Home Farm Trust (HFT) is a national charity providing long-term support for people with learning disabilities and their families to live the life they want to live, by taking the time to get to know them and their aims, and providing friendly support and expert advice where it’s needed, whether it’s with housing, jobs, money, or relationships. It offers a wide range of flexible services throughout the UK, including assistive technologies.HFT provides a number of basic training packages for email, Internet searching and multi-media programmes for care workers
In 2004, the organisation secured funding from the European Social Fund to lead the TATE project (Through Assistive Technology to Employment) which was aimed atthe adaptation of assistive technologies that were traditionally associated with the care of older people to people with learning difficulties. The TATE project ended in 2008, but HFT continues to implement assistive technologies for its clients thanks to private funding.
HFT has developed a needs-led assessment process for introducing its clients to assistive technology. This process evaluates every stage of the procedure: referral, consent, assessment, funding, equipment identification and ordering, response protocol, installation, review and changing needs. All these stages are focussed on the families of the client.
HFT also runs the Karten CTEC Centre. This implements the use of ICT in many innovative ways, including staff training on computers to meet the needs of HFT’s clients. The CTEC Centre has computers with broadband networks, an interactive whiteboard, data projector and up-to-date software. Additionally, the CTEC Centre runs a variety of ICT-based courses for clients, the most popular of which is a one-day life-story workshop designed to allow clients to put together a multimedia profile using computer technology. There are also courses that use email with specially adapted symbols for use by people with learning difficulties. These courses are accredited by the City and Guilds and the Learning Disability Awards Framework.
There is a £1 per week fee for the service that users pay themselves. To access the service a pc and an internet connection are required. The staff is made up of social care workers and volunteers and the initiative involves organizations belonging to the Private and the Voluntary sector.
The main aim of the initiativeis to support people with learning disabilities to:
Hft commitment goes beyond being just a high quality support provider. The HFT’s team works in partnership with the people it supports, their families and carers and health professionals to develop effective services that will help people live the life they choose. In 1962 a group of parents of children with learning disability got together to ensure that their children would continue to be supported in leading fulfilling lives. Since that moment, many other families have joined this group of parents and today the HFT focus is firmly on developing tailored services for people with learning disabilities, supporting all people wanting to lead independent life in their homes with their relatives.
Care Recipients
Informal carers
Paid assistants
Formal carers
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Independent Living
Information and learning for carers
Personal Support and Social Integration for carer
Care coordination
Kind of services provided through the use of ICTs:
A personal computer and an internet connection are the only two devices required to use the service.
For care workers, HFT provides a number of basic training packages for email, Internet searching and multi-media programs.
Kind of technological supports used by carers and/or care recipients: assistive technologies for emails with specially adapted symbols for people with learning difficulties.
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The service was funded by public funding in the beginning until 2008. Now it continues thanks to private funding only. The first option is to see whether the local authority will pay for the equipment. Then HFT will try and raise funds to pay for it, or see if there is enough in the Trust to pay for it. Some users will pay for the equipment themselves. Maintenance of the equipment can add 15/25% to the initial costs, though HFT tends not to focus too much on maintenance
The sustainability plan takes into account that funding has been hard to secure, with a reliance on grants (including one from Vodafone). So, in the future, HFT hopes to develop e-learning facilities and online modules for training purposes, and to have all staff able to use ICT-based services in order to increase its target users
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Authorities
Private Care Sector
Health and Social Care Systems
Third Sector
Private Companies
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Informal Carers
Health Professionals
Social Care Professionals
Privately-Hired Care Assistants (inc. Migrant Care Workers)
Volunteers
The organization employs trainers with ICT expertise and hosts an intra-net based exchange forum that has around 500 professional users. Hft is working towards enabling all staff associated with it to communicate via the Internet.
Area Manager: Area Managers enable supported people in the local area to achieve their aspirations. Area managers are great communicators, relationship builders and negotiators. They work with the care recipients and their carers, to get the most out of staff, to develop effective partnerships with local organizations and health professionals and to lead negotiations on funding or resources for the people Hft work with. Area Managers are responsible for all operational support staff, volunteers and the Service in the area. Responsibilities also include planning and developing services according to local needs, managing finances for the services in their area, and ensuring the delivery of high quality services according to relevant legislative and quality standards.
Service Manager: Service Managers make sure that services meet the wants and needs of the clients from choosing the right staff to ensuring the service has the right resources. Running the business end of the services, Service Managers are skilled at identifying creative solutions for the people supported. They look for ways to improve services, develop specialist support as needed and identify new development opportunities, all with the aim of helping the supported people to live the life they choose. They are responsible for recruiting, developing and leading service staff that match client’s needs and comply with relevant legislative and quality standards. They also have a lot of experience in health and social care, know the relevant legislation inside-out and are skilled in assessment, support planning and report writing. These managers are able to look for creative solutions to meet people’s support needs in a way that respects their individuality and to build strong staff teams with these qualities.
