Luminance
We must be clear that there isn't always a choice for care. It's rather important in fact. We must focus on enabling people to feel safe and supported so that they are never in a position where they are turning down care at risk to their health and safety. In an ideal world everyone can have their chosen care, that is something to work on and work towards but it cannot be a standard if that care is not available that they then are not offered it. Especially under life saving measures. So yes many of us need to engage our common sense. Prioritise those with real and genuine need rather than make it a battle that has losses on one side only.
We must be clear that there isn't always a choice for care. It's rather important in fact.
I doubt anyone on this thread is unaware of the paucity of carers, this fact is not a new phenomenon. It has been known for some considerable time by governments and their agencies that over the last 50 years or so, mortality rates have decreased and that fertility rates have declined.
We know - we know - that Care-in-the-Community is frequently inadequate, and we know the combination of reasons why, not least of which is the underfunding of social care systems.
It is not a lack of common sense that is the problem, it is the lack of leverage - clout - among the elderly / vulnerable who are largely forgotten or whose plight is ignored until the media highlights how they are, for example, 'bed-blocking' hospitals across the UK, followed by op-ed pieces insisting that something-must-be-done about said community-care, etc, etc, - and then they are forgotten again.