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Recent History of Hospital Closures

Recent History of Hospital Closures. the advent of Direct P ayments a nd Self Directed Support. “ deviant roles ”. Sick Person Menace Object of Pity Burden of Charity Holy Innocent. “ Sick Person ”.

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Recent History of Hospital Closures

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  1. Recent History of Hospital Closures the advent of Direct Payments and Self Directed Support

  2. “deviant roles” • Sick Person • Menace • Object of Pity • Burden of Charity • Holy Innocent

  3. “Sick Person” • "The biological, economic and sociological bearings of feeble-mindedness have overshadowed the fact that it is fundamentally and essentially a medical question.“ Fernald (1915)

  4. residential care for“sick people” • Medical hierarchy • Labelled as a hospital • Residents are “patients” • Care is referred to as “nursing care” • Living units are “units” or “wards”

  5. “developmental model” • “designed to • facilitate and encourage the resident's interaction with the environment • maximize interaction between staff and residents • foster individuality, dignity, privacy, and personal responsibility • furnish residents with living conditions which not only permit but encourage functioning similar to that of non-handicapped community age peers”

  6. developmental model architecture • Homelike internal and external design • Colorful, light, bright, perceptually warm but diversified living units • Small, self-contained living units • Bedrooms for 1-4 residents • Family dining facilities • Homelike appliances such as toilets, faucets, showers, baths, stoves • Windows of normal size, type, and placement • Live-in care personnel • Plenty of space for individual possessions. • Doors between rooms and areas • Curtains or doors for baths and showers, and toilets designed for private use • Homelike access to "controls" such as switches and thermostats • Access to "risks," e.g., stairs, electrical outlets, hot water, etc

  7. Scottish Learning Disability Hospitals 1995 2 1 3 4 6 1 Craig Phadrig, Inverness 2 Ladysbridge, Banff 3 Woodlands, Aberdeen 4 Strathmartine, Dundee 5 Lynebank, Dunfermline 6 RSNH, Larbert 7 Gogarburn, Edinburgh 8 St Josephs, Rosewell 9 Birkwood, Lesmahagow 10 Kirklands, Bothwell 11 Lennox Catle, Lennoxtown 12 Merchiston, Johnstone 13 Arrol Park, Ayr 12 11 5 7 8 10 13 9

  8. we know what makes for quality in adult learning disabilities services • Respect: for • the individual • the equal adult status of the individual • the human rights of the individual • Understanding: that it’s not about “special needs” but that we all share the same human needs for • friends, love, home, community, privacy, security, money, sense of purpose • Competence: to deliver the right type and amount of additional individualised support to ensure that these needs are met

  9. but this knowledgeoften fails to translate directly into practice • especially in a major undertaking like hospital closure, it can become severely diluted through various filters • national policy • local strategy • administrative complexity • the strains and stresses of the health and welfare bureaucracies attempting to work in partnership • finite resources of time and money "Deinstitutionalisation and Community Services in Greater Glasgow“ Tizard Learning Disability Review, Vol. 4 Iss: 1, pp.13 - 23

  10. Scotland 1995 • health and social work administered in Scotland • but policy and legislation set on a UK basis • 3,000-4,000 people living in 13 learning disability “hospitals”: National Health Service • 16 National Health Service Boards • 11 Social Work Departments • no policy of hospital closure • instead a piecemeal, ad hoc, policy to reduce size of “hospital” population and develop more “community care”: • joint planning • resource transfer

  11. National Health Service Scottish Health Boards 1995 HIGHLAND Craig Phadrig, Inverness GRAMPIAN 2 Ladysbridge, Banff 3 Woodlands, Aberdeen TAYSIDE Strathmartine, Dundee FIFE Lynebank, Dunfermline FORTH VALLEY RSNH, Larbert LOTHIAN 7 Gogarburn, Edinburgh St Josephs, Rosewell LANARKSHIRE 9 Birkwood, Lesmahagow 10 Kirklands, Bothwell GREATER GLASGOW 11 Lennox Catle, Lennoxtown ARGYLL & CLYDE 12 Merchiston, Johnstone AYRSHIRE & ARRAN 13 Arrol Park, Ayr

