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The Longevity Economy: Unlocking the World's Fastest-Growing, Most Misunderstood Market
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survey of the views of people who use adult social care. In 2019–20, 64 per cent said they were ‘extremely satisfied’ or ‘very satisfied’ with their care and support and a further 24 per cent were ‘quite satisfied’ (NHS Digital, 2020c).
Richard Humphries • Ending the Social Care Crisis: A New Road to Reform
Direct Payments Act was passed in 1996.
Richard Humphries • Ending the Social Care Crisis: A New Road to Reform
positive innovations through new services such as direct payments and personal budgets (which people use to shape their own support for example by employing their own personal assistants – PAs – instead of services contracted by the council); ‘shared lives’ schemes (involving people sharing their home with someone who needs support) and the expansi
... See moreRichard Humphries • Ending the Social Care Crisis: A New Road to Reform
most councils know very little about self-funders in the area – who they are, what kind of care they are buying and how much they are paying.
Richard Humphries • Ending the Social Care Crisis: A New Road to Reform
Use or ornament? The social impact of participation in the arts
François Matarasso • 3 highlights
artshealthresources.org.ukThe Act stated that overt racial discrimination was no longer legal in public places – although it didn’t apply to shops or private housing.
Reni Eddo-Lodge • Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race: The Sunday Times Bestseller
Three years into his career at Jane Street, he remained fully committed to generating as many dollars as possible and channeling them into the causes that saved lives most efficiently. He’d given away most of the money he’d made on the trading floor to three charities identified by the Oxford philosophers as being especially efficient at saving liv
... See moreMichael Lewis • Going Infinite: The Rise and Fall of a New Tycoon
Dr Moody’s work with the League of Coloured Peoples was quite possibly Britain’s first anti-racism campaign in the twentieth century, and it would have far-reaching implications for Britain’s race relations in the future.