Support worker/ senior support worker: Support Workers, support people in keeping healthy, in doing the things they enjoy and in getting involved in their local community like providing personal care or emotional support, support with household tasks or helping them pay the bills. Support can be delivered in the home, out and about in the community, or away on holiday, both day and night.
Additionally, managers participate in recording the administration of medicine, speaking on behalf of the people who are supported and take part in assessments and contract reviews.
Support workers also take part in managing people’s finances, purchasing materials, and helping manage complex or sensitive issues, including advising and encouraging the people who are supported. As well as providing support, there are general administrative duties such as completing necessary care records and working to appropriate legislative and care standards. Senior support workers are also responsible for leading shifts, for supervising staff in their team, and covering for the service manager. They also need a good understanding of appropriate standards and legislation with a view to supporting their team to work to those standards.
Relief Support Worker: Relief support worker work on a temporary basis with the clients and they help to ensure that Hft maintains a high quality service all the time. They provide support to people to achieve what they want to in terms of their health, in doing the things they enjoy and in getting involved in their local community. They help withthe everyday things like providing personal care or emotional support, support with household tasks or financial management and undertake sleep-in duties, or act as second level support when accompanying people on holiday. Relief support workers undertake general administrative duties, completing necessary care records and working to appropriate legislative and care standards.
Volunteering with Hft can be a rewarding way to spend spare time and there are different and flexible ways to get involved. Volunteers are supported through on-the-job training and the information packs provided, covering travel expenses where appropriate or other specific support needed for the volunteering role. Volunteers can have different roles:
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A lot of initiatives and events are organized in order to promote the service: concerts, marathons, bike and foot rides. There is also a Media contact section.
The service positively impacts on:
- Informal carers because it reconciles care and work and improves their social life and health.
- Paid assistants because the service improves their social life and health.
- Elderly people because the service improves their health and social relationships.
Other benefits:
Despite some concerns from clients in the early stages, demonstration of the ICT-based courses reveals their benefits and overcomes initial fears. HFT has its own database which measures confidence, independence, reassurance and safety. There is also an attempt to scenario model what would be the costs involved in not having the technology. Some findings show that rather than isolation, ICT actually helps people become more integrated (Schmidt et al., 2011).
Benefits of this service on:
- Private organisations that provide care: the service helps to save costs and optimize resources
- Companies and the labour market: the service helps the informal carer to reconcile paid work and caring tasks and it avoids added costs for replacing the worker who has to stay at home with the care recipient (Schmidt et al., 2011).
Benefits of this service on public authorities, NHS and social care services: the service helps to save the costs of home caring and hospitalisation and it is effective in training and relieving informal carers so it helps to optimise financial and human resources (Schmidt et al., 2011).
Strengths
Weaknesses
Threats
Opportunities
Challenges
HFT has installations all over UK (Northern England, Central England, South East England and South West England) and indented to assess them all. As scaling up would be a major initiative, the provider plans to change the organizations and their marketing techniques and focus more on service users than technology. So, to increase the initiative transferability, they are going to invest firstly on the equipment for workers and volunteers rather than on the service users. However, savings should not be the motivation for this work, as HFT believes that if organizations engage this with the idea of creating independence, andsafety in mind, the savings will follow and the initiative could be transferred in other contexts.
References:
Schmidt A., Chiatti C., Fry G., Hanson E., Magnusson L,. Socci M, Stückler A., Széman Z., Barbabella F., Hoffmann F. & Lamura G. (2011), Analysis and Mapping of 52 ICT based Initiatives for Caregivers, http://is.jrc.ec.europa.eu/pages/EAP/eInclusion/carers.html
Publications:
Hft (2012), Annual Review, available on http://www.hft.org.uk/about-us/governance/How-we-are-governed/
Hft (2013) Family Carer Support Services and Appendices, available on http://www.hft.org.uk/Supporting-people/family-carers/Resources/
Hft, Governance structure (2011), available on http://www.hft.org.uk/about-us/governance/How-we-are-governed/
Hft, Report and Accounts (2011), available on http://www.hft.org.uk/about-us/governance/How-we-are-governed/
Hft, New and events, available on http://www.hft.org.uk/News-and-events/News/ (last access on 17 June 2013)
Yeandle S., Fry G. (2010), The Potential of ICT in Supporting Domiciliary Care in England, available on http://ipts.jrc.ec.europa.eu/publications/pub.cfm?id=3019
Hft
5/6 Brook Office Park
Folly Brook Road
Emersons Green
Bristol
BS16 7FL
0117 906 1700
For all media enquiries, both during and outside of office call 0117 906 1697.
Or email media.enquiries@hft.org.uk during office hours.