Respite Services (Young Disabled Adults) (PE1499)
The third new petition is PE1499, by Robert Watson on behalf of the What About Us? campaign group, on creating suitable respite services for younger disabled adults with life-limiting conditions. Members have a note by the clerk, the SPICe briefing and the petition. Jackie Baillie is interested in the petition, so she remains with us.
I bet that most of you in this room had a holiday this year—a chance to go somewhere different or to a place that you enjoy visiting for a break from the usual routine and the stresses of everyday life. That is what a respite break is like for us. How would you feel if you were told that you could never have a holiday again?
Thank you very much for coming, Mr Watson. I also thank Kyle Kelly—please let me know if you wish to speak at any time, Kyle, because we want to include you in our discussion. I know that it was a difficult journey for you today; I do not know whether it is the first time that you have given evidence before a Scottish Parliament committee.
Yes, it is.
We do not have a certificate for you today, but we perhaps should have.
We did a lot of research, and it seems that there is not really anywhere suitable. The only place that I found that seemed to be suitable was Leuchie house out in North Berwick, but it charges £1,000 just for a four-night stay, which is just not affordable for the average person. If it was cheaper, or if there was more funding available, that would be an option.
Have you had a look at other examples in other countries, such as England, Wales and Northern Ireland, or elsewhere in Europe, to find examples of best practice?
Not in Europe, but we have looked around the UK, and the lack of such facilities seems to be a UK-wide problem. There are a lot of children’s respite services but, once someone reaches 18 or 21, they are not allowed to go anywhere. There seems to be nowhere to go to address that gap in the middle.
So there is a gap at that stage. Children have some coverage, but there is a gap in young adult provision throughout Scotland.
Yes—from age 21 to about 40 or 45. It is hard to define the upper age limit, but the early 40s would be about right. There seem to be services for people in their 50s and 60s with terminal conditions such as cancer, but nothing in the middle.
It may be that some establishments are suitable for you, but the problem is that they do not cater for the age group with whom you want to socialise. Are you saying that the sociability aspect is very important? Do you want people who are the same age as you to be there?
There are places out there for younger adults with learning difficulties, but nothing that is suitable for physical disabilities. Those are two very different types of disabilities.
Thank you for that. I will bring in some of my colleagues and, once the committee has concluded its questioning, I will bring in Jackie Baillie. Chic Brodie will go first.
Good morning, Robert and Kyle. Forgive my lack of knowledge about how widespread the problem is. How many people do you think fall into this category in Scotland?
The 100 families that I mentioned are just the families that are affected by CHAS’s decision to stop people over 21 from going.
How many are affected by CHAS’s decision?
More than 100 for CHAS alone, but there are a lot of people with different conditions who do not use CHAS’s services.
Do you know how many fall into that category?
I do not have numbers, I am afraid.
I was just trying to understand the scope of the challenge. Presumably, CHAS’s decision is based on finance, or is there any other reason that you are aware of?
You would need to ask CHAS, but I think that it said that demand was increasing because so many children were using its services. I find that I do not get as many stays as I used to, because there are a lot more people going there. Also, because lot of us are much older than the children who are there, I think that they feel that it is not appropriate for us to be there.
What Robert Watson has said is how I feel too.
Robert Watson mentioned a figure of £1,000 for four-day residential provision, and I can see from your submission that the Minister for Public Health seemed to have become confused between respite for yourself and for people with your condition and respite for your parents. You indicated that you were pushing for respite for your parents to go away on a holiday, but would that mean that you would need 24/7 care during that respite period for your parents?
It would. I cannot speak for other families, but I know that my mum and dad would rather be at home and have time to themselves while I went away somewhere.
I have done a rough calculation based on 24/7 care, which would cost about £1,500 for seven days. That would almost equate to a respite break for yourself somewhere with specialist care provision. Who pays for the cover when your parents have their respite? Is it the local authority that steps in to provide the funding for a carer in the periods when they are not there?
I guess that they should, but they do not give anybody enough funding for anything like that. The only care that we get is seven mornings a week for two hours each day to get me up, and an hour twice a week at night for showers. Kyle Kelly’s situation might be different.
During the week, I get carers that come in for an hour or so in the morning to get me up and ready, and 45 minutes at night for showers.
Is that all?
Yes, that is all.
That raises the wider issue of the amount of time and funding that is allocated to provide appropriate care for individuals. If the local authority is picking up the cost for individuals who need 24/7 care, the money should be there to provide that, but I hope that by taking the petition forward we will be able to look at some of the issues that arise.
I thank Robert Watson and Kyle Kelly for coming along today.
As no other members want to speak, I will bring in Jackie Baillie.
Thank you, convener. Evidently I was caught in the same traffic jam as the witnesses, because I arrived moments before them.
Do members have any final comments?
I have done a quick calculation. Across the 32 local authorities, 10 days of respite would cost £30,000, which is not huge in the scale of things.
I think so, judging by the care that I have had over the years at Rachel house. Based on that, I would say yes but, without experiencing other places, it is difficult for me to say what care is like on a wider scale.
Basically, I think the same. It is hard to talk about other carers if you have not experienced them. If someone has had only the carers that we have in CHAS now, they have not had any other experience.
There seem to be a lot of care providers, but they are not necessarily all of the same standard. I have had lots of agencies over the years and I have had some bad experiences, so I know both sides.
I think that Anne McTaggart has a final point before we go to summation.
My point is really in summation. We should ask the relevant parliamentary cross-party groups for their advice on the petition.
For the benefit of Robert Watson and Kyle Kelly, I state that we will now consider what the next steps should be for the committee. We heard your excellent evidence and you answered the questions well. We will now consider the next stage. It is clear that we want to continue your petition, and some suggestions have been made. Can I have suggestions from committee members on the next steps?
I support the recommendation that we write to the Scottish Government, the Scottish Partnership for Palliative Care and the Health and Social Care Alliance Scotland. I thank Jackie Baillie for her views, and I add that the idea of a debate in the Parliament is not a bad one.
A plenary debate would be a matter for the Conveners Group but, through a bit of foresight, I have a bid in for a debate, probably in March or April. I made the bid without knowing what subject we would discuss. If the committee agrees to debating respite care, we have a card to play, which is fortuitous.
I agree that we should write to the Scottish Government, the Scottish Partnership for Palliative Care and the Health and Social Care Alliance Scotland, but I suggest that we also write to a couple of local authorities to find out their role in provision. Some of the funding comes from local authorities, so it would be useful to get their views.
The presentation was excellent and Robert Watson and Kyle Kelly put their points over well. Given what we have heard from them, I am struck by the need to debate the issue in the chamber. It is curious that there does not seem to be much mention of charities that deal with muscular dystrophy, although the Muscular Dystrophy Campaign is mentioned. It might be an idea for us to write to it to find out how it would feel about getting involved in new facilities in Scotland.
The Muscular Dystrophy Campaign and Action Duchenne are both aware of the campaign; I have been in regular contact with them. They are both keen to work with the Government to try to solve the issue.
That is good to hear. If we could write to those organisations and get official responses, that would be good.
Yes. As there are no other contributions, I say to Robert Watson and Kyle Kelly that we are enthusiastic about your petition. You have identified a huge gap on which we can do a lot more work with the Scottish Government. We will write to all the organisations that members mentioned, and it will probably be worth while for us to write to COSLA as well.
Previous
Current PetitionNext
Current Petitions