NHS Digital have recently released their annual tranche of statistics concerning social care for adults in England. This blogpost is the latest in a series about social care statistics concerning adults with learning disabilities in England, updating the statistics to include the latest 2021/22 figures. Because the reporting year for these statistics runs from April to March, these are the second set of annual statistics that might tell us something about the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on social care services for adults with learning disabilities. When looking through these statistics it is important to remember the pressures local authorities have been under, which might have affected the quality of the information collected.
Councils with social services responsibilities return information to NHS Digital every year on how many adults are using various forms of social care, and how much councils spend on social care (this doesn’t include other types of state funding relevant to social care, such as housing benefit as part of supported living support). I've tried to use some of the statistics to answer three questions about spending on social care services for adults with learning disabilities (questions relating to how many adults with learning disabilities are using social care are in a previous blogpost).
Question 1: How much money are councils spending on social care services for adults with learning disabilities?
The graph below shows gross expenditure by local authorities on social care for adults with learning disabilities from 2014/15 to 2021/22, broken down by age band and categories of spending. It is important to remember that these figures do not include housing benefit (an essential component of supported living arrangements). These figures are also not adjusted for inflation, which as we enter a time of high inflation is going to be even more important to take into account. However, using 2014/15 as a baseline (there had already been real-terms cuts to social care budgets by this point), the graphs also includes lines of what expenditure would be if social care expenditure only increased in line with inflation, using adult social care inflation figures from the invaluable PSSRU publication Unit Costs of Health and Social Care (2021 edition).
A couple of observations. Overall, despite the number of adults getting social care decreasing during 2021/22, social services expenditure continued its steady upwards trajectory in absolute terms in 2021/22 at an annual growth rate of 4% from 2014/15. Local authority gross expenditure on social care for adults with learning disabilities totalled £6.5 billion in 2021/22, 30% of all local authority expenditure on adult social care. For both adults with learning disabilities aged 18-64 and adults with learning disabilities aged 65+, increases in expenditure ran slightly ahead of inflation. This indicates local authorities trying to protect these budgets, while at the same time falling short of what would be needed given projected increases in the population of adults with learning disabilities needing social care support.
The two line graphs below show trends in expenditure on specific types of social care service for adults with learning disabilities aged 18-64 and 65+ (with different scales for the two age groups). Spending on supported living continues to increase and has now overtaken spending on residential care - these two are by far the largest components of social care expenditure to support adults with learning disabilities.
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