This blogpost is the third of five looking at the Transforming
Care programme through the prism of the national statistics regularly produced
by the ever excellent @NHSDigital.
The first blogpost looked at the overall number of people
with learning disabilities and autistic people identified by the statistics as
being in inpatient services. Among other things, this post looked at the
different views provided by commissioners (via the Assuring Transformation statistics), who tend to focus more on people in specialist learning disability
inpatient services, and mental health service providers (via the MHSDS), who
tend to focus more on people with learning disabilities and autistic people in
mainstream mental health inpatient services often for short periods of time and
for many people apparently for the purposes of ‘respite’. This is important to
remember when looking at the graphs to follow.
The second blogpost looked at statistics on the number of
people being admitted to inpatient services, and where they were being admitted
from.
This third post will focus on two aspects of what happens to
people in inpatient services, how far people are from home and how long they
are in inpatient services. Since the demise of the Learning Disability Census
in 2015 we don’t have very good information on how people are being treated,
but the Assuring Transformation statistics do help us build up a bit of a
picture, particularly in terms of the possible impact of Transforming Care on
inpatient services.
One of the main things highlighted by Transforming Care has
been having crisis and inpatient services close to home. The first column on the left in
the graph below shows the distance from home of people in inpatient
units (according to commissioners in the Assuring Transformation dataset) in
August 2017. A quarter of people (25%) are in inpatient units within 20km of
home, but almost as many people (23%) are in inpatient units more than 100km from home, and for a worrying 14% of people this information isn’t even known.
The graph below also shows information from the MHSDS, which
with its focus on short-term mainstream mental health services, presents a very
different picture. The middle column in the graph shows that three quarters
(75%) of people who were in and out of an inpatient service within the calendar
month of August 2017 were within 20km of home, with only 1% more than 100km
from home. For those in inpatient services at the end of August 2017, according
to the MHSDS (the right hand column), well over half (57%) were in inpatient
services less than 20km from home and 6%
were in inpatient services over 100km
from home.
Again, the right hand column in the graph shows the
equivalent figures from the MHSDS dataset. These figures show that towards half
of people (45%) had been in their inpatient unit for less than 6 months,
although there were still also 12% of people who had been in their current unit
for 5 years or more.
As I mentioned in the previous post, there is quite a lot of
evidence that many people are moved around different inpatient
services without ever leaving the inpatient service system. Assuring
Transformation also reports information on how long people have been
continuously within inpatient services (not just how long they have been in
their current unit). The graph below shows this information from March 2015 to
September 2017. The extent of people being transferred around can be clearly
seen; in September 2017 over a third of people (36%) had been continuously in
inpatient services for 5 years or longer, a proportion that has hardly changed
from March 2015.
Finally, Assuring Transformation also reports the average
length of time that people have been in their current inpatient unit, and
continuously in inpatient services. The graph below shows that people were on average
in their current inpatient unit for just under 3 years, with this length of
stay gradually falling from March 2015. In contrast, the total length of time
people have been continuously in inpatient services has increased slightly and
is now standing at an average 5 years 6 months.
So, overall the types of mainstream mental health inpatient
service largely reported in the MHSDS are generally close to home with people
staying in them for short periods of time. Whether they are effective for the
people with learning disabilities and autistic people using them, how people
experience these services, whether the people using these services are the same
as people using the more distant inpatient services reported in Assuring
Transformation where they stay for years – we know very little about any of
these questions. Within the largely ‘specialist’ inpatient services reported by
Assuring Transformation, to date there seems to have been little change over
time in how local these inpatient services are and how long people stay in
them.
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