This blogpost tries to summarise what information is
available concerning children and young people with learning disabilities and
autistic children and young people (in this blog, when I talk about ‘children
and young people’, these are the groups of children and young people I’m
referring to) in inpatient units in England, according to publicly available statistics from NHS Digital. By children and young people, I mean the age
band of under 18 years old used in the datasets.
Most of the available information is from the Assuring
Transformation dataset, which is recorded (sometimes retrospectively) by
commissioners and reported monthly by NHS Digital. This dataset is the one that
NHS England uses to assess how it is doing against the targets set in
Transforming Care. Every month, the reference tables spreadsheet reports some
information broken down by age band – although not everything is broken down by
age band (it would take a quite monstrous excel file to do that) there are some
things that have been reported consistently over time and some new information
by age band that has been recently added.
The first question is how many children and young people are
in inpatient units, according to the commissioners reporting to the Assuring
Transformation dataset? The first graph below shows that, in absolute terms,
the number of children and young people in inpatient units has increased from
170 children/young people in March 2016 (more reliably collected data than in
March 2015) to 260 children/young people in December 2018, an increase of 53%
over that time.
As the total number of people recorded by Assuring
Transformation as being in inpatient units decreases, the percentage of the inpatient population who are children and young people is increasing rapidly. As of
December 2018, 11% of all people with learning disabilities and autistic people
in inpatient units are children and young people aged under 18, up from 7% in March 2016 (see the graph
below).
Assuring Transformation records snapshots of the number of
children/young people with learning disabilities and autistic children/young
people at single points in time. For a number of reasons the issue is even
bigger than the 260 children and young people recorded by Assuring
Transformation. First, commissioners can report retrospectively to Assuring
Transformation, so the number of children and young people recorded for
December is likely to increase. Second, children and young people can go in and
out of inpatient units, so the number of children and young people in an
inpatient unit at some point over the course of a year will be bigger than a
snapshot count of children at any one time (particularly as some young people
reach the age of 18 and either remain in the inpatient unit or get transferred
directly to a different inpatient unit). For example, the Mental Health Services
Dataset (MHSDS), analysed monthly by NHS Digital from mental health service
provider returns, reports that in the month of November 2018 alone 500 children
and young people with learning disabilities and autistic children and young
people spent some time (often a very short time) in some form of mental health
inpatient unit. Third, children and young people can be in a range of
residential services that feel and operate like inpatient units but are not registered
or counted as such, such as certain types of residential special schools or ‘specialist’
residential homes.
The second question is what do we know about the children
and young people in these inpatient units? Although information is limited, there
is enough to show that they are quite different to people in other age bands,
even 18-24 year olds. As the graphs below show, most children and young people in
inpatient units are female (and increasingly so over time – 62% of children and
young people in December 2018) whereas most 18-24 year olds (70%) are male.
Most children and young people in inpatient units are labelled as ‘autism only’
(70% of children and young people in December 2018), whereas for 18-24 year
olds the labels are more evenly distributed.
The legal status of children and young people is also
different to people in other age bands, as the graph below shows. Over two
fifths of children and young people have informal legal status (110 people;
42%) and almost everyone else (140 people; 54%) is on a Part II section. For
18-24 year olds, only 6% of people have informal legal status, with 68% on a
Part II section and a further 24% on a Part III section.
There is a similar picture in terms of the level of security
of the wards that children and young people are subject to, as the graph below
shows. Most children and young people (175 people; 69%) are in wards with a
general level of security, with most of the rest (50 people; 19%) in low secure
wards. For 18-24 year olds, just over half of people are in wards with a
general level of security (51%), with substantial numbers of people in low
secure (24%) and medium secure (21%) wards.
What are the prospects for children and young people getting
out of the inpatient unit they are in? Assuring Transformation records if a
person has a planned transfer date of which the ‘home’ authority is aware –
only 15% of children and young people (40 people) had such a planned transfer
date, compared to 28% of 18-24 year olds and 30% of people of all ages in inpatient
units. Similarly to people generally in inpatient units (61%), 63% of children
and young people were reported to have their family involved in their care
plan.
Finally, in a different dataset (the MHSDS) mental health
service providers report the ‘restrictive interventions’ that people with
learning disabilities and autistic people in inpatient units are subject to (a previous blogpost describes the dataset in more depth). The graph below shows
the percentage of children/young people and the percentage of adults who experienced
any restrictive intervention, and specific types of restrictive intervention,
at some point in the month of November 2018.
As the graph shows, 12% of children and young people
compared to 7% of adults experienced some form of restrictive intervention in
November 2018. Children and young people were also more likely to experience
almost every specific type of restrictive intervention than adults: physical
prone restraint (5% vs 1%); physical restraint (not prone) (11% vs 5%);
chemical restraint (4% vs 1%); and seclusion (6% vs 2%).
As well as reporting the number of people experiencing
restrictive interventions, the MHSDS also reports the number of restrictive
interventions people have experienced. From this we can calculate the average number
of times during the month of November 2018 that people experienced a
restrictive intervention. The graph below shows this for children and young
people and adults.
As the graph shows, children and young people in inpatient
units experienced restrictive interventions much more frequently than adults.
For the 60 children and young people who experienced a restrictive intervention
in November 2018, they experienced an average number of 18.2 restrictive
interventions compared to 5.0 for adults. With the exception of mechanical
restraint, children and young people, compared to adults, experienced more
frequent restrictive interventions of all types: physical prone restraint (4.8
times per child/young person in November compared to 2.4 times per adult);
physical restraint (not prone) (14.0 vs 4.4 times in the month); chemical
restraint (5.0 vs 2.3 times in the month); mechanical restraint (0 vs 2.8 times
in the month); and seclusion (2.8 vs 1.8 times in the month). So not only are
children and young people more likely to be subject to restraint, if they are subject
to restraint they are subject to that restraint more frequently than adults.
Overall, although public information is limited, the picture
is looking bleak for children and young people with learning disabilities and
autistic children and young people when it comes to inpatient services. It
seems obvious that the group of children and young people in inpatient services
are in some respects different from adults, being mostly girls and young women
and mostly autistic children and young people. Children and young people are
more likely to be in inpatient units with an informal legal status, and to be
in general or low secure inpatient wards, but are much less likely to have a
planned transfer date out of the unit they are in. Within inpatient units,
children and young people are almost twice as likely to experience restraint
compared to adults in inpatient units, at more than three times the frequency
(on average, more than four times every week for those experiencing restrictive interventions). With child and family poverty
increasing, education and support for disabled children at the lowest of ebbs,
and legislation routinely ignored by authorities there to ‘help’, this is an
issue way beyond Transforming Care.
Well, telling about the disabilities with the children which has special power is being fighting.
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