No Place For Elderly Like Their Own Home
Older people tell us they prefer to live independently in their own homes and communities and we aim to make this a reality in as many cases as we can
Some important Welsh Government policies have similar ambitions
Together for Health, recognises the need to change how NHS services are delivered to an ageing society, providing more preventative services, closer to home. The Social Services and Wellbeing Bill proposes more preventative services, and closer working between Health and LAs
There is no doubt that greater integration between health and social care is essential if Wales is to deliver effective services which reduce the impact of high levels of chronic ill-health in an ageing population
And yet, the role of housing in all of this is often forgotten. Good quality, safe, accessible housing is an important part of a more integrated system, and can improve health and social care outcomes, while delivering cost savings
The challenge for housing organisations is to make sure that those who develop policy and commission health and social care services are well informed about the role that housing can play in improving older peoples’ health and producing savings across an increasingly stretched health and social care system
Some examples:
Extra care housing, which is designed to meet the needs of residents by offering care and support on site and on call, has been shown to improve health and wellbeing for older people, while delivering cost-effective support outside of residential care
Services that improve home energy efficiency and help older people afford to pay their fuel bills reduce demand by avoiding A&E visits and emergency hospital admissions. Given the scandalous 1700 annual extra winter deaths, and many thousand more winter admissions, it is crucial that we make clinical commissioners fully aware of the threat of cold homes to our older people. We must also convince them of the return on investment that services such as Care & Repair, and adaptations can provide
Last year in England saw a huge breakthrough on this front with the Department of Health announcing an additional £40 million for Disabled Facilities Grants. This is a first in terms of significant Health investment into Housing adaptations
Care & Repair Cymru urges the Welsh Government to take similar steps by diverting relatively small amounts of Health capital funding to the highly successful Rapid Response Adaptations and Independent Living Grant programmes, both of which are more cost effective and quicker than Disabled Facilities Grants
We also need greater housing input into safe hospital discharge plans. Each local health system should have budgets to allow housing adaptations to be put in place swiftly to support recovery and rehabilitation at home, reducing the cost of delayed discharges or readmission
The same is true for the growing number of people with dementia: relying purely on hospital provision to meet their needs is not only undesirable for those affected, it’s also impossible for the taxpayer
Greater investment in tele-health, assistive technology and low-level interventions, delivered cost effectively via the existing Care & Repair infrastructure and expertise, can help people with dementia stay in their own homes
The case is clear. Housing needs to be part of an integrated architecture of building healthier communities tailored around someone at home
At a strategic level, this means that Housing must be aligned better with Health and Social Care policy
Operationally, housing services, including Care & Repair must be better networked within local health and social care economies. In this way, we can really begin to plan and deliver the health, social care and support that people aspire to in their own homes and neighbourhoods