Written answers

Tuesday, 2 October 2007

Department of Health and Children

Nursing Homes Repayment Scheme

9:00 am

Photo of John DeasyJohn Deasy (Waterford, Fine Gael)
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Question 203: To ask the Minister for Health and Children the way the national repayment scheme applies to patients in private nursing home accommodation who applied for public beds but these were not available; if her attention has been drawn to the fact that many people with family in private nursing homes have been turned down under the repayment scheme; and ifshe will make a statement on the matter. [21454/07]

Photo of Mary HarneyMary Harney (Dublin Mid West, Progressive Democrats)
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The Health (Repayment Scheme) Act 2006 provides a clear legal framework to repay recoverable health charges for publicly funded long term residential care. All those fully eligible persons who were wrongly charged and are alive will have their charges repaid in full. The estates of all those fully eligible persons who were wrongly charged for publicly funded long term residential care and died since 9 December 1998 will have the charges repaid in full. The scheme does not allow for repayments to the estates of those who died prior to that date.

Recoverable health charges are charges which were imposed on persons with full eligibility under the Health (Charges for In-patient Services) Regulations 1976 as amended in 1987 or charges for in-patient services only, raised under the Institutional Assistance Regulations 1954 as amended in 1965.

Persons who were in publicly contracted beds in private nursing homes are covered by the terms of the Supreme Court judgment. The provisions of the judgment do not apply to individuals in private nursing homes who have entered these homes under the Nursing Home Subvention Scheme. In the case of private nursing home care the contract is between the individual and the private nursing home owner.

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