The Care Act 2014 sets out local authorities’ duties when assessing people’s care and support needs.
This resource supports care practitioners and answers their questions about assessment and determination of eligibility under the Care Act. It also provides practical guidance over what they should do when applying the letter and spirit of this law.
For brevity and simplicity, throughout this resource the term ‘assessment under the Care Act’ is used to refer to either a Care Act assessment of:
Section 13 of the Care Act 2014 and the Care and Support (Eligibility Criteria) Regulations 2015 sets out the national eligibility criteria which must be followed to determine if an individual has eligible needs for care and/or support.
The purpose of this section is to answer your questions in relation to the determination of eligibility under the Care Act and aims to give you practical guidance in relation to what you should do.
The eligibility determination follows an assessment and cannot be undertaken until the Care Act assessment is completed.
The national eligibility criteria has three conditions and, as a social care practitioner, you will need to address each of the conditions in order, using the information gathered during the assessment to evidence your answers.
If you are supporting an adult, the conditions are:
If you are supporting a carer, the conditions are:
For the individual (adult or carer) to have eligible needs you will have to evidence an affirmative response to each of the conditions represented in the two sets of questions below.
The local authority’s duties in relation to determination of eligibility are exactly the same for individuals that are self-funders.
This is the first condition to determine eligibility for care and support. You do not need a formal diagnosis of an illness or impairment.
As a social care practitioner, you must be able to satisfy yourself – and have the necessary evidence in the assessment – that the individual is living with either a physical, mental, sensory, learning or cognitive disability or illness, substance misuse or brain injury that leads to them having the needs you have identified in your assessment. It does not need to be a long-term impairment or illness.
You as a social care practitioner must be able to satisfy yourself – and have the necessary evidence in the assessment – that the individual is providing necessary support. This means that the adult can’t do without support what the carer is doing for/with them.
You do not need evidence to indicate that the amount of unpaid support provided is significant or related to a practical task; it could be emotional support. The amount of time, or regularity or type of care and support provided, does not matter at this stage.
Condition two refers to the eligibility outcomes.
It may be that the individual only has one need that makes them unable to achieve two or more of the specified outcomes.
As a social care practitioner, you will need to demonstrate how an individual is able or unable to achieve each of the specified outcomes and have the necessary evidence in the assessment, and to ensure that a need in relation to that outcome has been identified in the assessment.
For example: If an individual is not interested in pursuing any work, education or volunteering opportunities and this is clearly recorded in the assessment, you won’t need to demonstrate whether they are able or unable to achieve ‘accessing and engaging in work, training, education or volunteering’. However, if they are interested, even if you think they are able to do it, you will have to demonstrate that they are actually able to do it.
Adult – an adult is to be regarded as being unable to achieve an outcome if the adult is:
You will need to specify which outcomes the individual is unable to achieve and in which way they are unable to achieve them, as noted above.
If an individual expresses that they ‘find it difficult’ or ‘are struggling’, it does not necessarily mean that they are unable to achieve the outcome being explored. Therefore, it is important that you clarify what they mean by finding it difficult or struggling. It could indicate that they are unable to achieve but without more information it would not be possible to determine.
Carer – a carer is to be regarded as being unable to achieve an outcome if the carer:
Two people can have a similar level of needs or type of needs, but these needs may have very different impact on their wellbeing due to different priorities, personalities, personal and network resources and/or personal outcomes.
The following are examples of what ‘significant impact’ could mean:
If an individual says that they are ‘frustrated’ or ‘struggling’, it does not necessarily mean that there is a significant impact, so clarifying what they mean and how it impacts their individual wellbeing as described at the time of the assessment will support you in responding and evidencing your answer to condition three of the eligibility criteria.
It is important you do not determine significant impact based on assumptions, but by using the information you gathered during the assessment to verify how being unable to achieve an eligibility outcome has an impact on the individual’s wellbeing. Assumptions may need to be made in exceptional circumstances, such as where the individual does not consent to consulting with others during the assessment process. If this is the case, then make it clear that you are making an assumption and why.
There are several key elements to consider when making an eligibility determination under the Care Act:
Every day, practitioners in adult social care must make difficult decisions that change lives. Therefore, it is important that you can defend your professional decisions.
It will be important for you to differentiate ‘needs’ from ‘outcomes’.
The duty is to meet eligible needs and have regard to personal outcomes, so needs are met in a way that will enable the individual to meet their personal outcomes. While you have a duty to have regards to personal outcomes, there is no duty to meet personal outcomes.
[EDITORS: there is a div created image on current site – may need to be done as image: https://www.scie.org.uk/care-act-2014/assessment-and-eligibility/determination-eligibility]
As a social care practitioner, once you have determined eligibility, you have the following duties:
If the individual has eligible needs, the local authority must:
Note that the local authority has the duty to ensure the eligible needs are met, not to provide services to meet them if there is a more cost-effective or appropriate way of meeting them (i.e. building on existing skills, strengths and capabilities, or via a carer or community resources, etc.).
The local authority should bear in mind that eligibility may change over time, due to changing circumstances or needs.
You are required to do exactly the same for a self-funder.