1 / 19

National Home Care Council – 4 February 2010

National Home Care Council – 4 February 2010. Mike Martin, Director JIT. Key messages from the Minister Reshaping Care for Older People The future shape of care at home support. Key messages from the Minister:. Home care at the heart of good community care Huge impact on ‘quality of life’

lavey
Download Presentation

National Home Care Council – 4 February 2010

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. National Home Care Council – 4 February 2010 Mike Martin, Director JIT

  2. Key messages from the Minister • Reshaping Care for Older People • The future shape of care at home support

  3. Key messages from the Minister: • Home care at the heart of good community care • Huge impact on ‘quality of life’ • Gone through change … more change ahead

  4. More Key Messages …. Dementia • Dementia Strategy being developed • 5 key areas: • Treatment and managing behaviour • Diagnosis and patient pathways • Improving general service response to dementia • Right and dignity and personalisation • Health improvement, public attitudes and stigma • Been subject to extensive consultation – and more consultation during March/April • Overall aims – early diagnosis – person centred – support to stay at home

  5. More key messages … End of Life Care at home • ‘Living and Dying Well’ – Scotland’s first national action plan • Achievements to date • Delivery plans in each NHS Board area • Engagement with key stakeholders • Improved visibility and focus • Working group looking at Care at Home and Care Homes

  6. Final key messages …. • Joined up strategies and delivery • Big challenges ahead – and we are well placed to meet them • Collaboration between statutory sector, service users/carers/patients/providers and workforce

  7. Reshaping Care for Older People: Imperatives: Demographic shifts Financial pressures Policy goals Sustainability

  8. The changing shape of Scotland’s population

  9. Headline Projections: Current numbers of service users – 90,000 by 2016 + 23,000 (25%)

  10. Financial pressures: More of the same results in 2016 +22% (£1.1 billion) 2031 +74% (£3.4 million) At the same time …. 2016 -10%-14% reduction in public expenditure

  11. Policy goals - “To optimise independence and wellbeing at home or in a homely setting” How well do current services help meet this agreed policy goal?

  12. Health and social care expenditure Scottish population aged 65+ (2007/08 total=£4.5bn)

  13. Demographic change for population aged 65+ Scotland Potential impact on specialist care services 2007-2031 94% 1-9 hrs Home care 26% 10+ hrs Home care Care Home Cont h/care (hosp) Projection P Knight Scottish Government

  14. 84% 61% 41% 24% 9% Calendar year ’07 estimate P Knight Scottish Government

  15. The Reshaping Care for Older People Programme • Govt/NHS/COSLA initiative • 8 workstreams • Vision and engagement • Demographics and funding • Care at home • Out of home care • Healthy ageing • Planning for ageing communities • Complex care/care pathways • Workforce • Public launch and extensive engagement programme – March-Summer

  16. Current service provision by service type

  17. Current service provision by age group 65-74 75-84 85+ 97% 88% 60%

  18. Emerging Proposals: The Headlines • Reinforce and restate the policy goals • Reshaping attitudes and expectations • Honesty about resources • Explicit about a focus on outcomes • Older people – asset not burden • Supported Self Care • Community Capacity Building • Integrated/Person centred approaches • More/better complex care at home/excellent care pathways • Shifting resources to follow the person • Action to secure healthy “added” years • Supporting the workforce, unpaid carers and volunteers

  19. Emerging Proposals Care at Home • Better integration • Re-ablement focus • Expand and integrate telehealthcare • Good assessment, planning and review [Talking Points] • Support unpaid carers • Support volunteers • More complex care at home • Better crisis care at home

More Related