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My grandfather is in full time 24 hour residential care in an NHS care home at present, the NHS now say we have to pay for his care in another home and are telling us to sell his home to fund this, could anyone tell me where we stand legally and if there are alternatives to this. Thanks in advance for your advice

2007-02-18 04:19:24 · 5 answers · asked by annie m 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

Thanks to those who have been kind enough to answer, and for those who think this is an open and shut case, I do hope you never experience a loved one needing this type of care.

2007-02-18 05:02:49 · update #1

5 answers

If someone else lives in his home, say another relative, then, no, they cannot make you sell the house. I know it's too late now but what your Grandfather could have done was to make his house over to his children in the knowledge that he could live in it in his life time. this is what my Mum did 20 years ago.
To be helpful, you can get an assessment from Social Services or a local nurse or health Visitor, this way your Grandfather doesn't have to pay so much. Why should your Grandfather be penalised for saving hard for his own house instead of having a council house. Why should the state pay for some people in Nursing Homes and not others? Pleae do check this out.
Good Luck.

2007-02-18 07:48:15 · answer #1 · answered by pixiedust 2 · 0 0

I would get this thoroughly checked with a lawyer specialising in the area. From what I've heard the NHS will try it on with people to see if they can get people to do what you are saying, but it may not be actually necessary from a legal stand point. Best of luck.

2007-02-18 04:29:09 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Please overlook on the subject of the yank solutions. As it is in the united kingdom and eire component to YA i assume it quite is the place you're. My answer is for England, despite if i'm particularly particular the policies are tremendously comparable for something of the united kingdom. If somebody desires to pass right into a care homestead they are going to be required to pay for this themselves in the event that they have factors over approximately £23,000. quite often the fee of the guy's house is blanketed of their factors, so needless to say anybody who owns their own homestead will could pay for their care homestead fees. yet, they don't look to be compelled to sell the homestead. The community authority will pay for the care and placed a charging order on the homestead. this suggests they get their funds while the home is at last bought. So even in the journey that your mom is the only proprietor of the homestead it nevertheless won't be in a position to be bought from below you. regardless of the undeniable fact that, your mom could not be the only proprietor. replaced into your dad the only proprietor or a joint proprietor while he died? the two way its attainable he left the homestead, or his share, to somebody else. He could have left it on your mum for existence purely, under a have confidence. to that end she will stay in it yet its not hers so it won't count sort while assessing her care homestead fees. Its additionally attainable that even no remember if it quite is in her call it heavily isn't counted as an asset. this could ensue while a radical relative (ie you) who's elderly under sixteen or over 60 lives there - do you qualify? additionally in case you have been looking after her the homestead won't count number. To get a precise answer you are able to talk on your community council or a community solicitor. Edit: some thing I forgot to point in the previous, is that even in the journey that your mum is the legal proprietor on paper, you are able to nevertheless have a useful pastime that may not be in a position to be taken away. this could have arisen in case you had contributed to the fee of procuring for the homestead, paying the interior maximum loan, or making advancements. it quite is a puzzling component to regulation - contributing to every day expenses inclusive of utilities or maintenance does not count sort.

2016-12-17 13:01:49 · answer #3 · answered by briana 4 · 0 0

I am sorry about your grandfather , but yes they can make him sell his home to pay for his care , just another example of how bad this country has become :(

2007-02-18 04:52:05 · answer #4 · answered by jizzumonkey 6 · 0 0

Yes they can do this. Why should the public have to for his care if he has resources?

2007-02-18 04:58:26 · answer #5 · answered by professorc 7 · 0 1

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