MT62
MissAdventure
Yes, that must cost a fortune!
Anyway, regardless, in terms of care homes, i would report any staff who are giving out info on somebodys finances.
It’s a sackable offence to share any details of a clients personal information.
But you can’t stop residents sharing their own information.
Hello, Miss A! Great to see you back - I hope that means your health has improved 
My MIL has recently gone into a care home. She is 101, and until then she lived alone, with visits from carers and from us (her three children and their spouses). She is paying full rate, but at the high rate of fees her savings will run out and she will have to sell her home. She is reluctant to do this, as she has always seen it as something she and FIL worked hard to pay for, and is proud that she can call it her own. She is of the generation that dreaded 'dying a pauper', and is old enough to remember workhouses for those who had nothing. I think that when she has adjusted to being in care she will see that she doesn't 'need' her house, but it's huge psychological leap for her just now.
Other residents do talk about being in there free - it seems there is nothing too personal to be discussed when their lives are rather short of events to talk about
. Some were on PC, so are not contributing anything from their own pockets, and complain about not being able to keep the whole amount. Presumably they didn't pay tax or NI either, if they are on PC now? It really doesn't seem fair to me that MIL is charged so much for something others get free, and that the reason for that charge is that she worked (as well as raising children and cleaning her house), so has some resources.
I don't think the comparison with the NHS is fair - most people pay into that, and whilst some may smoke or drink, (or enjoy extreme sports etc) none of us knows if we will become ill and need costly treatment. It is an insurance scheme, and as with all insurance we pay in in the hope we won't need to claim. Similarly with childbearing - it is our children (or grandchildren) whose taxes are paying our pensions, so if we are putting a price on children, whilst their deliveries, health and education are a cost, they pay it back as adults.
Of course we (as a society) can't have older people not getting care, just as those unable to work should have their contributions paid so they are looked after. The truth is that a lot of the residents where my MIL lives would be incapable of looking after themselves. MIL is not demented - she is physically frail, but many of them have both mental and physical frailties. The alternative to care would be to let them die, which would be unconscionable - it's not the care of the needy that people object to, but the way some are charged and others not.
I wonder whether a lot of those who don't see the two-tier payment system as unfair know that even if they pay the fees they will still have money in the bank, so it is less of a blow than 'dying a pauper' would be?