The National Care Service Bill provides a framework and details the powers needed to legislate for a National Care Service.
The Bill, if successful, will give Scottish Ministers powers to:
- Organise the National Care Service and potentially bring in other services, such as children’s and justice social services, in the future
- Create new institutions called ‘local care boards’ and ‘special care boards’
- Local care boards will serve particular geographical areas. Specialist care boards will provide specialist services across the country
- Establish a complaints service and provide advocacy in connection with the National Care Service
- Oversee, monitor and intervene in services provided by care boards
- E.g. Scottish Ministers can remove care boards if they fail to carry out their function or transfer duties of care boards to the Scottish Government in an emergency
- Make Health and Social Care records more consistent and better integrated
And commits to:
- Produce a National Care Service Charter of Rights and Responsibilities which must be reviewed every 5 years and make publicly available
- Rights to breaks for Carers – making sure carers get the support they need to take sufficient breaks
- Giving rights to people living in adult care homes to see the people important to them (known as ‘Anne’s Law)
The process for a Bill to become Law can be a long one and normally follows the stages as set out below:
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