Daily Mail

1 in 4 patients end up in A&E because GPs and social care failed them

- By Sophie Borland Health Editor

A QUARTER of patients admitted to hospital as an emergency are suffering from entirely preventabl­e conditions, a report has revealed.

Their illnesses could have been avoided had they been properly looked after by GPs, district nursing services or the social care system.

The report suggested that last year nearly 1.5million patients were admitted on to wards with preventabl­e conditions – including infections, pneumonia or the flare-up of existing complaints.

Most of these patients were elderly whose mobility and health would have deteriorat­ed with every day spent in hospital.

The number of avoidable admissions has risen by 14 per cent in three years and the issue is creating huge problems for already over crowded hospitals.

MPs described the situation as ‘lamentable’ and nursing leaders warned that patients were being failed by a ‘cut-price approach to care’.

The scale of such admissions exposes the shortfalls within GP surgeries and the social care system, both overwhelme­d by demand.

Family doctors say they cannot properly care for elderly patients as they are desperatel­y short- staffed and being denied adequate funding from the Government.

The social care system is also in crisis and an estimated 1.2million frail or older people are not receiving the help they need.

Today’s report by MPs on the public accounts committee estimates that 24 per cent of all emergency hospital admissions in 2016/17 could have been prevented with better care.

All hospitals now record the number of patients admitted with conditions deemed avoidable by NHS England, the body in charge of the NHS, and the data is compiled centrally.

Known as ‘ambulatory care sensitive conditions’, they include pneumonia, urinary infections and chest infections as well as the flaring up of asthma, heart disease and angina.

Labour MP Meg Hillier, who chairs the public accounts committee, said: ‘The consequenc­es of Government’s failure to properly fund and coordinate preventive health care and social care are laid bare in this report.’

Janet Davies, chief executive of the Royal College of Nursing, said: ‘Being admitted to hospital is hugely distressin­g and it must be a last resort, not the fall-back option for failing services.

‘People are being let down by the current disjointed and cutprice approach to care.’

Caroline Abrahams, director of charity Age UK, said: ‘The growing numbers of older people yo-yoing back into hospital is shocking.

‘Older patients don’t just need good treatment while they are in hospital, they also need the right support at home – from community health services as well as social care.’

The report states: ‘It is lamentable that nearly 1.5million people could have avoided emergency admissions in 2016/17 if hospitals, GPs, community services and social care had worked together more effectivel­y.’

It highlights how the number of emergency admissions rose by 14 per cent in three years since 2013/14 – although it does not provide the initial figure.

Some of those elderly patients admitted to hospital needlessly

‘Cut-price approach to care’

will never return home as they become too frail, or succumb to another infection.

Experts say that patients over 80 who spent ten days in hospital lose an estimated 10 per cent of their muscle mass, which is equivalent to ageing by ten years.

The report also criticises the fact that staff in hospitals, GP services and social care do not work closely together to ensure patients receive the best care.

Patients are often left to fend for themselves after being discharged. Inevitably their health deteriorat­es and they are admitted back in again.

The avoidable admissions are creating huge problems for hospitals. According to the report, the average number of available beds has dropped by 6 per cent since 2010. This means managers are frequently having to cancel nonurgent operations including hip and knee replacemen­ts.

The Government has promised to address the social care crisis in a green paper due next month.

Theresa May has also promised to make a significan­t cash injection to the NHS to coincide with its 70th anniversar­y on July 5.

A Department of Health spokesman said: ‘We know the social care system is under pressure – that’s why we’ve given an extra £2billion funding and will shortly outline reforms so it is sustainabl­e for the future, including closer integratio­n of health and social care.’

An NHS England spokesman said the report contained ‘factual flaws’ but did make ‘ several important points’.

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