FEWER THAN ONE IN FIVE exhausted unpaid carers (14 per cent) are confident that the support they receive with caring will continue following the COVID-19 pandemic.
After an extraordinarily challenging year providing many more hours of care for loved ones during the pandemic – coping with reduced support from health and care services as well as limited help from family and friends – unpaid carers are seriously worried about the support they will have to help them care in the future.
Research released for Carers Week (7 – 13 June 2021) has found that carers lost, on average, 25 hours of support a month they previously had from services or family and friends before the pandemic.
The research also found that 72 per cent of carers have not had any breaks from their caring role at all. Of those who got a break, a third (33 per cent) used the time to complete practical tasks or housework, and a quarter (26 per cent) to attend their own medical appointments.
Three quarters (74 per cent) reported being exhausted as a result of caring during the pandemic. More than a third (35 per cent) said they feel unable to manage their unpaid caring role.
The six charities supporting Carers Week – Carers UK, Age UK, Carers Trust, Motor Neurone Disease Association, Oxfam GB and Rethink Mental Illness – are calling on the UK Government to provide £1.2 billion funding for unpaid carers’ breaks, so that those providing upwards of 50 hours of care are able to take time off for their own health and wellbeing.
On behalf of Carers Week charities, Helen Walker, Chief Executive of Carers UK, said: “Carers have sacrificed their physical and mental health caring for loved ones over the course of this pandemic. They are exhausted having cared around the clock, and do not know how they can continue without a break.
“Many are looking to support services to be able to take that time for themselves but are desperately worried that they will not continue in the future. Without the right support, the stress and challenges of the last year could lead to far more carers breaking down. It is essential that the Government ensures that carers can take breaks and that those providing upwards of 50 hours of care each week get a funded break.
“Unpaid carers need hope and support in the future and they must be at the heart of the Government’s plans for social care reform.”
Almost two thirds of carers responding to the Carers Week survey (63 per cent) said they are worried about continuing to care without a break, 69 per cent reported poor mental health, while 64 per cent said their physical health had deteriorated.
* Source: Carers UK