The BBC Panorama exposure of how people with learning
disabilities were abused by staff was over 7 years ago now, and despite the
ongoing ministrations of Transforming Care the litany of abusive practices in
‘specialist’ learning disability inpatient units and residential care homes
continues to the present day, and no doubt into the future.
Given what has happened at Winterbourne View and beyond, a
central concern of the Transforming Care programme should be to ‘transform’
what actually happens to people in inpatient services. How many people, how
often, experience different types of ‘restrictive intervention’ – physical
restraint (including prone restraint where people are pinned to the floor),
seclusion (solitary confinement), mechanical restraint (being physically
contained so you can’t move), or being subjected to heavy duty medication? And
that’s before you take into account self-harm or being physically assaulted by
other people in the same place as you.
Government initiatives since Winterbourne View have clearly
said that the use of these ‘restrictive interventions’ should be minimised and,
in the case of prone restraint, stopped altogether (https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/positive-and-proactive-care-reducing-restrictive-interventions
), and that the kinds of medications used in these inpatient services (mainly
antipsychotics and rapid tranquilisers) should be seriously reduced as well (https://www.england.nhs.uk/learning-disabilities/improving-health/stomp/
).
So there is a clear steer about what should be happening.
What is actually happening in these inpatient units? Are things getting better?
From 2007 to 2015, we got a pretty regular picture of what
was being done to people in inpatient units from a census that was carried out
on all people in inpatient services for people with learning disabilities
and/or autistic people in England. This blogpost from a couple of years ago
summarises this information https://chrishatton.blogspot.com/2016/04/adverse-experiences.html
. Overall, by September 2015:
- 23% of 3,000 people in these inpatient units had experienced at least one physical assault in the last three months
- 24% of people had experienced at least one episode of self-harm in the last three months
- 13% of people had experienced seclusion at least once in the last three months
- 34% of people had been subjected to hands-on-restraint at least once in the last three months
- 72% of people had been ‘given’ antipsychotic medication in the last 28 days
- 11% of people had been ‘given’ rapid tranquilising medication in the last 28 days
For all of these experiences, many people had experienced
them many times, and trends over time varied (so the number of people
experiencing physical assaults or hands-on restraint had reduced, but the
number of people experiencing seclusion had increased).
What has happened since 2015, now that Transforming Care has
taken shape as a national programme? In public, silence. The regular inpatient
census was stopped in 2015, on the grounds that other sources of information
would take up the slack so we didn’t need the census any more. The Assuring
Transformation dataset, which NHS England uses to count the progress or
otherwise of Transforming Care, doesn’t include anything about ‘restrictive
interventions’, assaults, or self-harm.
Another dataset, however, does. The Mental Health Services
Dataset (MHSDS) is collected from mental health service providers (both NHS and
independent sector) about everyone using their inpatient mental health
services, and for a couple of years information has been flagged about people
with learning disabilities and/or autistic people in these services and
reported alongside the Assuring Transformation data (https://digital.nhs.uk/data-and-information/publications/statistical/learning-disability-services-statistics
). The coverage of people and services in the Assuring Transformation dataset
and the MHSDS overlaps but is not the same:
- the MHSDS does not include everyone in the Assuring Transformation dataset because some big ‘specialist’ inpatient services obviously don’t report to the MHSDS (for reasons that escape me https://chrishatton.blogspot.com/2018/03/now-you-see-me-now-you-dont-independent.html )
- the MHSDS includes a lot of people with learning disabilities and/or autistic people who are in generic mental health inpatient units (rather than specialist learning disability units), often for short periods of time. For example, the MHSDS reports that there were 3,635 people with learning disabilities and/or autistic people in inpatient services at the end of June 2018 – 895 of these people were admitted and discharged within the month of June.
The MHSDS is a big beast of a dataset, and it collects A LOT
of information, including:
- ‘Restrictive interventions’, broken down into: Physical Restraint (prone); Physical Restraint (excluding prone); Chemical Restraint; Mechanical Restraint; Seclusion; Segregation; and a category where restraint has been recorded but the specific type of restraint has not been recorded.
- Assaults by another person using the service.
- Self-harm.
