Next year's settlement includes an extra £200m to help councils with responsibility for adult social care to provide subsidies for care costs, taking total funding in this area to £3.7bn next year.
The ruling comes as there is increased focus on the effects of advertising unrealistic or unhealthy body images on mental health.The "body positivity" movement which began around 2010 focused particularly on promoting a more diverse range of models.
But Ms Moss told BBC Breakfast she thinks the body positivity movement is "slightly under threat"."The wider industry is veering towards a very thin model look," she said.Adding: "With a rise of weight loss injection drugs there's a rise of talk in the media of people taking these drugs and I think that's really pushed this idea of everyone has to be thin much more to the fore again."
She said "bigger girls are simply not being cast" for fashion campaigns and raised concerns over a rise in eating disorders among young women along with more "thinspiration pictures" being posted on social media.Ms Moss says the use of body positive curve models has certainly declined in the high fashion industry over last few years but it is still unusual to see very thin models used in high street campaigns.
Editorial director of British Vogue previously
the fashion industry "should be concerned" by a recent trend towards a return of skinnier models.Rachel, another subject in the exhibition, cares for her two-year-old daughter Effie, who has a rare chromosomal disorder.
The disorder caused global developmental delay, a condition where a child takes longer than others to reach certain development milestones.It also caused an aggressive cancerous tumour on Effie's spinal cord when she was five months old.
Rachel, from Weston-super-Mare, said she was "thrown into a world of disability and caring" as soon as Effie was born.She was approached by Invisible Army to be in the exhibition after documenting her experiences as a carer on Instagram.