Young Carers in the United Kingdom: A Profile

Författare
Dearden, C., & Becker, S.
Titel
Young Carers in the United Kingdom: A Profile
Utgivningsår
1998
Stad
London
Utgivare
Carers National Association
Sammanfattning

Young Carers in the United Kingdom is the largest survey to date of children with caregiving
responsibilities. The book contains information on over 2,300 young people,
all aged 18 and under, who provide care and support for ill or disabled family
members and who are also in contact with a specialist young carers project. It
combines a statistical profile of these children with case studies of 22 young people,
half of whom have been assessed by social services, half who have not.
The book draws comparisons between the position of young carers now and in 1995
when a similar survey of a smaller number of young carers was conducted (see
notes below). While the situation shows some improvements, notably in a two per
cent reduction in the numbers providing intimate personal care, and a five per cent
reduction in those experiencing educational difficulties, young carers as a whole
remain a vulnerable group of children. Specialist support projects, of which there are
now over 100 in the UK, are greatly valued by young carers and their families. These
projects help young carers to achieve their rights and to access other avenues of
support which will both reduce the incidence of children as carers and ensure that ill
and disabled family members also receive the support to which they are entitled.
In the past young carers have been largely ignored in community care legislation,
but the Carers (Recognition and Services) Act of 1995 allows them to seek an
assessment in their own right when the person they support is being assessed. The
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Children Act 1989 also protects children in need and many local authorities now
accept that young carers fall into this category and should be supported as such. The
book discusses the incidence of assessment under both Acts and case study material
provides an insight into how children and young people experience both the process
of assessment and its outcomes.

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