Carers Support

Are You A Carer?

If you’re a Carer who helps and supports someone who can’t manage on their own, we want to ensure YOU get all the support YOU need.

What is a carer?

Carers provide help and support to a partner, relative, child, friend or neighbour who could not manage without your help due to physical or mental illness, disability, frailty, life-limiting illness or addiction.

Carers can be any age and background.

What is a young carer?

  • A young Carer is someone aged 18 or under who helps to look after a relative who has a disability, illness, mental health condition, or drug or alcohol problem
  • Someone who does jobs around the home such as cooking, cleaning or helping someone get dressed or move around
  • Someone who helps someone deal with their feelings

The difference between a young Carer and other young people is that a young Carer is responsible for the care of a member of their family in a way other young people are not.

To be able to do this, we need to know certain facts about your caring situation, please ask at reception for a Carers Referral Form.

Please complete this form and either hand it to our Receptionist If you are agreeable, we will pass your details to the Carers Service, a countywide organisation providing relevant information and advice, local support services, newsletter, and telephone link line for carers.

With your permission, we will also refer you to have your needs assessed by Adult Care Services.  This is called a Carers’ Needs Assessment.

There is no charge for this, and it’s your chance to discuss your role as a Carer and what help you may need to:

v  Support you as a Carer,

v  Maintain your own health.

v  Balance caring with other aspects of your life, like work and family, looking at both your current and future needs.

It’s NOT about judging the way you are caring for someone, nor should social services assume that you wish to become, or carry on being, a carer.

Because of completing the Assessment, the local authority may provide services to help you in your caring role or to maintain your own health and well-being.

It can also look at the needs of the person you care for. This could be done separately, or together, depending on the situation.

Please speak to our reception team for a Carers Referral Form

Carers Support Policy

If you are a carer, you might find it difficult to access our services without extra support.

 If you identify yourself as a carer, our staff will try to offer you:

1.      Home visits and/or telephone appointments if caring responsibilities mean you cannot leave the person you care for at home or bring them with you to the surgery.

2.      Flexibility or priority on appointment times where possible.

3.      Support for the person you care for in the waiting room or a private area if you need to bring them to the surgery but would like an appointment in private.

4.      Information about local carers supports services which may be able to arrange transport and/or sitting services to help you leave home to attend surgery.

5.      Telephone ordering for prescriptions where possible.

6.      An annual health check and a flu jab.

7.      Information about your right to a Carers’ Assessment of your own needs as a carer.

8.      Advice on safer lifting and other aspects of providing care such as medication.

9.      Discussing with you that you would like us to do in the event of you or the person you care for having a medical or other emergency.

In some cases, caring roles are full time and very demanding. We would like to support you in your caring role where we can. We will avoid making assumptions about the amount of care you wish to take on.

Caring should not be at the expense of your own health and wellbeing. Please tell us how your caring role is affecting you and if you have any support needs.

We will try to help you by:

·         Respecting your privacy and confidentiality and conducting conversations of a personal nature in private.

·         Discussing the benefits of appropriate information sharing with patients who need or may in future need care from a relative or friend.

·         Providing you with information about the condition and needs of the person you care for, such as the effects of medication, where that person gives consent.

·         Always listening to and respecting the information you give us about your caring role and the needs of the person you care for.

·         Providing you with general information about health conditions when you ask for it when we do not have consent from the person you care for to share their personal information.

Further Support

  • Please Visit Route2Wellbeing For Further Help and Support.
  • Young Carers - Visit: https://www.sandwellyc.com/ Sandwell Young Carers provides guidance and support to children and young people (aged 5-18) whose health, education and social lives have been affected as a result of caring for a dependent family member.