  12. Scottish Local Government Social Work Departments 1995 HIGHLAND Craig Phadrig, Inverness GRAMPIAN 2 Ladysbridge, Banff 3 Woodlands, Aberdeen TAYSIDE Strathmartine, Dundee FIFE Lynebank, Dunfermline CENTRAL RSNH, Larbert LOTHIAN 7 Gogarburn, Edinburgh St Josephs, Rosewell STRATHCLYDE 9 Birkwood, Lesmahagow 10 Kirklands, Bothwell 11 Lennox Catle, Lennoxtown 12 Merchiston, Johnstone 13 Arrol Park, Ayr

  13. 1995: Lennox Castle “Hospital” • home for around 250 people • administered by Greater Glasgow Health Board • situated within the Strathclyde social work area…… • ……which also contained the Argyll & Clyde, Ayrshire & Arran, and Lanarkshire Health Boards

  14. 1995: Lennox Castle “Hospital” • some serious joint planning intent shown with the creation of the Greater Glasgow Joint Learning Disability Project • Greater Glasgow Health • purchaser “Board” separate from provider “Trust” • Strathclyde social work department

  15. 1995: Lennox Castle “Hospital” • Strathclyde is home area for most people……. • ….but some from every other part of Scotland • ……and there are “Strathclyde people” in every other “hospital” in Scotland (plus some in England) • the Royal Scottish National Hospital in Larbert has been developed over the years as a “national facility”

  16. Scotland 1996 • health and social work administered in Scotland • but policy and legislation set on a UK basis • 13 learning disability “hospitals”: National Health Service • 16 National Health Service Boards • 32 Social Work Departments • no policy of hospital closure • instead a piecemeal, ad hoc, policy to reduce size of “hospital” population and develop more “community care”: • joint planning • resource transfer

  17. Scottish Local Government Social Work Departments 1996

  18. 1996: Lennox Castle “Hospital” • home for around 250 people • administered by Greater Glasgow Health Board • situated within the East Dumbarton social work area…… • ……GGHB area also contains Glasgow City, West Dumbarton, East Renfrew, [part of] South Lanarkshire and [part of] North Lanarkshire

  19. 1996: Lennox Castle “Hospital” • Glasgow City is home area for most people……. • ….but some from every other part of Scotland • ……and there are “GGHB people” in every other “hospital” in Scotland (plus some in England) • many in the Royal Scottish National Hospital in Larbert

  20. 1996: Lennox Castle “Hospital” • Greater Glasgow Joint Learning Disability Project • commissioning social care arrangements for lots of group homes • pressures of time • pressures of money • emphasising security and income maximisation through secure tenure of properties • realisation dawning that no-one is actually commissioning the housing needed!!!

  21. 1997: Lennox Castle “Hospital” • first major crisis of the “Project” • trades unions and local politicians combine in opposition • tabloid newspaper headline reads: “Sick For Sale”……….. • …..but later that year the Secretary of State for Scotland gives permission for hospital closure

  22. Scotland 1998 • health and social work administered in Scotland • but now policy and legislation devolved to re-established Scottish Parliament • but still • 13 learning disability “hospitals”: National Health Service • 16 National Health Service Boards • 32 Social Work Departments • no policy of hospital closure • instead apiecemeal, ad hoc, policy to reduce size of “hospital” population and develop more “community care”: • joint planning • resource transfer

  23. 1998: Lennox Castle “Hospital” • closure of top-site completed

  24. Scotland 2000 • health and social work administered in Scotland • but now policy and legislation devolved to re-established Scottish Parliament • still • 13 learning disability “hospitals”: National Health Service • 16 National Health Service Boards • 32 Social Work Department • but now hospital closure policy established in national policy document “The Same As You?”

