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Statement by the Right Honourable Stephen Dorrell, Secretary of State for Health: 12 March 1997; social services reform
- Author:
- DORRELL Stephen
- Publisher:
- Great Britain. Department of Health
- Publication year:
- 1997
- Pagination:
- 4p.
- Place of publication:
- London
Statement about the Government's White Paper on the future of social services in England and Wales: 'Social services: achievement and challenge' presented to Parliament in March 1997.
Speech given by Stephen Dorrell, Secretary of State for Health, to Social Services Conference, Edinburgh, 18 October 1996
- Author:
- DORRELL Stephen
- Publisher:
- Great Britain. Department of Health
- Publication year:
- 1996
- Pagination:
- 14p.
- Place of publication:
- London
Primary care: the future
- Author:
- DORRELL Stephen
- Publisher:
- Great Britain. Department of Health. National Health Service Executive
- Publication year:
- 1996
- Pagination:
- 67p.
- Place of publication:
- London
First step document in a process of clarifying how primary care services should be developed and identifying the action needed to proceed with these developments.
MENCAP speech/statement on services for people with learning difficulties: Tuesday 25 June 1991
- Author:
- DORRELL Stephen
- Publisher:
- Great Britain. Department of Health
- Publication year:
- 1991
- Pagination:
- 25p.
- Place of publication:
- London
Speech by the Parliamentary Secretary for Health to the MENCAP Week Conference, announcing 4 Department of Health initiatives to help improve the delivery of services to people with learning disabilities.
Long term care of the elderly: shaping the future
- Authors:
- DORRELL Stephen, et al
- Publisher:
- Social Market Foundation
- Publication year:
- 2010
- Pagination:
- 5p.
- Place of publication:
- London
In this brief statement the authors highlight why there needs to be reform of the funding of long term care for older people in England. It is argued that to be effective any reform needs to have cross-party agreement. The key elements of long term care reform where consensus exists and which could used as the principles for a future programme of change are then summarised. These include: the need for social care funding to be a partnership between the state and individuals; the use of 'risk-pooling'; a national system of funding, assessment and entitlement; more help should be given to family carers; an increase in the quantity and quality of formal social care; individuals should have a choice of services.
The wellbeing of the nation: interim report and consultation
- Authors:
- PERRY Pauline, DORRELL Stephen
- Publisher:
- Public Service Improvement Policy Group
- Publication year:
- 2006
- Pagination:
- 23p.
- Place of publication:
- London
The Wellbeing of the Nation sets our four ‘core values’ which will guide the more detailed policy proposals to be announced in July 2007. This includes a new partnership with the professions, an unqualified commitment to the principle of Equitable Access, a strengthened commitment to local solutions, an unambiguous commitment to growth. Preliminary areas which have been identified for further work include education, social housing and social care.