Title

SOCIAL CARE

Requests for publicly-funded care at record high

The demand for publicly-funded social care is at a record high, a new study has revealed.

The demand for publicly-funded social care is at a record high, a new study has revealed.

Latest figures showed that requests for support have increased to around 1.98 million yet the number of people receiving long-term care fell to 818,000 in 2021-22.

Senior fellow at The King's Fund charity and lead author of the report, Simon Bottery, said: ‘It's likely that local authorities will see the number of new requests for adult social care pass the two million mark for the first time this year but, on current trends, fewer people will end up receiving long-term support.

'That means that more people will have to pay themselves, rely on family and friends or go without care entirely.'

Chairman of the Local Government Association's community wellbeing board, David Fothergill, said £13bn was needed to meet the pressure for social care and enable councils to meet their statutory duties.

He said: ‘Councils and providers always strive to reflect, learn and improve, but it is becoming increasingly hard to fund even statutory services.'

SOCIAL CARE

Preventing illegal parking

By Glynn Barton | 25 March 2026

Amanda Barrie and Glynn Barton explain how BCP Council implemented a landmark government trial to combat illegal parking on 10 days’ notice.

SOCIAL CARE

How we manage LGR without losing focus on vital regeneration work is paramount

By Sheila Oxtoby | 25 March 2026

LGR is clearly a huge challenge, says Sheila Oxtoby, 'but we are determined not to lose sight of delivering on our key strategies via initiatives like Pride ...

SOCIAL CARE

Creating a sustainable future for local government finance is essential

By Tracy Bingham | 25 March 2026

The LGiU's annual State of Local Government Finance survey makes clear that councils cannot raise sufficient revenue to meet the needs of their communities, ...

SOCIAL CARE

Now it's time to seize the initiative

By Simon Kaye | 25 March 2026

Simon Kaye sees an opportunity for a sceptical sector to push hard for further devolution.

Popular articles by William Eichler