According to Pulse magazine investigation revealed that UK health funding has being spent on new clothes, an iRobot cleaner, holidays, horse riding, satnavs, a summer house, art classes and aromatherapy.
Personal health budgets
were introduced by the Government to help the long-term sick and disabled, and
give them greater control over the support they received.
The patients work with
their GP or an NHS team to decide how the money should be spent on their care.
Pulse used the Freedom of
Information Act to find how much was spent on personal health budgets during
2014/15, as Sky News discovered that some cancer treatments were to be expected
to be cut in an attempt to reduce the amount being spent on the Cancer Drug
Fund.
Some 33 of 209 Clinical
Commissioning Groups (CCG) in England provided full responses.
The NHS Nene and NHS Corby
CCGs, which handle health budgets in Northamptonshire, spent £2.55m on personal
health budgets for 161 patients.
This included cash for a
family holiday to help a patient "re-establish relations" with their
children.
Another person went on
holiday with a dog, while cash was also spent on building a summer house so a
patient could have "their own space".
A spokesman said the money
was being used to achieve outcomes that "focus on improving an
individual's health and wellbeing".
He added: "All
personal health budgets are clinically agreed and monitored."
In Kernow in Cornwall, £248
was spent on horse riding and £7 on hiring pedalos, while £1,000 was put
towards music lessons in Stoke-on-Trent.
The 33 CCGs also disclosed
their predicted spend on personal health budgets in 2015/16. They had an
expected spend of £589,000 each.
Extrapolated across all
CCGs, this would amount to £120m on fewer than 5,000 patients.
Dr Richard Vautrey, deputy
chairman of the British Medical Association's General Practitioners Committee,
said: "We continue to have real reservations about this scheme and the
inappropriate use of scarce NHS money on non-evidence-based therapies.
"While individuals may
themselves value a massage or summer house, others will understandably start to
question why they can't also have such things paid for by the state - and that
will just fuel demand."
Pulse Magazine
Sky
some patient are lucky
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