26/08/14 10:18
Addressing delayed discharge
NHS and COSLA establish task force.
The NHS and Scotland’s councils are to work together to tackle the growing numbers of delayed discharges, the Health Secretary and COSLA said today.
While delayed discharge has fallen by a third since 2006, statistics released today show this continues to be challenging, with a significant number of people delayed due to a lack of availability of care in the community.
This week, the Health Secretary Alex Neil wrote to local authority and health board partnerships urging them to use the £5 million funding recently announced by the Scottish Government to address the reasons for the delays.
Mr Neil said: “We have come a considerable way in tackling this problem, with comparable figures for 2006 showing three times as many people were delayed for over four weeks.
“However, it’s disappointing that some patients are still delayed for lengthy periods in our hospitals. Remaining in hospital, when clinically ready to leave, is frustrating for individuals and can pose challenges in ensuring effective patient flow through the hospital.
“Integration of health and social care will be key to driving down delays, and we are working with COSLA to deliver integration for the benefit of people across Scotland. We recently announced an additional £5 million to be targeted at the areas with the greatest challenges. This money will be used by seven NHS and local authority partnerships to reduce delays and release hospital capacity.
“Legislation to implement health and social care comes into full force in April next year, but we need not wait to make progress. COSLA and I are agreed that we need immediate improvements and NHS Boards and local authorities recognise the need to work together now to make sure people do not have wait in hospital any longer than is necessary.”
Cllr Peter Johnston, COSLA’s Health and Well-being Spokesperson, added: “I’ve just visited a District General Hospital in my own Health Board area and know from that just how hard nurses, clinicians, social workers and managers are working to facilitate the transfer of people waiting for discharge back to their own homes or into a care home. This is a priority of the first order – we know that for older people in particular, a delay of longer than 72 hours can have an impact on their health and well-being.
“We in COSLA are determined to make further progress on discharge arrangements. We are fully committed to the work of the task force, and believe that innovation in discharge protocols and in commissioning practice will deliver some of the progress needed. This will all take place within emerging health and social care partnerships and we hope to get to a position in time where service redesign can build community capacity to ensure that people are only admitted to hospital because they really need to be there and are then discharged speedily back to their own homes.”
The Task Force met for the first time last week. Its membership is made up of representatives from the Scottish Government, NHS, local government, Care Inspectorate, housing, third sector and independent providers
The remit of the Task Force is to:
- Agree short/medium term priorities for support to improve discharge from hospital, building on the actions in the Home First document
- Advise and oversee the use of national funding to improve performance in discharge from hospital
- Commission and review the impact of tests of change or innovation projects designed to improve the discharge pathway
- Monitor performance against current delayed discharge and 75+ bed days targets, reporting to the Health and Community Care Delivery Group and to the Unscheduled Care Programme Board
- Consider current and future targets in the context of the Residential Care Task Force report and the national health and wellbeing outcomes
The full delayed discharge statistical publication is available online at http://www.isdscotland.org/
For reference see previous news release ‘Investing in flow of patients’ http://news.scotland.gov.uk/News/Investing-in-flow-of-patients-f80.aspx [07/08/2014]
