Day care for older people provide opportunities for social contact and social support (Lecovich & Biderman, 2012) and can support health, nutritional and daily living (Anderson et al., 2012). Perceived benefits are associated with improved mental health, socialisation, physical function and quality of life (Orellana, Manthorpe, & Tinker et al., 2018).Day care models are mixed and often involve complex arrangements (Gridley, Brooks, & Glendinning, 2012). Internationally, access to day care may be linked to national insurance schemes for those who require long-term care with services based on either social or medical models (Kuzuya, Masuda, Hirakawa et al., 2006; Tomita, Yoshimura, & Ikegami, 2010). The lack of a standardised definition of day care has meant that effectiveness can be difficult to assess (Fields, Anderson, & Dabelko-Schoeny et al., 2014). The increasing ageing population (UN, 2015), a narrowing of life expectancy gap between men and women (ONS, 2017) and a projected increase in the oldest old (Eurostat, 2017), has resulted in a changing demographic and at the same time wider austerity policy has seen local authority spending on community services for older people reduced (Ismail, Thorlby, & Holder, 2014).LTCs are conditions for which there is no cure, are life long and require ongoing drugs or treatment to be managed (Goodwin