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Social Care News - Numbers and Data surrounding Older People in Care

Posted on 17/08/2018 by

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Number of older people with unmet care needs soars to record high

Age UK highlights the enormous cost to the NHS of delayed discharges due to a lack of social care.

Numbers of older people who don’t get the care and support they need soars to a record high of 1.4 million.

New analysis by Age UK highlights the enormous cost to the NHS of delayed discharges due to a lack of social care, and how more older people than ever are missing out on the vital care and support they need.

The numbers of older people in England who struggle without the help they depend on to carry out essential everyday tasks (ADLs), such as getting out of bed, going to the toilet, washing and getting dressed, have increased to a new high of 1.4 million, meaning nearly one in seven older people now live with some level of unmet need. Experts at Ashton House say that assistance should be provided to those that need it the most.

Age UK also found that among the 1.4 million people with unmet care needs, 307,581 require help with three or more essential activities, of whom 164,217 receive no help whatsoever from paid carers, family members or friends.

1.6 million people don’t get the help they need.

Taking into account other necessary tasks such as shopping, cooking or managing medication, the numbers of older people who don’t get the help they need rise to nearly 1.6 million people, a five percent increase in the last two years. Among this group over half didn’t get any help at all.

The Charity has also calculated that delayed discharges from hospital due to social care not being in place cost the NHS £289,140,954 a year equivalent to £550 per minute.

This new analysis needs to be seen against a context in which between 2009/10 and 2016/17 spending on adult social care in England fell by eight percent in real terms. As a result, over the same period, the average spend per adult on social care fell by 13 per cent, from £439 to £379, and an estimated 400,000 fewer older people received social care as the eligibility criteria tightened in response to insufficient resources.

‘Inadequate’ social care system.

Caroline Abrahams, Charity Director at Age UK said: “Age UK’s new analysis shows the huge impact on older people and on the NHS of our wholly inadequate system of social care. The Government often says they have invested more in social care over the last two years, but it’s not been nearly enough since the numbers of older people going without the support they need are continuing to rise – and quite sharply.

“If an older person needs social care but can’t get it this is a sure-fire recipe for them to become weaker and less well. They are at far greater risk of not eating enough and of falling and hurting themselves because of trying to do more than they really should. And it goes without saying that their lives are likely to be diminished and made more miserable. Is this what we want for our parents and grandparents, husbands and wives, older neighbors and friends in 2018? We have to do better.

“The Government will no doubt point to the fact that they hope to publish a Social Care Green Paper in the autumn, but a Green Paper will not in and of itself deliver any new funding for social care for several years and it is obvious that the system needs a major injection of cash right now. The responsibility for fixing this lies firmly with the Treasury: the Chancellor must take action to shore up social care in his Autumn Budget. The experts say there is a funding gap of about £2.5bn and that’s the kind of extra money that our older population needs to see. Anything less means the numbers struggling alone without help will keep going up.

“Age UK’s new analysis also shows that delayed discharges due to a lack of social care iscosting the NHS a staggering £550 every minute. The extra funding announced recently for the NHS is warmly welcome, but it will do a lot less to help our GPs and our hospitals than it should do for as long as the Government allows social care to continue to decline.

“Taken together these numbers show the folly and sheer wastefulness of the Government’s failure to invest anything like enough money in social care. We all depend on the NHS so we all lose out if it has less money to spend due to the lack of social care, but there is no doubt that it’s our older population who are paying the highest price of all – with their health, their happiness and sometimes even their lives.” 

Source: NursingNotes