NHS launches plan to improve patient care by cutting long hospital stays
Date posted: 13th June 2018The NHS has announced plans to improve patient care by cutting long stays in hospitals.
Speaking at the annual NHS Confederation conference at Manchester Central Simon Stevens and Ian Dalton, the Chief Executives of NHS England and NHS Improvement, will set out the plans which will also help to free up thousands of hospital beds and ease pressures next winter.
Shorter stays will benefit
patients who would otherwise be stuck in hospital when they are well enough to
leave as well as freeing up beds for those who are sicker.
Many older people,
particularly those who are frail and may have dementia, actually deteriorate
while in hospital - a stay of more than 10 days leads to 10 years’ muscle
ageing for people most at risk.
Nearly 350,000 patients spend
more than three weeks in a hospital each year. That is around a fifth of beds,
or the equivalent of 36 hospitals. Some patients need to be there for medical
reasons but many do not.
The NHS, working with local
authorities, aims to reduce the number of long staying patients by around a
quarter, freeing up more than 4,000 beds in time for the winter surge.
Simon Stevens said: “Over this past year hospitals and
local councils have successfully worked together and have turned the corner on
delays in patients being discharged. Now they need to go further in order to
ensure patients are treated with dignity and looked after in the right setting
for them.”
The joint announcement comes
as the NHS is drawing up plans for next winter after having been hit by a
perfect storm of bad weather, flu and stomach bugs, along with record A&E
attendances and emergency admissions, in the winter just gone.
NHS Improvement’s Chief
Executive, Ian Dalton, will say that his organisation and NHS England are
determined to tackle the issue of bed availability before the onset of next
winter, with a message going out to the system including chief executives of
acute trusts, CCGs and the chairs of health and wellbeing boards, calling for
them to act now.
Ian Dalton said: “No one wants patients to stay in
hospital longer than they have to, or for the health of patients to deteriorate
in the very place that is supposed to be making them better. But this is
happening all too often and we have to work together to change it. Every day in
hospital is a precious day away from normal life.
“By setting this national
ambition and working with trusts and local systems to deliver it, we will help
more patients to recover safely and as quickly as possible, while ensuring that
hospital resources are used for those who need them most.“
Rachel Power, chief
executive of the Patients Association, said: “Meeting the needs of older people
who have complex combinations of long term conditions is a key challenge facing
the NHS. Prolonged stays in hospital are often not the right solution for these
patients. Improved support to ensure patients can stay as well as possible in
their own homes, whether immediately after an admission or as a way to prevent
one, will be vital in ensuring the NHS meets the changing needs of our
population.”
Sally Copley,
Director of Policy and Campaigns at Alzheimer’s Society, said: “For too long people with dementia
have been pulled from pillar to post in our not-fit-for-purpose health and
social care system. It’s great to see the Government sitting up and taking this
issue seriously with an integrated approach, and more support for care home
staff is definitely welcome."
The new drive aims to build
on the success of the NHS and local councils in tackling delayed transfers of
care (DTOCs). The number of DTOCs fell to 4,880 in January, 1,780 fewer than
the baseline month of February 2017.
To meet the ambition NHS
trusts will be expected to close the gap between the number of patients
discharged during the week and those sent home at the weekend and make greater
use will be made of alternatives to admission such as emergency day cases or
therapy services.
Hospital stays above the best
practice guidelines will be treated as a safety issue that urgently needs
addressing with the time patients have spent on wards closely monitored through
the Patient Administration System.
Trust will be supported by
extended GP access and a focus on avoiding unnecessary hospital admissions
including more support for care home staff to prevent residents being admitted.
There will also be regional emergency care intensive support teams charged with
helping to deliver the 25% ambition.