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#AccessAble
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What’s the difference between NHS and social care? (and why people confuse them): Week 5 #AccessAble https://t.co/NfOYlWHhoQ
Week 5 of #AccessAble with @JenKteach is tonight.
Recordings are available for Weeks 1-4. Full of important information on Disability on the UK from several angles.
Highly Recommended Listening.
UNDERSTANDING DISABILITY: Week 5 of our #AccessAble Series is on TONIGHT 7–9pm
This week we’re looking at one of the most common sources of confusion for disabled people and families: What’s the difference between NHS and social care? (and why people confuse them) → Where does healthcare end and “support” begin?
We’ll clearly break down:
• The core responsibilities of the NHS versus local authority social care
• Why the two systems are so often confused and where they overlap
• How the picture differs across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland (including Northern Ireland’s integrated model)
• NHS Continuing Healthcare (CHC) - what it is, how it’s decided, and why it matters
• Real-world examples of where the boundary causes problems (hospital discharge, diagnosis vs ongoing support, children’s services, etc.)
• Why this split matters so much for disabled people and families

Format: Online X Space (link will be set up tonight at 6.55pm, as this ensures the space can be recorded and has a comments section!)
Drop a comment below if you have any questions. Looking forward to another powerful conversation. #UnderstandingDisability #AccessAble

UNDERSTANDING DISABILITY: Week 5 of our #AccessAble Series is on TONIGHT 7–9pm
This week we’re looking at one of the most common sources of confusion for disabled people and families: What’s the difference between NHS and social care? (and why people confuse them) → Where does healthcare end and “support” begin?
We’ll clearly break down:
• The core responsibilities of the NHS versus local authority social care
• Why the two systems are so often confused and where they overlap
• How the picture differs across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland (including Northern Ireland’s integrated model)
• NHS Continuing Healthcare (CHC) - what it is, how it’s decided, and why it matters
• Real-world examples of where the boundary causes problems (hospital discharge, diagnosis vs ongoing support, children’s services, etc.)
• Why this split matters so much for disabled people and families

UNDERSTANDING DISABILITY: Week 5 of our #AccessAble Series is on Thursday 4th June 7–9pm
Last week’s session on the different types of disability and why some conditions get taken more seriously than others was really insightful, with several new speakers, which is always great to see. Thank you to everyone who joined and contributed to such a thoughtful non-partisan discussion.
This week we’re looking at one of the most common sources of confusion for disabled people and families:
What’s the difference between NHS and social care? (and why people confuse them)
→ Where does healthcare end and “support” begin?
We’ll clearly break down:
• The core responsibilities of the NHS versus local authority social care
• Why the two systems are so often confused and where they overlap
• How the picture differs across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland (including Northern Ireland’s integrated model)
• NHS Continuing Healthcare (CHC) - what it is, how it’s decided, and why it matters
• Real-world examples of where the boundary causes problems (hospital discharge, diagnosis vs ongoing support, children’s services, etc.)
• Why this split matters so much for disabled people and families
Expect straight facts, clear explanations, practical examples, and open discussion, no slogans, just clarity on how the system actually works and where the gaps appear.
Format: Online X Space (link will be set up on Thursday so it can be recorded with comments enabled)
Drop a comment below if you have any specific questions or areas you’d like covered. Looking forward to another strong and useful conversation. #UnderstandingDisability #AccessAble

Regardless of any announcements made today #AccessAble AF will continue. The point was always to re-shape policy regardless of politics. Hope to see you tomorrow night 7-9pm

UNDERSTANDING DISABILITY: Week 5 of our #AccessAble Series is on Thursday 4th June 7–9pm
Last week’s session on the different types of disability and why some conditions get taken more seriously than others was really insightful, with several new speakers, which is always great to see. Thank you to everyone who joined and contributed to such a thoughtful non-partisan discussion.
This week we’re looking at one of the most common sources of confusion for disabled people and families:
What’s the difference between NHS and social care? (and why people confuse them)
→ Where does healthcare end and “support” begin?
We’ll clearly break down:
• The core responsibilities of the NHS versus local authority social care
• Why the two systems are so often confused and where they overlap
• How the picture differs across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland (including Northern Ireland’s integrated model)
• NHS Continuing Healthcare (CHC) - what it is, how it’s decided, and why it matters
• Real-world examples of where the boundary causes problems (hospital discharge, diagnosis vs ongoing support, children’s services, etc.)
• Why this split matters so much for disabled people and families
Expect straight facts, clear explanations, practical examples, and open discussion, no slogans, just clarity on how the system actually works and where the gaps appear.
Format: Online X Space (link will be set up on Thursday so it can be recorded with comments enabled)
Drop a comment below if you have any specific questions or areas you’d like covered. Looking forward to another strong and useful conversation. #UnderstandingDisability #AccessAble

