- Project status
- Ongoing
- Contact
- Mary Baginsky
- Institution web page
- https://www.kcl.ac.uk/
- Host institution
- King's College London
- Team members
- Mary Baginsky, Jill Manthorpe, Joan Rapaport, Emily Thomas.
- Funding information (if funded)
- This project is funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR).
- Project Summary
Introduction
COVID-19 is having a significant impact on people in need of care and support and on social care services. The Coronavirus Act 2020 became law early in the pandemic. Some of its changes relate to English local authorities’ (councils’) social care duties, particularly ‘easements’ which allow them to radically change what they do under the Care Act 2014 and how they do it (for example, postponing reviews or changing a person’s care arrangements or not supplying care at all). There have been no studies of how this new Act has been affecting: Councils, the people working in them, and people receiving Care Act services.
Objectives
This study is investigating how the changes of the Coronavirus Act were put in place in social care by:
- mapping which local authorities applied for Care Act easements, exploring why and for which activity(ies)
- exploring the impact of the Care Act easements on practice and on service users/ carers affected, and whether the aims of seeking easements were realised.
Methods
This study is taking an exploratory research design drawing on document analysis and qualitative data collection, including through expert interviews and interviews with staff, people who use services and carers.
Resources
Project website: https://www.kcl.ac.uk/research/easements-to-the-care-act
- Project website
- https://www.kcl.ac.uk/research/easements-to-the-care-act
- Countries
- United Kingdom
- Care setting
- Other
- Funding type
- Public
- Impact/outcomes
- Access to care and care utilisation | Other | Quality of care | Treatment outcomes
- Intervention types
- Other | Policy and governance | Studies to analyse impacts of the pandemic
- Methods
- Document analysis | Qualitative studies
- Groups/organisations
- Care provider/care organisations | Other