system is broken. we have an estimated 160,000 vacancies in social care. we have tens of thousands of people waiting to be assessed. we have a sector where pay is extremely poor, where the quality of care that we can offer people is often very, very limited and not able to offer support to enable people to stay independent. we can only offer support when people have become incredibly fragile and vulnerable, and that is not a happy experience for people receiving care and for their loved ones, but it then has all sorts of knock on effects. it has a knock on effect on the health service, where we have over 10,000 patients in hospital who don t need to be in hospital, aand one of the reasons they re in the hospital with often deteriorating hospitals, there isn t social care provision. and there s also impact on the economy because hundreds of thousands of people aren t
of care that we can offer people is often very, very limited and not able to offer support to enable people to stay independent. we can only offer support when people have become incredibly fragile and vulnerable, and that is not a happy experience for people receiving care and for their loved ones, but it then has all sorts of knock on effects. it has a knock on effect on the health service, where we have over 10,000 patients in hospital who don t need to be in hospital, aand one of the reasons they re in the hospital with often deteriorating hospitals, there isn t social care provision. and there s also impact on the economy because hundreds of thousands of people aren t able to work because either they have health conditions or care responsibilities or care needs that are not being addressed. the archbishop is right. the government has started to put a bit more money into social care
and that is not a happy experience for people receiving care and for their loved ones, but it then has all sorts of knock on effects. it has a knock on effect on the health service, where we have over 10,000 patients in hospital. we don t need to be in hospital. who don t need to be in hospital, aand one of the reasons they re in the hospital with often deteriorating hospitals, there isn t social care provision. and there s also impact on the economy because hundreds of thousands of people aren t able to work because either they have health conditions or care responsibilities or care needs that are not being addressed. the archbishop is right. the government has started to put a bit more money into social care over the next couple of years, although that s a quid pro quo for delaying the reforms. which were going to cap the amount of money which were going to cap the amount of money people are going to have to pay for care but after a decade or more
concerned for charles payne blood pressure and health, if the subject, a general view here that the blame game has gone into hyper drive. they have to blame somebody. can i make a point about barosso we heard at the top of the show. he ran portugal, right? portugal has a gdp of connecticut. he knows nothing of big economy, incapable of deciding how it might work and make it go. business debt to gdp 108%, household over 100%. he ran portugal. neil: okay, you have me there. and the economic but you have put me in this spot. does that remind you of the u.n. they have the mindless debates at the u.n. absolutely. neil: they blame us for everything. gaand one of the president s couldn t criticize him, he s saying everything the president did. neil: yeah, defend that