Thank you more 🙏🏽
#AccessAble spaces by Jennifer are brilliant with great information and discussions.
Thursdays at 7pm
⬆️⬆️⬆️⬆️⬆️⬆️⬆️
Previous recordings below
⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️
#Disabilities
#Carers
#Change
Thank you so much to everyone who joined us for Week 4 of #AccessAble! Your questions, stories and energy made the conversation.
If you missed it (or want to listen back), the full recording is here:
https://t.co/wucn1ZAlNM
Missed any earlier weeks?
Catch up on all recorded Spaces (starting with Week 1) here:
https://t.co/ZVK4wvZSmR
And grab the infographics from every week here:
https://t.co/c2f84LDghF
See you next week; same day & time. Mark your calendars #AccessAble #AUKForum
Thank you so much to everyone who joined us for Week 4 of #AccessAble! Your questions, stories and energy made the conversation.
If you missed it (or want to listen back), the full recording is here:
https://t.co/wucn1ZAlNM
Missed any earlier weeks?
Catch up on all recorded Spaces (starting with Week 1) here:
https://t.co/ZVK4wvZSmR
And grab the infographics from every week here:
https://t.co/c2f84LDghF
See you next week; same day & time. Mark your calendars #AccessAble #AUKForum
Week 4 of our #AccessAble Series Different types of disability: → Why do some conditions get taken more seriously than others? https://t.co/1bWRC7RKB9
What do you think is the fairest way to decide who gets priority for high-cost support?
Should we have stricter clinical thresholds for enhanced PIP or other benefits — even if it means some milder cases get less?
How important is prevention and early intervention compared to just increasing benefit spending?
Is the current system short-changing people with the most complex needs because of the surge in less severe or unseen conditions?
What one practical change to assessments or eligibility would you make tomorrow if you were in charge?
Clear clinical thresholds for high-cost support?
Better assessment of functional impact (not just diagnosis)?
Protect funding for complex, high-needs cases while still offering reasonable support for milder conditions?
Stronger focus on prevention and early intervention?
Week 4 of our #AccessAble Series Different types of disability: → Why do some conditions get taken more seriously than others? https://t.co/1bWRC7RKB9
UNDERSTANDING DISABILITY: Week 4 of our #AccessAble Series TONIGHT 7–9pm... Will post space Link at 6:55pm for a 7pm start...

UNDERSTANDING DISABILITY: Week 4 of our #AccessAble Series is on TONIGHT 7–9pm
This week we’re looking at the different types of disability:
Types of disability: physical, sensory, cognitive, and mental health → Why do some conditions get taken more seriously than others?
We’ll clearly break down:
• Real UK prevalence figures for each category (with latest 2023/24–2025 data)
• Specific conditions, numbers for children, and how they differ across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland
• Age, sex and ethnicity patterns for each type
• Societal attitudes and the “hierarchy of deservingness”
• Funding realities and the surge in invisible/chronic conditions
• How we strike the right balance when resources are limited and the most severely disabled risk being short-changed
Whether you joined Weeks 1, 2 and 3, or are just jumping in this week, everyone is warmly welcome.
Format: Online X Space (link will be set up tonight at 6.55pm, as this ensures the space can be recorded and has a comments section!)
Drop a comment below if you have any questions. Looking forward to another powerful conversation. #UnderstandingDisability #AccessAble
UNDERSTANDING DISABILITY: Week 4 of our #AccessAble Series is on TONIGHT 7–9pm
This week we’re looking at the different types of disability:
Types of disability: physical, sensory, cognitive, and mental health → Why do some conditions get taken more seriously than others?
We’ll clearly break down:
• Real UK prevalence figures for each category (with latest 2023/24–2025 data)
• Specific conditions, numbers for children, and how they differ across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland
• Age, sex and ethnicity patterns for each type
• Societal attitudes and the “hierarchy of deservingness”
• Funding realities and the surge in invisible/chronic conditions
• How we strike the right balance when resources are limited and the most severely disabled risk being short-changed
Whether you joined Weeks 1, 2 and 3, or are just jumping in this week, everyone is warmly welcome.
UNDERSTANDING DISABILITY: Week 4 of our #AccessAble Series is on Thursday 28th May 7–9pm
Last week’s session on the Equality Act and legal protections was excellent, thank you to everyone who joined and contributed to such a clear and useful discussion on the issues in Northern Ireland and Disability as a Protected Characteristic not being sufficient to meet needs.
This week we’re looking at the different types of disability:
Types of disability: physical, sensory, cognitive, and mental health
→ Why do some conditions get taken more seriously than others?
We’ll clearly break down:
• Real UK prevalence figures for each category (with latest 2023/24–2025 data)
• Specific conditions, numbers for children, and how they differ across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland
• Age, sex and ethnicity patterns for each type
• Societal attitudes and the “hierarchy of deservingness”
• Funding realities and the surge in invisible/chronic conditions
• How we strike the right balance when resources are limited and the most severely disabled risk being short-changed
Expect straight facts, detailed stats, practical examples, and open discussion, no slogans, just clarity on what the data actually shows.
Format: Online X Space (link will be set up on Thursday so it can be recorded with comments enabled)
Drop a comment below if you have any specific questions or areas you’d like covered. Looking forward to another strong and useful conversation. #UnderstandingDisability #AccessAble

