Children, Support Packages
Children, Support Packages
Last Updated: April 2024
How much health and social care help is possible for my child? This depends on an assessment of their individual needs and what support you need to care for them. It may also depend on the services available in your area.
This section briefly covers the different possible routes to getting health and social care support and how this links in with education support. It also discusses what assessment route would be best for your child and what you can do to get ready for any assessment.
This care is the responsibility of your local Integrated Health Board (IHB – previously the Clinical Commissioning Group or CCG)
If you think your child has complex health needs, talk to a health professional like a specialist nurse. If appropriate, they can support you to request a continuing care assessment for your child. This will look at all your child’s needs and the support you need to care for them.
A health assessor collects evidence of both your child’s met and unmet needs. They draw on the advice of the health and care professionals who are supporting your child. They have to judge what care your child needs that is over and above what would be expected for a child of the same age and stage of development. As part of this they will ask you and your child for your views on care and support. They will ask if you have any preferences about how this would be given. They use what is called a Children’s Decision Support Tool. This sets out ten areas of care called ‘care domains’:
- breathing
- eating and drinking
- mobility
- ability to control poos and wees (continence and elimination)
- skin care needs (skin and tissue viability)
- communication
- drug therapies and medicines
- psychological and emotional needs
- seizures
- challenging behaviour.
The ‘tool’ covers all aspects of your child’s life. This includes sections on home life and education. The assessment should always describe everything that matters.
The health assessor then makes a case to a panel of experts. They look at the evidence and the recommendations and decide if your child has a continuing care need.
To prepare for your child’s assessment, we suggest:
- Keep a diary for a week recording your child’s care needs throughout the day and night. Record details of the time all these tasks take you on your worst day. This blank diary template may be helpful.
- Gather as much evidence of your child’s care needs as you can – from doctors, other medical professionals etc. SMA UK can provide a letter of support.
- Think about any safety issues that mean you or a carer must be present and watchful – e.g. if there is a risk your child may vomit when using BiPap and there is a danger of choking.
- Think about any emotional or psychological challenges for you or your child as well as physical challenges.
Your child’s medical team should provide information about your child’s condition.
Please contact SMA UK if you:
- would like more help to explain the impact your child’s SMA has on them and your family
- need any other support preparing for or during your child’s assessment.
The people who work with you to assess your child’s needs and the needs of you as their carer should keep you well informed about:
- who is doing what
- how long the assessment will take
- how any decisions and offers of care will be made to you.
If you are not sure what is happening at any stage, ask your assessor.
In England, once your child is of nursery or school age, the IHB should work with your local authority to coordinate the assessment. Together they should agree a wider package of continuing care than just health needs. This is part of the process to develop your child’s Education, Health & Care Plan .
If you need any advice or support, contact your local health visitor, G.P or any member of your medical team.
If your child has a continuing care package via health (see above), you are entitled to have a personal health budget to manage yourself. Your health assessor will talk you through this.
If your child has ‘eligible needs’ that have been agreed in a Needs Assessment (see above) and they will be met by your Local Authority (LA), you may be offered the option of a personal or individual budget.
In England, where efforts are being made to integrate funding for care, your personal budget may combine any funding from health, social care and education.
Once the amount of the personal budget has been agreed, you and your caseworker can plan how best to support your child’s needs using your personal budget. You may choose for the LA to organise your child’s care or you may choose to organise this yourself. In this case your child’s budget is given to you as a Direct Payment (DP). This means you are given the funds to employ carers or personal assistants (PAs) for your child. There are supporting organisations that can help with managing the employment and support of carers and PAs. Your LA will be able to tell you which one(s) you could use locally.
All LA’s check and audit DP accounts. They will also want to know how you manage your DPs. They will want to see:
- what you spend, including all receipts. You need to keep careful records
- proof that the person you employ is allowed to work in this country
- what employment contract you have with them.