Shared Lives Plus have released the latest figures of Shared Lives in Scotland from 2021-22.
The annual report looks at trends within Shared Lives schemes in Scotland, shares new possibilities in communities and highlights how Shared Lives remains strong even in the face of recent challenges.
Key findings:
Summary
The Shared Lives sector in Scotland has had a positive year. The contraction in services during the pandemic has been reversed,
services have re-opened, processes adapted, more Shared Lives carers recruited, and there are plans for more growth.
The resilience of Shared Lives carers has shone through as they continued to provide support to vulnerable people, even as other services fall away. The data in this report paints a picture of a small, resourceful and, above all, resilient Shared Lives sector rooted in bespoke, person-centred care. It shows that Shared Lives remains strong, even in the face of recent challenges, and that it still has significant scope for growth with investment and support. The data shows that short-break and day-support services have gone most of the way to re-opening, but the narrative behind the data is that interventions are happening later, with smaller packages of care being available for people.
Shared Lives schemes have adopted creative approaches to enable Shared Lives carers to continue their support, many recruitment and assessment processes have moved online, support has been delivered outside and online, support groups are now more digitally active than ever before. Changes that were forced upon the sector have altered practice permanently and made the sector more flexible and resilient.