What age can people access Shared Lives?
How is it different from fostering, Staying Put, and supported lodgings?
Who doesn’t Shared Lives work well for?
How long can someone stay in a Shared Lives arrangement?
How can a young person find out more?
Shared Lives is a CQC regulated community-based accommodation and care and support model that provides an anchor in a carers home.
The carer will have been assessed and received training to be a Shared Lives Carer and will ‘share their life’ with the supported person. This is likely to include taking part in family life and community activities as well as developing independent living skills and making decisions about their own lives as well as personal care if needed.
It can be either living with the carer of visiting for respite or day support.
Shared Lives has traditionally been a service for adults with a learning disability. However, it has proved itself to be a really successful option for young people transitioning from children’s to adult services who have a Care Act Need for support and accommodation, as described in the Care Act below:
It is worth considering Shared Lives where a young person has an EHCP, Autism, is neurodiverse or has complex trauma which is impacting on the areas listed above so that the relevant adult social care team and Shared Lives can advise on eligibility or in some areas this can be funded by Children’s Services, as leaving care support and accommodation provision.
Planning starts from 14 -16 but usually the arrangement starts between a young persons 16th and 18th birthday.
At 18, if a young adult has Care Act eligible need, Adult Services take over responsibility. Children’s Services will continue to provide some support to the young adult as they are care experienced, led by the Personal Advisor.
If the young person doesn’t have a Care Act need then Children’s Service can fund a placement from 16 or 18, depending on the local schemes Statement of Purpose.
Fostering: It is like fostering in that it is individualised care and support in the carers home. Like fostering, it is regulated, although by CQC rather than Ofsted.
The biggest difference is that the supported person is an adult and has choice and control over their life. This means they will be supported to manage their finances, make decisions about how they spend their time and who they spend it with.
For example, a Shared Lives carer wouldn’t be able to instruct someone to be home at a particular time or take their phone away from them, but they would likely have expected behaviours / house rules, just like any other group of people or family who live together.
Staying Put: It is also like Staying Put, in that the supported person is now an adult and living in the carers home.
However, in a Staying Put arrangement the carer is no longer a Foster Carer and covered by regulation and the arrangements is time limited.
Currently this is usually until the young adult turns 21 but it practice it tends to be less time than this.
There is also no requirement around the levels of support and training provided to Staying Put Carers. Best practice is for Shared Lives to be used rather than Staying Put where the care experienced young adult has eligible Care Act need.
Supported Lodging: Supported Lodgings is most like Shared Lives as it is for young people who are 16+, is provided in the hosts home and is regulated.
However, it is lighter touch support (max. 10 hours per week), focusing more on the person’s housing need and is time limited.
If a young person just wants a room to stay in or is already independent, it is likely that Shared Lives may not be quite right for them.
Also, young people who need constant supervision, or more than 2 to 1 support are also unlikely to find this the right option for them.
We love this answer – it is for as long as they need to.
Obviously, carers do retire, or their situation changes but if Shared Lives is the right option we would do all we could to find another match for the supported person so they can remain part of Shared Lives.
Usually supported people move on to independent living when they are ready, but they take the network of relationships that they built in Shared Lives with them.
The referral process varies between authorities and on whether the arrangement will be funded by Children’s or Adult services.
We advise you contact your local Shared Lives Scheme – contact details here to ask about your local referral processes.
Up until a young person turns 18 all costs are usually covered by Children’s Services. After this, there are three elements to the payment. This includes:
As a Children’s Social Worker your role is usually to consider Shared Lives as an option for young people who you think may benefit from a Shared Lives arrangement. If they are interested then you will also be key in making sure everyone is communicating well with each other, whilst keeping the view of the young person at the heart of the planning. This means you will likely be checking that the right people are involved and that you have made the referral to adult services, if applicable, and to the Shared Lives scheme. The right people are likely to include the young person, Personal Advisor, current carer or key worker in their placement, Independent Review Officer, Adult Social Worker, Shared Lives Scheme Worker, family member and anyone else such as their education placement, health professionals and maybe an advocate or mentor.
As a Personal Advisor, your role is to bring the leaving care expertise and help the team think about the young person’s needs resulting from them having been in care. This is likely to include sharing the pathway plan, and making sure this forms part of any assessments and is the key document all professionals and the young person is inputting into. Finances for young people in Shared Lives can be complicated, so they will need your support to make sure that they are claiming any finances they are eligible for and that they (and their Shared Lives Carer) are aware of the Local Offer and what is available to them.
As an Independent Review Officer your role will be to make sure things are happening in a timely way, including starting to raise awareness of Shared Lives as an option from 14. It is important that you are aware of the referral process for Shared Lives in your Local Authority, so that you can connect everyone together to carefully plan for the young person. There are two main groups, those who are in foster care where a foster carer is interested in transitioning to Shared Lives with the young person, and young people where it would be a new arrangement, they may be in supported accommodation, residential or a fostering placement, that cannot continue for whatever reason.
As an Adult Social Worker your role will be to do the Care Act Assessment and ensure that the Shared Lives Scheme have the information they need to organise an arrangement in a planned way. You will also be securing the funding for the arrangement.
As a Supervising Social Worker your role is to provide information to the Foster Carer about Shared Lives, particularly about being registered as a Shared Lives Carer and a Foster Carer, linking them in with the Shared Lives Scheme early so they can find out more about the scheme and start the assessment process if they want to become a Shared Lives Carer.
They can:
They can:
You can speak to your local Shared Lives scheme who will be happy to answer your questions and share more information.