Press release

Better care plans to provide dignity, independence and reduce A&E admissions

Plans to improve out of hospital care for the elderly and vulnerable will reduce emergency admissions.

This was published under the 2010 to 2015 Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government

Plans to improve out of hospital care for the elderly and vulnerable will reduce emergency admissions, the Department of Health and Department for Communities and Local Government announced today (5 July 2014).

Following a review of the first set of local plans for the Better Care Fund, a renewed agreement has strengthened a commitment to bring health and care service providers closer together to make joint decisions, ensuring more people receive joined-up, personalised care closer to home. The fund and the benefits it is creating will be an enduring feature of health and care provision beyond 2016.

Building on existing practices whereby local government already purchases care services from a range of suppliers, the fund, with a shared budget of at least £3.8 billion, will bring from next April:

  • more dignity and independence for the frail and elderly by providing the care they need at or closer to home
  • 7-day health and care services — to ensure that people can access the care they need when they need it
  • a named professional— who can join up services around individuals, and prevent them from falling through the gaps
  • better data sharing — so that people don’t need to endlessly repeat their story to every professional who cares for them
  • joint assessments — so that services can work together to assess and meet people’s needs all in one go

Today’s news means that as well as providing this kind of service to patients, Health and Wellbeing Boards – made up of councils and local health services – will be able to set their own performance pot with a guideline reduction in unplanned admissions of at least 3.5%. This equates to at least 185,500 fewer admissions a year. The balance of their current performance allocation will then be spent on NHS-commissioned community services.

Following a review of 151 local area ‘Better Care’ plans, NHS England and the Local Government Association (LGA) found that more than 80% of local area plans are on course to transform ‘out of hospital’ services. NHS England and the LGA have also identified 14 areas that can fast track the completion of their plans because they are already showing high potential, some 9 months out from the formal start of the programme.

The plans will be further reviewed by DCLG Permanent Secretary Sir Bob Kerslake and NHS Chief Executive Simon Stevens later in the summer to ensure they are ambitious enough to achieve improvements in care and that every area is on track to begin in April next year. In order to drive this through at pace a new Better Care Fund programme director will also be appointed with an expanded team, working across Whitehall, local government and the NHS.

More than 100 Clinical Commissioning Group areas have expressed an interest in ‘co-commissioning’ primary care services. This will mean that GPs have unprecedented involvement in not only how hospital services should be shaped to meet the needs of their patients, but also how primary care services are set up to prevent people from experiencing unnecessary hospital visits.

Health Secretary, Jeremy Hunt said:

Local authorities and the NHS are making excellent progress in developing plans that will give patients better, joined up care and allow hospitals to focus on treating the people who really need to be there. The plans are packed full of ideas and show that strong partnerships are being forged with different teams like never before.

Successive governments have talked about bringing the NHS and social care together for decades – this is the first, transformative step to making that a reality. We will continue to nurture and support the development of these plans to deliver our shared ambition so that every part of the country provides better care for patients closer to home.

Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, Eric Pickles said:

The Better Care Fund is about bringing health and social care together to provide better, more dignified care and independence for the elderly and vulnerable, not leaving them with no choice but to turn up at A&E or be stuck unnecessarily in hospital for weeks when they could be helped at home. The great advantage of the system is local flexibility to get the mix of services right for the user. The revised plans will help cement this new partnership at a local level, with services built around the user, and provide a good deal for the taxpayer too.

Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Danny Alexander said:

This fund will help ensure more people benefit from the dignity and independence of being cared for at home instead of a hospital ward. Empowering local areas by pooling budgets will help unlock real improvements in a wide range of public services in the years to come.

It’s clear from the plans we have seen that these are only first steps in improving services. The Better Care Fund will be an established feature of the care system for the coming years so areas can continue to fund care designed around people’s needs rather than institutional divides.

Care and Support Minister, Norman Lamb said:

Too often care is uncoordinated, leaving too many people needlessly going back to A&E again and again. We want to make the system fairer and provide better care for patients, no matter where they are being treated. We already have 14 pioneer areas proving that an integrated approach can save money, reduce demand on services and improve patient care.

Background information

  1. Up to £1 billion of the Better Care Fund will be allocated to local areas to spend on out-of-hospital services according to the level of reduction in emergency admissions they achieve. Local areas will agree their own ambition on reducing emergency admissions and they will be allocated a portion of the £1 billion performance money in the fund in accordance with the level of performance against this ambition. The remaining money from the performance pot not earned through reducing emergency admissions will be used to support NHS-commissioned local services, as agreed by Health and Wellbeing Boards.

  2. Revised guidance for local areas to shape the further development of local Better Care Fund plans will be set out shortly. This will include information on the revised performance payment scheme, as well as specific areas where local plans need to be strengthened through providing further detail on local plans.

  3. We expect local areas to submit revised plans later in the summer, ahead of a further process of national assurance and ministerial sign off. Better Care Fund plans will launch in all local areas from 1 April 2015, as set out in the 2013 Spending Review.

  4. Based on 2013/14 figures the total number of emergency admissions in 2013/14 was 5,300,439.

  5. The 14 areas that can fast-track the completion of their plans are:

  • Dudley
  • Hammersmith and Fulham
  • Kensington and Chelsea
  • Westminster
  • Greenwich
  • Leeds
  • Liverpool
  • Nottinghamshire
  • Reading
  • Sunderland
  • Rotherham
  • Torbay
  • Warwickshire
  • Wiltshire
Published 5 July 2014