Examples of NHS Continuing Healthcare in a sentence
NHS Continuing Healthcare is a package of care arranged and funded solely by the NHS and provided free to the patient.
There is a legal ‘right to ask’ for a personal health budget, which has been available since April 2014, which was extended to a legal ‘right to have’ a personal health budget (with some exceptions) since October 2014 for people receiving NHS Continuing Healthcare (including children).
We shall work with you, such authorities and anyone who might top-up any shortfall between fees offered by a CCG for NHS Continuing Healthcare or by a local authority and our required weekly fee, and endeavour to agree terms with them by which you are able stay at the Home despite a change of funding, but we cannot guarantee the outcome of such discussions, and you may be required to leave the Home.
It does not necessarily mean the individual is eligible for NHS Continuing Healthcare.
As a result of the Coughlan Judgment (1999) and the Grogan Judgment (2006), under the National Health Service Act 2006, the Secretary of State has developed the concept of a “primary health need” to assist in deciding which treatment and other health services it is appropriate for the NHS to provide under NHS Continuing Healthcare.