This blogpost is the third in a set looking at various aspects of the social care statistics recently published by NHS Digital for 2020/21, focusing on adults with learning disabilities in England. The first two blogposts gave an overview of trends in social care support and expenditure for adults with learning disabilities, and a more focused look at what kinds of places those adults with learning disabilities getting social care are living in.
This blogpost updates previous
posts on what the statistics say about the self/paid employment of
working age (aged 18-64 years old) adults with learning disabilities in
England. These figures are provided by local authorities every year, and since
2014/15 have only been provided for people getting long-term social care
(before 2014/15 it was the larger group of people known to local authorities as
a person with learning disabilities, even if they weren't getting long-term
social care support). This means that these figures don't include the much,
much larger group of adults with learning disabilities who aren't known to
local authorities or GPs and who don't get any kind of support related to their
learning disability.
It is important to note that these statistics are
collected for financial years (April to March), so they will represent what was
happening for adults with learning disabilities up to March 2021, through the
first two/three peaks of the COVID-19 pandemic in England. It is also really
important to say that the quality of this information has been questioned at
the best of times – there are massive caveats about the extent to which local
authorities would be able to collect this kind of information in the middle of
the pandemic, particularly given the complexity of people’s working situations
(for example, furlough) which these statistics were not designed to pick up.
Some of the numbers reported here are included in
the NHS
Digital Adult Social Care Outcomes Framework (indicator 1E, if you're interested),
although some of the numbers are more buried in publicly available but less
accessible CSV datafiles.
What do the numbers tell us?
The first graph below shows the number of working
age adults with learning disabilities that councils say are in any self/paid
employment, broken down by whether people are in employment for 16+ hours per
week or less than 16 hours per week (and 1 hour a week can count in these
statistics). The gap between 2013/14 and 2014/15 is because of the change in
data collection I mentioned earlier, so numbers before and after then can't be
compared, and 2008/2009 was the first year that information was collected so
it's rather dodgy for that year.
According to these figures, in 2020/21 there were 6,870 working age adults with learning disabilities getting long-term social care in any form of self/paid employment. After a couple of years of the number of people in paid/self employment edging towards 8,000, this is now the lowest number of people in paid employment since the first dodgy year of data collection in 2008/09. Consistent across the years is that most of the people in employment (65% of people in 2020/21) are working for less than 16 hours per week.
What do these numbers mean in terms of employment
rates? The graph below shows the employment rates for working age adults with
learning disabilities over the same time period. The columns show the
overall employment rate - in 2020/21 this was 5.1%, compared to 75% for adults generally in March 2021. This is the lowest employment
rate for adults with learning disabilities recorded since the statistics were
changed in 2014/15.
The lines on the graph show employment rates for men and women with learning disabilities separately. Employment rates for men (the purple line) are consistently higher (5.7% in 2020/21) than employment rates for women (the blue line) (4.4% in 2020/21 with this gender employment gap staying fairly stable over time.
The last graph below sounds an appropriate note of caution about the reliability of information on self/paid employment provided by councils. This shows, for all working age adults with learning disabilities getting long-term social care, whether councils say they are: 1) in self-paid employment; 2) not in employment but actively seeking work (and presumably therefore liable to potential benefit sanctions); 3) not in employment but not actively seeking work. There is also a fourth category, where councils say they don't know the employment status of the person.
Over time, the number of people whose employment status is unknown has decreased rapidly, from 44% of working age adults with learning disabilities in 2014/15 to 21% of people in 2020/21 (21% is still a big chunk, however). It is unclear how councils are making decisions about whether to record someone as actively seeking work or not.
Overall, this update shows, bearing in mind
understandable caveats about the quality of the information that could be
collected during the COVID-19 pandemic, further reductions in employment rates (from a
ridiculously low base) for working age adults with learning disabilities
getting long-term social care, with most work being extremely part-time, and a
gender employment gap.
As far as we know, many more than 5.1% of working
age adults with learning disabilities want to work. We know that secure, stable paid employment for people
with learning disabilities is associated with better physical and mental health, and we know that supported employment is highly
cost-effective. Building sustainable, fulfilling paid
employment for people with learning disabilities, in our current circumstances
of wide-ranging labour shortages, surely has to be an urgent ‘building back
better’ priority?
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