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Faster and fitter

Posted: 21 October 2004 | Subscribe Online


Despite the brouhaha surrounding the introduction of delayed discharge fines a year ago, the evidence is that they are working. This week's report from the Commission for Social Care Inspection contradicts the pessimists who said the reimbursement policy for hospital discharges taking longer than three days would be a needless distraction. On the contrary, the policy has concentrated minds on drawing up effective care packages, an achievement which probably outweighs the occasional complaint that it skews priorities at the health and social care boundary.
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Faster discharges do not appear to have come at the expense of imaginative care packages. By the start of this year councils had almost halved the excess time older people were spending in hospital waiting for care to be arranged.

But performance around the country is still mixed, with some disturbing variations in user choice and in rates of readmission to hospital. In some areas care homes are a Hobson's choice for patients, either because short turnround times give little scope to creative thought, or because scant attention has been paid to cultivating alternatives. As choice becomes the 10 Downing Street watchword, these failings will be increasingly untenable.

The dramatic contrasts in readmission rates hark back to some of the lurid claims made in the early days of the policy. Then it was alleged that older people's lives were being put at risk in the rush to push them out of hospital. Evidence of any calamities has been hard to find, but there is something wrong when in some parts of the country half of patients have to go back into hospital within three months of leaving it, whereas elsewhere only one in 12 are readmitted within this time. In a few cases these readmissions may be part of a sustainable care package that delicately balances hospital and home care. But in many cases, readmissions are evidently not of this kind.

It is clear that care services in some areas remain antediluvian. The government's forthcoming vision for adult social care will, if it does what it promises and focuses on people's needs, spur the development of modern services everywhere.



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