About this briefing

This briefing consists of two parts. The first part presents the results of a national analysis of emergency hospital admissions from care homes across England, to provide insight into how often care home residents are being admitted to hospital and the types of conditions that are causing their admissions. We use a novel technique of identifying care home residents at national level developed by the IAU that is more robust than other methods such as postcode matching, or surveys. We present figures for care home residents across England broken down by residential and nursing homes. We focus on emergency admissions for people aged 65 or older who are living permanently in care homes in England (excluding younger people and those moving to care homes for short periods of time). We included residents regardless of whether their stay was funded by the local authority, privately, or through NHS continuing care, but could not identify residents who were in the care home temporarily for respite care, rehabilitation, short breaks or other purposes.

The second part of the briefing draws on evaluations conducted by the IAU of four enhanced care packages provided to care home residents in Rushcliffe, Sutton, Nottingham City and Wakefield. By comparing and contrasting the different elements and contexts of these sites and bringing in other local evaluations of these sites, we explore the factors that may be most influential in reducing hospital admissions.

Lastly, our analysis points to the next steps for local health and social care providers and commissioners looking to better understand the quality of care being provided in order that they may improve care further.

Box 1: Seven core elements of the Enhanced Health in Care Homes (EHCH) framework

Care element

Sub-element

Enhanced primary care support

Access to consistent, named GP and wider primary care service

Medicine reviews

Hydration and nutrition support

Access to out-of-hours/urgent care when needed

Multi-disciplinary team (MDT) support including coordinated health and social care

Expert advice and care for those with the most complex needs

Helping professionals, carers and individuals with needs navigate the health and care system

Care element

Sub-element

Reablement and rehabilitation

Rehabilitation/reablement services

Developing community assets to support resilience and independence

High quality end-of-life care and dementia care

End-of-life care

Dementia care

Joined-up commissioning and collaboration between health and social care

Co-production with providers and networked care homes

Shared contractual mechanisms to promote integration (including continuing health care)

Access to appropriate housing options

Workforce development

Training and development for social care provider staff

Joint workforce planning across all sectors

Data, IT and technology

Linked health and social care datasets

Access to the care record and secure email

Better use of technology in care homes

Source: NHS England. Enhanced Health in Care Homes framework (2016).

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