Implications and priorities for future work

Implications of the evaluation

The Sutton Homes of Care vanguard worked in partnership with local health and care providers to design and deliver an ambitious change programme and bring about an improvement in the health care and wellbeing experienced by all care home residents in Sutton, alongside a reduction in health care costs.

These analyses reflect implementation part way through the delivery of the enhanced support, and provide important insights for Sutton CCG that could help improve its work in this area. Many of the activities were carried forward beyond April 2017, which was the end of the period covered by this evaluation. These analyses supplement existing evidence derived by alternative methods delivered by the vanguard’s local evaluation partner, and provide a different approach to evaluating the impact of the vanguard-enhanced support. Alternative analytical approaches come with different strengths and weaknesses. Exploring how these findings differ and/or support one another provides useful insights that can inform future implementation. Learning from the Sutton vanguard and sharing good practice will be key to achieving the aim of creating a culture and ethos in Sutton that will deliver sustainable improvement, as the changes made evolve into ‘business as usual’ within Sutton CCG.

Our main findings, while not being conclusive, do suggest some weak evidence of higher emergency hospital admissions for the Sutton residents in the study as compared to the control group, particularly in nursing homes. While it is possible that this is due to other factors than changes made by the Sutton Homes of Care vanguard, it is also possible that this pattern reflects a true increase in hospital use, potentially reflecting earlier identification of health issues and unmet health care need. This may require further investigation. Our analyses also suggest a reduction in A&E attendances for Sutton residents who moved to a care home during the second eight months of the study period. This finding highlights the importance of local systems delivering new models of care being given time for changes to take effect, being supported to work through initial implementation challenges and being able to learn from experience. It also demonstrates the importance and value of robust evaluation such as this, to understand whether initiatives are working well, or need to change to succeed.

Improving care across a large number of care homes with different environments and contexts is a complex undertaking. Experience has shown that such complex innovations often take time to take effect, that the implementation path is often not linear, and that the final result can be unpredictable. International examples show that, often, a continual process of learning is needed, with changes being successively tested and evaluated, and with learning used to improve both the design of the change programme and the surrounding context. Sometimes there needs to be changes to the nature of the interventions offered or to the surrounding context, so that it is more conducive to the changes being made. The aim of the Improvement Analytics Unit is to produce information that contributes towards learning and informs course correction on the ground as well as at a national level.

Priorities for future work

Building on the implementation approach adopted by the vanguard, with evidence and analysis being part of delivery, Sutton CCG would benefit from ongoing testing and evaluation to support its delivery of sustainable change. Future studies using larger samples of care home residents would be useful to increase the power to detect significant differences in outcomes between different models of care. Analyses could concentrate on the following key areas:

  • building on this analysis, by exploring how to reduce the risk that differences in quality of care in the care homes may partly explain observed results, or by conducting additional quantitative analyses of data from the period after April 2017, to see if there is evidence that the impact on hospital outcomes has changed as the implementation matures
  • inclusion of data on planned admissions and on hospital admissions following a UTI, fall or significant fracture, pressure ulcer or VTE in longer-term analyses, if sufficient cases are reported
  • ongoing monitoring of hospital admissions from care homes providing regular tracking of care quality and trends, including the use of data linkage methods to understand possible reasons behind those trends
  • assessing if differences in quality of care in the care home (residential care home or nursing home) as assessed by CQC (rating or presence of a registered manager) had any impact on the results.

Further, these findings need to be looked at alongside any qualitative evaluation to understand the level of uptake of the implementation and also explore what might have led to the patterns of hospital use seen in this study.

Previous Next