Publication | Closed Access
The Use of <i>Fair Access to Care Services'</i> Eligibility Criteria for Equipment Provision within Local Authorities in England
10
Citations
5
References
2006
Year
Health AdministrationHealthcare ProvisionNational Eligibility FrameworkPrimary CareOccupational Health ServicePublic HealthHealth Services ResearchLocal AuthoritiesCare DeliveryHealth SciencesFacs CriteriaIntegrated CareHealth PolicyFacs Eligibility CriteriaOutcomes ResearchCare ServicesEquipment ProvisionHealth Care DeliveryNursingHealth SystemsHealthcare AccessOccupational TherapyLong-term Care
In April 2003, the national eligibility framework for the provision of community care services, Fair Access to Care Services (FACS), was implemented. The aim of the framework was to ensure geographical equity in the provision of services, including equipment and minor works, so ending the postcode variability of care described in the Audit Commission report Fully Equipped. This study reports a postal questionnaire survey of a representative sample of 100 local authority occupational therapy teams across England to examine the implementation and use of the criteria for equipment provision. A 60% response rate revealed that only 9 out of 60 teams (15%) used solely FACS criteria; the remainder still used local criteria. Between-colleague differences in equipment provision persisted (68%). This suggests that the implementation of the FACS eligibility criteria has not achieved its goal.
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