will today announce an
injection of £240 million into the social care system to ease
pressure on the NHS this winter.
This money could buy 71,500
domestic care packages or 86,500
reablement packages.
Routed through local councils, this will fund
packages of care to prevent older people from going into
hospital unnecessarily and getting people home quickly when
medically fit to leave.
The money will be specifically focused
on reducing winter pressure on the NHS, and councils will be
allocated the funding based on the adult social care relative
needs formula. They can also choose to spend the money on housing
adaptions or taking measures to prevent hospital admissions as
well as provide step down or other care packages.
, Health Secretary, is expected
to say:
“I want to help the NHS through this winter
too.
“I have already provided funding for
hospitals to make upgrades to their buildings to deal with
pressures this winter.
“And I can announce that today I am making
an extra £240million available to pay for social care
packages this winter to support our NHS.
“We will use this money to get people who
don’t need to be in hospital, but do need care, back home, back
into their communities, so we can free up those vital hospital
beds.
"And help people who really need it, get the
hospital care they need.”
ENDS
Notes to Editors
· We
have provided billions of pounds more funding for social
care. With 1.5 million more over 75s expected in
the next 10 years, we recognise the growing pressure on
social care as our population ages. The government has
provided billions of pounds for social care:
-
The Government has given councils access to
£9.4 billion dedicated funding for adult social care over the
three years from 2017/18.
-
We announced an additional £2 billion for
adult social care.
-
The Government announced a further £150
million in 2018-19 for an Adult Social Care Support
Grant.
· We
are introducing a package of measures to boost support over the
winter period. These include taking action to
reduced long stays in hospital, expanding same day emergency
care, and ensuring primary care extended access is in place
across the country, with an additional GP nine million
appointments per year. We are also taking action to safely
reduce ambulances conveying patients to hospital through
increased ‘hear and treat’ and ‘see and treat’.
· We
took action to address delayed transfers of care during
2017-18. The spring budget prioritised £2bn
additional funding for adult social care services, in part to
help reduce pressures on the NHS from DTOC. Both the NHS and
social care have been working hard to reduce delays and free up
beds, and overall trends indicate that the NHS and social care
system are continuing to reduce delays.
-
As a result of cross-system action, delays
have reduced - up to 1,900 beds were freed-up over the winter
period.
-
There were 139,983 total delayed days in July
2018 (or 4,516 delayed days per day), compared with 181,891
total delayed days in July 2017 (or 5,867 delayed days per day)
- a decrease of 23%.
-
And overall DTOCs due to social care have
fallen by 1,044 a day since February 2017 – a reduction of
43%. The latest data shows that there were 2,145
fewer beds occupied by a delayed transfer in July 2018 compared
to the baseline (February 2017).
-
We have given the NHS £145m to improve
emergency care ahead of winter. The government is
giving more than £145 million to NHS trusts across the country
ahead of winter to improve emergency care. The funding is being
spent on 81 new schemes to upgrade wards, redevelop A&E
departments, improve same-day emergency care, and improve
systems for managing the number of beds in use. (Gov.uk, Press release,link)
-
For the first time, children in school year 5
will be offered the flu vaccine, meaning that all
children aged between 2 and 9 will be offered the flu
vaccine. And NHS leaders have also announced an
ambition for 100% of frontline workers to get the
flu vaccine to protect patients as part of a
comprehensive plan for this winter.
***EMBARGOED UNTIL 0001hrs, Tuesday 2
October 2018***
MP, Labour’s Shadow Cabinet
Member for Social Care, responding to Matthew Hancock's
conference announcement, said:
"There is a severe crisis in social care caused
by eight years of Tory austerity, and tinkering at the edges like
this is not going to solve it.
"With 400,000 fewer people receiving care
under this Government than in 2010, funding such a small number
of care packages is a drop in the ocean.
"Labour will rebuild social care services,
starting with an extra £8 billion across a Parliament to start to
ease the crisis, to lift care quality and ensure more people get
the support they need."