Care England, the largest representative body for independent
providers of adult social care, has expressed great concern at
new research indicating that the mortality rate from Covid-19 for
those with a learning disability was up to six times higher
during the first wave of the pandemic than the general
population.
Professor Martin Green, Chief Executive of Care England,
says:
“
This damning report underscores the disproportionate effect
Covid-19 has had on those with a learning disability. Care
England has consistently highlighted to central government the
need for priority to be given to supporting measures to aid
preventing the spread of Covid-19 in care settings which support
these individuals. Although emerging systems to manage the virus
are now being put in place, such as access to Personal Protective
Equipment (PPE) and COVID-19 testing for staff and residents, we
are immensely disappointed that such measures were not actioned
sooner in order to safeguard some of society’s most vulnerable.
There are many lessons to learn”.
The report,
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/covid-19-deaths-of-people-with-learning-disabilities/covid-19-deaths-of-people-identified-as-having-learning-disabilities-summary
published on 12 November by Public Health England (PHE), examines
data over the spring of 2020 from The English Learning
Disabilities Mortality Review (LeDeR) and NHS England’s COVID-19
Patient Notification System (CPNS) which records deaths in
hospital settings.
The data reveals that the rate of Covid-19 deaths notified to
LeDeR, from 21 March to 5 June, was 451 per 100,000 people with
learning disabilities, 4.1 times the rate for the general
population. Significantly, LeDeR suggests this rate could be as
high as 692 per 100,000 once the data has been adjusted to
account for under-reporting, which is 6.3 times the general
population rate.
Within care settings, the CQC data, which covered the period from
10 April to 15 May, indicates that Covid-19 accounted for 54% of
deaths of adults with learning disabilities in residential care
and 53% of deaths of adults with learning disabilities receiving
community-based social care.
The report coincides with the Lords’ Public Services Select
Committee
Lessons from COVID−19: major report on public
services which acknowledges that whilst the Government’s own
pandemic planning rightly identified social care as needing
significant support during an outbreak of a disease like
COVID-19, it remained the poor relation to the NHS when it came
to funding during lockdown.
https://committees.parliament.uk/committee/430/public-services-committee/news/123559/lessons-from-covid19-major-report-on-public-services-launched/
Martin Green continues:
“The immense loss of life has been a tragedy and has
highlighted that the impetus for change that Covid-19 has
catalysed needs to be harnessed, not forgotten in order to
facilitate a fully integrated health and social care
system.”