Written answers

Tuesday, 18 October 2016

Department of Health

Care of the Elderly Funding

Photo of Alan KellyAlan Kelly (Tipperary, Labour)
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94. To ask the Minister for Health if the extra funding provided for in budget 2017 will meet the demand assessed by the HSE for all home care packages and home help hours required; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [30698/16]

Photo of Helen McEnteeHelen McEntee (Meath East, Fine Gael)
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I am pleased to say that overall funding for services for older people has increased to €765 million in 2017 - an increase of €82 million since the HSE’s 2016 Service Plan. This has focused on additional funding for homecare in particular and is aimed at allowing people to continue to live in their own homes and at facilitating discharge of older people from acute hospitals.

Since the Government took Office, we have significantly increased the funding available for homecare. An additional €40m (including €10m as part of the forthcoming Winter initiative) already provided in 2016 represented an increase of over 13% in the total funding available, and means that the number of Home Care Packages provided this year will increase from 15,450 to 15,800 and home help hours from 10.4million to 10.57 million.

The Winter Initiative will also provide another €1.4m for homecare this year which will provide a further 650 Packages by year's end. These will be targeted at 10 specific hospitals to allow people to be discharged home quickly. Over 2016 the number of Home care Packages being provided will have increased by 1,000.

In 2017, €14.6m of the Winter Initiative will be to fund homecare, and there will be another €3.8m to maintain existing levels of service and €10m for new developments. Details of the services to be provided with these funds will be set out in the coming weeks in the forthcoming HSE 2017 National Service Plan.

Demand for homecare has increased significantly in recent years and this is a continuing trend. This is due to a number of factors including long-run demographic trends, an increased desire on the part of many older people to stay in their own homes and communities for as long as possible and continuing requirements to support discharges from acute hospitals. The resources available for homecare came under severe pressure in recent years because of the wider economic environment, and this, coupled with the other factors that I have already mentioned means that we have a good deal of ground to make up. I think we have made a very substantive start to that process but it will take some time to get to where we would ideally want to be in terms of home care services.

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