This information has never been released specifically
focusing on people with learning disabilities and/or autistic people in mental
health inpatient units. However, the redoubtable Lucy Adams of BBC Scotland has
obtained this information from NHS Digital for the File on 4 programme ‘Transforming
Care – Is It Working?’ which you should be able to find here https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0000mkd File on 4 itself and an article in the
Guardian (https://www.theguardian.com/society/2018/oct/02/physical-restraint-used-on-50-more-nhs-patients-with-learning-disabilities
) have covered the main messages coming out of this information – this blogpost
provides a bit more of a detailed look at the numbers released by NHS Digital.
The first graph below shows the total number of restraints
that people with learning disabilities and/or autistic people in mental health
inpatient units have been subjected to, for the calendar years of 2016 and
2017. The figure for 2018 has been projected from figures provided for the
first 5 months of 2018.
In 2016, people were recorded as being subjected to
restraint on 15,065 occasions. In 2017 this figure had increased by exactly
50%, to 22,620 restraint ‘episodes’. If the projected figures for 2018 are
right, the number of times people are restrained is set to increase even
further, to 25,812 episodes.
The most common type of restraint is Physical Restraint (excluding
prone restraint): in 2016 this happened 8,785 times, increasing to 14,490 times
in 2017 and projected to increase further to 17,350 times in 2018.
Prone restraint (which isn’t supposed to ever happen)
occurred 2,250 times in 2016 and 3,170 times in 2017, with 2,890 episodes of
prone restraint projected for 2018.
Mechanical restraint is less common, and seems to be
decreasing (535 times in 2016; 365 times in 2017; projected 265 times in 2018).
Chemical restraint (this is where people are given
medication on spot, in addition to any prescribed antipsychotic or other
medication they may be on) of people happened 1,880 times in 2016, increasing
to 2,360 times in 2017 and projected to rise further to 2,830 times in 2018.
While segregation is relatively rare (155 times in 2016; 125
times in 2017; projected 230 times in 2018) seclusion is common and seems to be
increasing – from 1,460 times in 2016 to 2,100 in 2017 and projected to rise
further to 2,245 times in 2018.
One of the many things that worries me about this information
is the large and increasing number of restraints that aren’t recorded as any
particular type of restraint; from 1,590 episodes of restraint in 2016, to a
massive 6,260 in 2017 (over a quarter, 28%, of ALL restraints recorded) and a
projected 5,700 in 2018. Why should this be so, if the recording of restraints
is supposed to be improving? And what types of restraint is this coding hiding –
are the numbers of prone restraints even higher than these figures suggest?
The final graph below shows the number of reported assaults
and episodes of self harm that people experienced, both of which are high and
rising.
The number of assaults experienced by people with learning
disabilities and/or autistic people in mental health inpatient units 3,685 in
2016, increasing hugely to 9,050 in 2017 and currently projected to be 6,350 in
2018.
The number of episodes of self-harm was 7,125 in 2016,
increasing to 7,795 in 2017 and projected to increase again to 8,880 in 2018.
What do these statistics tell us? They are not comparable
with the earlier information from the inpatient censuses because they report
the number of episodes rather than the number of people experiencing them, the
categories used to report restraint are different, and the types of services
included overlap but are not the same.
But they are shocking statistics. Types of restraint which
aren’t supposed to happen at all, such as prone restraint, are both common and
seemingly increasing. Other forms of restraint, and experiences such as assault
and self harm, also seem to be on the increase. Can it be because there is now
better reporting (why did it take so long? What on earth was happening before?)
– if so then why is the type of restraint not recorded for over a quarter of
restraint episodes? Are there more people with learning disabilities and/or
autistic people in inpatient services – this is not what NHS England are
telling us.
One of the things I find most disturbing, though, is that
these figures would never have seen the light of day without the BBC being
persistent in getting hold of the information. These statistics are vital for
the public to understand what is happening with Transforming Care, but they
were (and are) being kept secret. They could also be used to understand a lot
more that would be useful to the Transforming Care programme, but there is no
sign that NHS England or others are using this information to inform what they
are doing. How do independent sector units compare to NHS units? What about
different types of unit? How are people doing in generic mental health
inpatient units – a large group of people that should be central to Transforming
Care but that seem to be completely ignored.
These habits of secrecy and defensiveness do no favours to
the effectiveness of the Transforming Care programme, and do a great disservice
to people with learning disabilities and/or autistic people and their families.
There is no reason for it – transparency will not kill, but the opposite might.