A Better Life, and Better Ageing
This strategy should be read together with our account of how we want to develop support for all adults in Dorset: Commissioning for A Better Life for Adults in Dorset. That document sets out our overall vision for everyone to live a better life, with or without the need for support.
This question, posed by Social Care Futures following work with people using social care services, is important for connecting how we all live, with or without support needs. In Dorset, we are working on helping everyone achieve that, through the idea of a Better Life. It isn’t a judgment on how anyone’s life is now. We aren’t saying that any particular life should be better. But we are saying that it is the job of everyone working in adult social care and support services – and across the wider council and our partners – to ensure people have the opportunity to live the better life that they are seeking for themselves. As people age and, in many cases, develop the conditions or frailty associated with older age, it becomes ever more important that we provide the opportunities to think about what their version of ‘A Better Life’ is, and have the support available to help them to achieve it.
Four outcomes
The outcomes that we set out in our overall strategy for all adults apply to older people as well. But we also need to think about the kinds of outcomes that matter as people age.
Dorset is a great place to grow older, with a range of vibrant community activity, giving people better days whether they have support needs or not, and keeping them well connected to the people around them and where they live.
People have access to excellent care and support in their home, both responsive short-term reablement and longer-term care, which always puts independence at its heart and helps people to continue to live independently for as long as possible, utilising equipment and assistive technology where appropriate.
A good range and choice of residential care is available, in high quality, modern homes, to meet the increasingly complex needs of the local older population.
Some key connections with our overall vision for adults in Dorset
Preventing care and support needs from developing, or delaying them, or reducing the degree of need, are all crucial to helping people to age better.
This strategy starts from what it means to live well in supportive communities, before people develop care and support needs. In the strategy for all adults, we talk about the supportive and preventive community system, plus the use of technology-enabled care systems, that are all part of a prevention vision for older people.
As we age, we all need to make choices about how, and possibly where, we live. It is very important that we have good information and advice available to people to help them in those choices, so what we said in the adults’ vision is of great importance to older people.
We also set out a vision for day opportunities, focusing on a community-embedded approach, moving away from more rigid “day services” to a more flexible and responsive set of options for people to occupy their days. This is important for older people to remain connected to their communities and the things that matter to them, as well as better tailoring the support offer to the needs of different groups.