Interpretation

What can we learn from these analyses?

This evaluation is based on data on hospital utilisation over the period January 2016 to April 2017 for care home residents who moved into one of 28 residential or nursing care homes in Sutton during this time. These analyses provide insights into hospital utilisation rates by new care home residents supported by the Sutton Homes of Care vanguard at an initial stage of the vanguard’s enhanced support, in comparison with a broadly similar group of individuals who entered care homes not supported by the vanguard.

Considering the whole period covered by the evaluation, the results of these analyses do not allow us to draw strong conclusions about the effectiveness of the enhanced care initiatives introduced by the Sutton Homes of Care vanguard. There was no strong evidence that people moving to care homes in Sutton used hospitals more or less frequently than the matched control group.

Our findings do not necessarily imply that there was no effect. There were wide 95% confidence intervals for the relative difference between Sutton residents and the control group on several measures. The true difference between groups will realistically lie somewhere within the range of those wide confidence intervals, and the examined data may therefore not give a full picture of the impact that enhanced care is having on the chosen hospital utilisation outcomes.

Notwithstanding the degree of uncertainty in the results, there were some indications that the Sutton residents in the study might have experienced more emergency admissions than matched controls, including more admissions that we considered to be potentially avoidable through better care outside hospital. These indications were strongest in the nursing homes. It is possible that this pattern reflects a true increase in hospital use in the Sutton care home residents observed in the study period. For example, it is conceivable that more intensive and multidisciplinary care of new residents in care homes, as well as improved staff training, led to earlier identification of health issues and unmet health care needs, more proactive engagement with health care professionals and a greater propensity towards hospital referrals. It is also possible that this finding could be influenced by unobserved factors independent of the enhanced support. Lastly, we cannot rule out the possibility that the enhanced support was unable to significantly reduce emergency admissions among new Sutton residents.

There were some indications that Sutton residents who moved to a care home during the second eight months of the study period experienced fewer visits to A&E departments than the control group. Among these late care home entrants, the rate of A&E attendance was estimated to be 70% lower in Sutton compared with late entrants to a control care home. The likelihood of an A&E attendance for late care home entrants was between 88% and 24% lower in Sutton than in the control care homes.

Experience from previous evaluations has shown that such complex innovations often take time to take effect. In this evaluation we were looking at the impact over a 15-month period between January 2016 and April 2017. This was part way through the implementation of the three-year vanguard programme, and it should be noted that some of the interventions that made up the enhanced support were introduced mid-way through 2016, and the range of initiatives were implemented with varying degree of coverage. A follow-up evaluation allowing for sufficient time for all the changes to take effect might provide more conclusive results and determine whether these interventions are sufficient, or if changes to implementation may be needed, to achieve the desired effect.

Strengths and limitations of the study

This evaluation focused on hospital utilisation, since it was an objective of the vanguard to respond to pressures on the health and care system by reducing the use of unplanned emergency care. Other aspects of care delivery in care homes, such as ambulance conveyances and the experiences of residents, care home staff and manager are considered within other evaluation evidence compiled by the vanguard, but were not considered in this evaluation due to limitations in the data available.

By linking data sets together, we were able to study the hospital records for a large number of care home residents, without the problems with non-response that can occur with other data collection methods such as surveys. However, we restricted our attention to new care home residents, and it is possible that the evaluation is missing a larger effect from those who have lived at a care home for a longer period. We might also have missed some new residents due to limitations of the method used to identify residents and link the data sets together, though there are no indications that this would have affected the results.

The statistical methods used in the evaluation mean that the control group was selected to be as similar to the Sutton residents in the study as possible on a range of demographic, socioeconomic, health and hospital use characteristics. These characteristics were measured prior to the introduction of the enhanced support. These two groups had similar age, gender, health care conditions and previous hospital utilisation, and they lived in care homes that were similar in terms of size and provision of nursing or residential care. Moreover, the matched control group residents lived in local authority areas that were comparable to Sutton in terms of demographic and socioeconomic characteristics and historic, per capita rates of emergency hospital admission.

It was noted during the matching process that some residual differences remained at both care home and resident level. At resident level, some remaining differences were seen in relation to the type and number of comorbidities associated with frailty, conditions associated with mortality, prior A&E attendances, outpatient appointments and the number of emergency admissions in the year before moving to a care home – both overall, and those that were potentially avoidable. While this could indicate a higher level of health care need by care home residents in Sutton when they enter a care home, these outstanding dissimilarities, at least on observable characteristics, were subsequently addressed via the risk-adjusted analysis. We were reassured to find that the Sutton and matched comparison groups had similar mortality rates, lending support to the notion that neither group had more severe health conditions than the other.

Some of the differences at care home level were not expected to be substantially reduced through matching, since Sutton features a preponderance of small, independent care homes in a largely urban setting relative to the rest of England. These differences included the size, age category and rural classification of the care homes. We were also unable to measure differences relating to the quality of care delivered in care homes or other measures of the care home market, due to lack of data available to the Improvement Analytics Unit. As such, these could not be addressed by the risk adjustment. We did however attempt to minimise the risk of introducing a significant bias by selecting care home residents from multiple areas.

Notwithstanding the similarities, it is therefore possible that unmeasured differences may have existed between the Sutton residents in the study and the matched comparison group, for example in the availability of informal care support or local authority funding. Any unmeasured differences between the groups might explain some or all of the difference we observed in the utilisation of emergency care. It is also possible that there were greater similarities than anticipated in the care provided by some of the care homes included in the control group and those supported by the Sutton Homes of Care vanguard. For example, there may have been enhanced care initiatives being implemented in the comparison care homes. This would have made it harder to discern an effect of the Sutton Homes of Care vanguard compared with the control.

We cannot therefore be certain of the extent to which the effects seen are due to the vanguard's enhanced support, or some other factor relating to differences in the care provided to both groups, or insufficient time for the changes to take effect. While it might be possible to build on this study to address this limitation, some problems would remain unless a randomised controlled trial was conducted, and even that approach can suffer from shortcomings, and in some cases bias, for complex changes such as this one.,

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