A decade on since the Care Act received Royal Assent, our publication reflects on the extent to which the aims of the legislation have been achieved and, where they have not, what changes are needed to deliver fully on the Act’s ambitions.
Building on the projections in Health in 2040, this report is one of the first studies to unpack patterns of inequalities in diagnosed illness by socioeconomic deprivation across England and project them into the future.
New ministerial intervention powers from 31 January 2024 This guidance sets out the new process for ministerial intervention in reconfiguration of NHS services, which came into force on 31 January 2024.
The Times Health Commission was set up in January last year to take a long, hard look at the NHS and social care system.
This King’s Fund report shares insights and evidence about how to collaborate well to build a stronger collaborative ethos across health and care services.
Unpaid carers provide significant levels of support to family or friends – equivalent to 4 million paid care workers. Carers often need support with their own health and wellbeing, but they are not always able to access this.
Drawing on a wide range of evidence, this report makes clear the huge return on investment that social care could deliver.
Our new report, Health Inequalities, Lives Cut Short, has confirmed that a million people in 90% of areas in England lived shorter lives than they should between 2011 and the start of the pandemic.
The Government has announced a long-awaited first career pathway for the social care workforce, with better training and improved job prospects.
National Voices is committed to tackling racial inequalities – in healthcare, health status, within our own organisations and across the charity sector.
Creating better health value: understanding the economic impact of NHS spending by care setting. Exploring which of a range of care settings can deliver the most economic output when funding is increased.
Carers UK recently published a new report which looks at “what good looks like”.