@JenKteach I look forward to another great Space #AccessAble
My question is;
Which service or departments cover the budget for respite, shared care, full care, sectioning etc?
Thank you always 💕
#AccessAble
I'm definitely really grateful 🙏🏽
Disability Space on Thursday 7pm.
⬇️ Please join ⬇️
Jennifer @JenKteach
UNDERSTANDING DISABILITY: Week 4 of our #AccessAble Series is on Thursday 28th May 7–9pm
Last week’s session on the Equality Act and legal protections was excellent, thank you to everyone who joined and contributed to such a clear and useful discussion on the issues in Northern Ireland and Disability as a Protected Characteristic not being sufficient to meet needs.
This week we’re looking at the different types of disability:
Types of disability: physical, sensory, cognitive, and mental health
→ Why do some conditions get taken more seriously than others?
We’ll clearly break down:
• Real UK prevalence figures for each category (with latest 2023/24–2025 data)
• Specific conditions, numbers for children, and how they differ across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland
• Age, sex and ethnicity patterns for each type
• Societal attitudes and the “hierarchy of deservingness”
• Funding realities and the surge in invisible/chronic conditions
• How we strike the right balance when resources are limited and the most severely disabled risk being short-changed
Expect straight facts, detailed stats, practical examples, and open discussion, no slogans, just clarity on what the data actually shows.
Format: Online X Space (link will be set up on Thursday so it can be recorded with comments enabled)
Drop a comment below if you have any specific questions or areas you’d like covered. Looking forward to another strong and useful conversation. #UnderstandingDisability #AccessAble

UNDERSTANDING DISABILITY.
WEEK 3.
TONIGHT 7-9PM UK.
The Laws covering Disability in the UK, with a particular focus on the Equality Act 2010, whilst noting the difference in NI.
Do join @JenKteach for the #AccessAble series.
UNDERSTANDING DISABILITY: Week 3 of our #AccessAble Series is on TONIGHT 7–9pm
This week we’re moving into the legal side:
Legal definitions in the UK (Equality Act basics) → What protections exist, and where do they fall short? Section 20 the all-important duty to make reasonable adjustments. How effective the law has been in practice since 2010? Realistic ways the law could be improved (or what should replace it?)
Expect straight facts, practical examples, and open discussion no slogans, just clarity on what the law actually does and where it falls short.
Whether you joined Week 1, Week 2 or are just jumping in this week, everyone is warmly welcome.
Format: Online X Space (link will be set up tonight at 6.55pm, as this ensures the space can be recorded and has a comments section!)
Drop a comment below if you have any questions. Looking forward to another powerful conversation. #UnderstandingDisability #AccessAble
UNDERSTANDING DISABILITY: Week 3 of our #AccessAble Series is on TONIGHT 7–9pm
This week we’re moving into the legal side:
Legal definitions in the UK (Equality Act basics) → What protections exist, and where do they fall short? Section 20 the all-important duty to make reasonable adjustments. How effective the law has been in practice since 2010? Realistic ways the law could be improved (or what should replace it?)
Expect straight facts, practical examples, and open discussion no slogans, just clarity on what the law actually does and where it falls short.
Whether you joined Week 1, Week 2 or are just jumping in this week, everyone is warmly welcome.
UNDERSTANDING DISABILITY: Week 3 of our #AccessAble Series is on Thursday 21st May 7–9pm
Last week’s session on the Medical vs Social Model was brilliant, so much great feedback, thank you to everyone who joined and contributed to such a thoughtful discussion.
This week we’re moving into the legal side:
Legal definitions in the UK (Equality Act basics)
→ What protections exist, and where do they fall short?
We’ll clearly break down:
• The Disability Discrimination Act 1995 and The key changes in the Equality Act 2010 (including the legal definition of disability)
• Section 20 the all-important duty to make reasonable adjustments
• How effective the law has been in practice since 2010
• The differences in Northern Ireland (which still largely operates under the old DDA)
• Realistic ways the law could be improved (or what should replace it)
Expect straight facts, practical examples, and open discussion no slogans, just clarity on what the law actually does and where it falls short.
Format: Online X Space (link will be set up on Thursday so it can be recorded with comments enabled)
Drop a comment below if you have any specific questions or areas you’d like covered. Looking forward to another strong and useful conversation.
#UnderstandingDisability #AccessAble

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