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Rise in hospital readmissions is cue for fresh concern over discharges

Posted: 15 July 2004 | Subscribe Online


Emergency hospital readmissions of older people have risen as delayed discharge rates have fallen, raising concerns some patients are being discharged too quickly.

The Healthcare Commission's annual State of Healthcare Report finds that while the proportion of delayed discharges among over-75s almost halved between September 2001 and March 2003 from 12 to 6.5 per cent, the proportion needing emergency readmission within 28 days rose from 7.1 to 8.2 per cent over the same period.

"Older people must not be rushed back into independent living before they are ready," the report warns. "If they are, there may be a greater risk they will quickly need to be readmitted to hospital. There is some evidence that this may be happening with increasing frequency."
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The figures follow earlier concerns that pressure on health and social services departments to free up beds quicker could encourage doctors to discharge patients from hospital before they are fully ready.

Under the government's delayed discharge reimbursement system, which came into force in January, social services departments can now be fined £100 a day (£120 in London and the south east) for any patient not given a care package within three days of discharge notification.

The report reveals that the percentage of patients aged over 75 whose discharge was delayed in each of the 28 strategic health authorities varied from 3.2 to 15.4 per cent in England in the year to March 2003. The highest rates were in southern English counties such as Hampshire, Surrey and Sussex, where high property prices squeeze out residential care, the report states.

Hospital staff should discuss home care arrangements with older patients before discharging them, adds the report, highlighting that this did not happen in almost a quarter of cases.
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The report also says there is evidence to suggest a reduction in age discrimination within the NHS, with the number of operations performed on over-75s on the rise.

It criticises NHS trusts for failing to provide dedicated facilities for treating children - one in four do not - and cites evidence of children as young as 12 being detained on adult psychiatric wards.

Meanwhile, the report is also concerned that black people are four times more likely to be detained under the Mental Health Act 1983 than their white counterparts.

State of Healthcare Report from www.healthcarecommission.org.uk


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