  25. 2001: Lennox Castle “Hospital” • hospital closure completed

  26. “hospital” closure timeline • Craig Phadrig 1999 • Gogarburn 1999 • St Joseph’s 1999 • Lennox Castle 2001 • Birkwood 2002 • RSNH 2002 • Ladysbridge 2003 • Strathmartine2003 • Woodlands 2003 • Kirklands2007 • Merchiston 2008 • Lynebank • ArrolPark

  27. enduring residential institutions • NHS assessment and treatment units • campus-style developments • “core and cluster” • specialist behavioural units • Nursing Homes • back to the future institutions

  28. “all the decisions that count” the advent of “Direct Payments” “Self Directed Support” “Personalisation”

  29. “Direct Payments”,“Self-Directed Support”“personalisation” • where do we find their roots? • how are they defined and described? • what is their relationship with the system of social work? • what are the implications for the rights of individual people?

  30. Independent Living Movement • arising out of civil rights movements of ‘60’s • associated with de-institutionalisation • adopting key principlesand values • independent living • participation • control • choice and empowerment • asserting “Social Model of Disability” in face of prevalent “medical model”

  31. social model of disability asserts that disability is created by three general types of social barrier, found in: • people’s attitudes— stereotyping, discrimination and prejudice • organisation’s practices— inflexible policies, practices and procedures • the built environment — including inaccessible buildings and services

  32. [biopsychosocial model] “In the Committee stages of the Welfare Reform Bill, the Government committed itself to the use of the social model of disability…..But when the Bill was being discussed in the House of Lords, Lord Freud announced that the Government had decided that the Bill should be based on the biopsychosocial model of disability instead. This model claims that biological, psychological and social factors all play a part in human functioning, in the context of disease or illness……..The biopsychosocial model is about health and illness, not about impairment and disability. It has nothing to say to the situation of someone who was, for instance, born with cerebral palsy. For the majority of us with long-term illnesses, "illness behaviour" is mainly irrelevant: we're not going to get better, no matter how hard we try……..Obviously some of us are going to recover, go back to work, lead normal lives again. That's wonderful. But many of us are not. I have progressive MS. I'm not going to be getting better - I'm going to get worse, and there is absolutely no way I'm fit to work at present…..But because the government has chosen the biopsychosocial model, there's a very real risk that after a year I'll be forced onto Jobseeker's Allowance: and face having it removed if I don't turn up for interviews because I'm unable to get out of bed.” http://funkymangosmusings.blogspot.co.uk/2012/01/modelling-disability-spartacusreport.html

  33. Direct Payments • cash payments made directly to the individual to purchase the services they are assessed as requiring. • a key goal of the disability movement for many years • seen as playing a role in the struggle for both redistribution and recognition • not legislated for until 1996 • Community Care (Direct Payments) Act • same year that hospital closure programmes began in earnest

  34. Direct Payments • allowing disabled people the freedom to determine the types of assistance they require, the quality of services available would be improved. • direct payments are regarded as having the potential to improve the social status of disabled people by transforming their identity from that of passive service recipient to active employer

  35. Self-Directed Support • a development of the 2000’s with intention of • making direct payments more flexible • Increasing the take-up of Direct Payments • extending the range of people with access to Direct Payments • introduction of new campaigns like In Control and In Control Scotland • other disability and “community care” groups becoming involved

  36. personalisation “by putting users at the heart of services, by enabling them to become participants in the design and delivery, services will be more effective by mobilising millions of people as co-producers of the public goods they value.” “PERSONALISATION THROUGH PARTICIPATION” CHARLES LEADBETTER, 2004

  37. UK Government and personalisation personalisation is “the process by which services are tailored to the needs and preferences of citizens. The overall vision is that the state should empower citizens to shape their own lives and the services they receive.” PRIME MINISTER’S STRATEGY UNIT (2007) “HM GOVERNMENT REVIEW: BUILDING ON PROGRESS: PUBLIC SERVICES”

  38. Scottish Government and Self-Directed Support “the Bill published today will give individuals informed choice and promote positive collaboration between recipients of social care and those who provide services on their behalf. There has been extensive consultation and engagement with stakeholders on the way forward and I am confident the Bill will help us build on the very positive progress made in implementing our 10-year strategy to providing real choice and control for those receiving social care." MICHAEL MATHESON, PRESS STATEMENT, MARCH 2012

  39. Scottish Government and Self-Directed Support the Social Care (Self Directed Support) (Scotland) Act, 2013

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