Consumer Action Group envelope labels
You are part of a community of over 195,000 people. Let your bank know that you won't give in. Display one of our labels on your envelopes. Full description here
Sheet of 20 self-adhesive envelope labels £3.50 inc p&p
|
Do your Internet search here Reclaim the Right Ltd. - reg.05783665 in the UK
reg. office:- 923 Finchley Road
London
NW11 7PE
| | | | Do your Internet search here:-
|
Come and chat with us here (NB: External site NOT affiliated with CAG)
| | | CAG Announcements | |
Welcome Guest
Please register
Registration is free
There are no charges for using any of the facilities of this website.
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ.
You will have to register before you can post.
To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
You will also have to register to access our template letters and claims forms
registration is free
Are you being threatened over debts more than 6 years old? This may be unfair
See our new Unfair Trading Guide Bought an extended warranty? Not satisfied?
The warranty may be an example of unfair trading
See our new Unfair Trading Guide Have you been defaulted?
Would you like to clean up your credit file? Check it out Are you a victim of unfair trading? Check it out The Consumer Protection from Unfair Trading Regs 2008 Have you been defaulted?
Would you like to clean up your credit file? Check it out | | | | | | Welcome to The Consumer Action Group and The Bank Action Group
Before beginning to claim your bank charges be sure to read the FAQ by clicking the link above. Read it carefully and also read as much of the forum material as you can manage before you start claiming your bank charges refund.
You will have to register before you can post or view the materials which may assist you in reclaiming your penalty charges: click the register link above to proceed.
To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. Understand what you are doing and you will be able to Reclaim the Right more effectively.
Why don't you come and introduce yourself in the Welcome section at the top of the forum. Then have a look around the rest of it.
Do not post or start claiming until you have read the entire FAQ section and step by step guides and you have a good basic idea of what to do and of the layout of the forum.
Good luck claiming your bank charges. We strongly suggest that you register under a UserID and not your own name |  | |
24th July 2007, 11:39
|
#1 (permalink)
| | Platinum Account Customer | Who Pays For Elderly Mentally Infirm Nursing Care? UPDATE- We won!!! I have contributed to other threads about paying the cost of nursing care for elderly people with alzheimers and other medical conditions, but it's time to start my own thread on this subject.
My father suffered a stroke in 1996 which affected the left side of the body. His mobility was affected and he learnt to walk (albeit very slowly) again. In recent years arthritis has ravaged his good limbs and he is now at the stage of being unable to walk at all. Vascular dementia has also taken its hold on him and his short term memory is shot to pieces. He is prone to aggressive outbursts of both language and attempting to hit anyone in range. It's very sad to see a man who was once very proud and served his country for 37 years in the RAF to be reduced to this.
We managed to get my parents into very sheltered accomodation in March this year. It is a new building built in 2002 and they have their own self contained flat, but with staff on hand to keep an eye on them. But my fathers condition has rapidly deteriorated and he was admitted to hospital on the 5th June with an infection. This has cleared up but the hospital will not discharge him back to his home because they don't have the expertise or facilities to look after him properly. He has to be hoisted in and out of bed now.
Enter social services and the hospital authorities into the situation. Their only interest has been the family assets. My parents sold their house after moving into the sheltered accomodation and because of this social services have deemed it the family responsibility to find a suitable home and fund it. We have applied to one home but they turned my father down because of the advancement of his condition.
We had a meeting with the hospital staff and social services and they laboured the point it was a family responsibility to sort this out. There was no mention of continuing NHS care, so they were most surprised when I mentioned this. The assessment for continuing NHS care has now been completed and it was no surprise that my father was declared as not eligible. Suffolk PCT has a reputation for not paying for this care and they are second only to a PCT in Derbyshire when it comes to not paying out for NHS care. They only fund 57 patients in the whole of Suffolk!
So now battle commences. I am grateful to Emma and Bankover for the support they have given me in this matter, and I will be taking them up on their kind offers of help, but anyone else out there who can pitch in will be most welcome.
It is a disgraceful situation that NHS continuing care is effectively a post code lottery and it shouldn't be like this. It is also wrong that care costs in Scotland are funded by the state but not in England and Wales. Shame on the government for allowing this to happen.
Last edited by Rob S; 5th September 2008 at 11:11.
|
| |
20th September 2007, 10:42
|
#11 (permalink)
| | Platinum Account Customer | Re: Who Pays For Elderly Mentally Infirm Nursing Care? Rob, sorry to butt in, I really have nothing constructive to add, but would you mind clarifying a few things? I ask this because as someone with no knowledge of this type of situation, I could barely follow the above, and thought that it might help others.
What does PCT stand for? Who are they, what do they do (or supposed to do), and who do they respond to?
What is the Grogan case?
What is the Coughlan case?
(Sorry, just worked out that PCT = Primary Care Trust)
Thanks in advance if you can answer.  |
| |
21st September 2007, 14:02
|
#13 (permalink)
| | Platinum Account Customer | Re: Who Pays For Elderly Mentally Infirm Nursing Care? Quote:
Originally Posted by Bookworm Rob, sorry to butt in, I really have nothing constructive to add, but would you mind clarifying a few things? I ask this because as someone with no knowledge of this type of situation, I could barely follow the above, and thought that it might help others.
What does PCT stand for? Who are they, what do they do (or supposed to do), and who do they respond to?
What is the Grogan case?
What is the Coughlan case?
(Sorry, just worked out that PCT = Primary Care Trust)
Thanks in advance if you can answer.  | Hello Bookworm,
The Coughlan case is the Court of Appeal case involving Pam Coughlan. She was badly injured in a road accident in the 70's and is a tetraplegic. She took the NHS to court and won when they tried to close down her accomodation that she was living in and said she would have to move into a home managed by the local authority. This meant she would have to fund her care costs in full. BBC NEWS | Programmes | Panorama | NHS care criteria 'fatally flawed'
This site gives a lot of background information about this case and the whole issue of NHS continuing care. NHS funded Continuing Care and the Coughlan case
The Grogan case was along similar lines where Ms Grogan challenged her local PCT and SHA (strategic health authority) over the criteria they used to assess her case. Our response to the Grogan case (25.01.06)
HTH,
Rob  |
| |
22nd September 2007, 18:29
|
#15 (permalink)
| | Platinum Account Customer | Re: Who Pays For Elderly Mentally Infirm Nursing Care? Cymraeg,
They will misinform you at every oportunity so be prepared for a long hard battle. Another site that will be of use you is this one:- Free nursing care information
It's a very good forum with some very knowledgable contributors and lots of support from others in similar situations.
Good luck in your battle too and thank you for the kind wishes. |
| |
5th September 2008, 11:29
|
#17 (permalink)
| | Platinum Account Customer | |