The first blogpost looked at statistics on the number of
people being admitted to inpatient services, and where they were being admitted
from.
The second blogpost looked at when people were in inpatient
units, how far were they from home and how long were they staying in inpatient
services.
The third blogpost looked at planning and reviews for people
within inpatient services.
This final blogpost will focus on the number of people
leaving inpatient services (charmingly called ‘discharge’) and what is
happening leading up to people leaving. Getting people out of inpatient units has arguably been the major focus of activities under the Transforming Care banner. Again, at this point the impact of the
Transforming Care programme should be visible in the number of people getting
ready to leave, how well people’s plans to do so are developing, and how many people are actually leaving to places outside inpatient services.
The first and most obvious question is whether people in
inpatient services have a planned date to leave (I will pick up on the
complications of what ‘leaving’ actually means later in this post). The graph
below shows the proportion of people in inpatient services with a planned date
for transfer, from March 2015 to September 2018 (according to Assuring
Transformation data). There was a worrying drop in the proportion of people
with a transfer date in 2016, but by September 2018 well over half of people
(58%) had a planned transfer date, the highest proportion recorded to date.
A date might be ‘planned’, but how distant in time is the
planned transfer? The graph below shows this information according to Assuring
Transformation data, from March 2015 through to September 2018. Consistent with
the earlier graph, the proportion of people without any planned date to leave
at all increased hugely in 2016, with the position recovering throughout 2017
and 2018. By September 2018, 13% of people had a planned transfer date within
the next 3 months, 17% had a planned transfer date between 3 and 6 months
ahead, and 10% of people had a planned transfer date between 6 months and a
year ahead. For 9% of people their planned date to leave was between 1 and 5
years ahead, and for 6% of people their planned date to leave was overdue.
So far, the statistics look like there is a push from
Transforming Care that is having an impact on the number of people with plans
to leave, although this push does not seem to have massively accelerated as the finish
line for the policy comes closer. Do we know anything about the plans
themselves?
Well, if people are leaving the inpatient unit to go home in
some sense then my expectation would be that the person’s local council should
be aware of the plan to leave. The graph below shows information from Assuring
Transformation based just on those people with a plan to leave – for this group
of people, are councils aware of the plan? Over time, the proportion of people
with a plan where their council is aware of that plan continues to drop
substantially – from over two thirds (69%) in March 2015 and March 2016 to less than half
(49%) in September 2018. Just as worrying is that in September 2018, for two
fifths of people (40%) it wasn’t known whether the council was aware of the
plan or not, a huge increase from March 2015 (7%). At the very least this
suggests that the close working between health and social care envisaged as
central to Transforming Care is less than universal.
There are other signs too of potential haste in making plans
to leave. The Assuring Transformation statistics report whether a range of
people (the person themselves, a family member/carer, an advocate, the provider
clinical team, the local community support team, and the commissioners) have
agreed the plan to leave. For those people with a plan to leave, the graph
below reports the proportion of their plans that have been agreed by different
people, from March 2016 to September 2018. Over time, the proportion of plans
agreed by anyone and everyone potentially involved has plummeted. Only
two-fifths of plans (40%) had been agreed by the person themselves in September
2018, compared to almost two thirds of people (64%) in March 2016. Even
bigger drops are reported for the proportion of family/carers (from 60% to 35%)
and advocates (from 64% to 38%) agreeing the plans.
By September 2018, transfer plans had been agreed by a
minority of provider clinical teams where the person was supposed to be moving
to (from 83% in March 2016 to 45% in September 2018), a minority of local
community support teams in the area the person was supposed to be moving to
(from 69% to 41%) and a minority of those commissioners who are reporting the
information the graph is based on! (from 83% to 45%). To what extent are these actually feasible and
sustainable plans that will result in a better life at home for people in
inpatient services, and what are their chances of breaking down?
The final graph in this blogpost series is one of the most
important – how many people have actually been transferred from inpatient
services, and where have they gone? The graph below adds up monthly
‘discharges’ from inpatient services in the Assuring Transformation dataset for
three periods of time; a year from October 2015 to September 2016, a year from
October 2016 to September 2017, and a year from October 2017 to September 2018.
It’s also one of the most complicated graphs in this series, so I’ll go through
it in a bit of detail.
The first thing to say is that overall the number of people
‘discharged’ from inpatient services has increased, from 2,045 people in
2015/16 to 2,265 people in 2017/18.
Of the people who have been ‘discharged’, in 2017/18 almost
a quarter of people (535 people; 24%) moved to independent living or supported
housing. Another fifth of people (490 people; 22%) moved to their family home
with support, making nearly half of everyone ‘discharged’ from inpatient
services.
Where did everyone else go? For almost a quarter of people
in 2017/18 (525 people; 23%) their ‘discharge’ was actually a transfer to
another inpatient unit, confirming the picture of ‘churn’ of people passed
around inpatient services found elsewhere in this series. Hundreds of other people (375
people; 17%) moved into residential care. Given that some inpatient services
have re-registered themselves as residential care homes with the CQC and a panoply of 'step-down' and other services are registered as care homes, it is
unclear to what extent people are leaving an inpatient service to move
somewhere more local and homely, moving somewhere very similar to where they
were, or not actually moving at all.
In 2017/18, there were also another 235 people (10%) who
moved to an ‘other’ location – again it is unclear what these ‘other’ places
are, but are they wildly different from where people were moving from? Finally,
50 people (2%) were in the puzzling category of ‘no transfer currently planned’
while having apparently already been transferred.
There are also signs of some changes over time in where
people are being ‘discharged’ to. Increasing numbers of people are being
‘discharged’ direct to another inpatient unit, or to ‘other’ places that may
well be varieties of relatively restrictive places described as ‘step-down’,
‘rehab’ or similar. Fewer people are moving to independent living homes or to
residential care, and increasing numbers of people are moving to supported
housing or back to their families with some form of added support.
So in this final post in the series, there are definite
signs that Transforming Care is exerting pressure for more people to have plans
to leave their current inpatient services, and almost half of those people who
are leaving are moving to independent or supported living or back to the family
home. There are real worries about the feasibility and sustainability of some
of these plans, and the extent to which many people ‘leaving’ inpatient
services are actually leaving for something radically different or being
churned around a system that doesn’t call itself an inpatient service system
but looks mighty similar to the people living within it. The fact that for almost a quarter of people being 'discharged', they are actually being moved to another inpatient unit, is to my mind something of an indictment of the inpatient service 'system' and Transforming Care's lack of fundamental impact upon it.