who is interested in continuing to take forward the new community care agenda." - Social Sciences in Health
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