The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Shock report shows Tayside has second highest rate of delayed discharge.

Region has second highest rate of delayed discharge in Scotland

- PAUL MALIK pamalik@thecourier.co.uk

Seven patients in Tayside have spent up to a year in hospital due to delays in having them discharged, figures have revealed.

Tayside had the second highest rate of delayed discharge in the country, according to statistics provided by ISD Scotland – NHS Scotland’s data service.

The figures were compiled in December last year and show seven patients had been delayed in getting out of hospital for as many as 12 months and 11 had been kept in hospital for between six months and a year.

In Fife, figures show only a single patient remained delayed for between six months and a year, with none of the patients in hospital in December in the region having been there for longer than 12 months.

The director of the Fife Health and Social Care Partnershi­p, Michael Kellet, said: “Success in tackling delays in Fife is because of our investment in new models of care and because of the good work across the partnershi­p – health and social care – to ensure people are discharged from hospital in a safe, timely and appropriat­e fashion.”

Perth and Kinross, Dundee and Angus Health and Social Care Partnershi­ps (HSCP) all said they are working with clinical colleagues to reduce unnecessar­y delays.

A review is under way in Perth and Kinross, with “significan­t resources” being ploughed into services to try to reduce the figures.

A spokesman for NHS Tayside said: “Discharge from hospital can be delayed for a number of reasons including when waiting for admission to care homes, social care assessment, provision of equipment or care at home services.

“Our commitment to patients is that they should not have to wait unnecessar­ily for the most appropriat­e care to be provided after treatment.

“NHS Tayside has been working very closely with the three health and social care partnershi­ps and third sector partners in Angus, Dundee and Perth and Kinross to build sustainabl­e solutions that seek to reduce unschedule­d care and demand and avoid unnecessar­y delays in dischargin­g patients from hospital.”

Robert Packham, chief officer for Perth and Kinross HSCP, said: “Since April 2017, Perth and Kinross has seen a reduction in the number of people experienci­ng a delay as well as a reduction in the average length of delay. Our aim and focus is to continue to improve so we avoid unnecessar­y delays in dischargin­g patients from hospital.”

Diane McCulloch, of Dundee HSCP, said its services are being redesigned.

She said: “Of those people who are delayed, the majority have complex needs which require tailored support requiremen­ts or legal procedures to be completed. We have invested in a range of additional community supports and have agreed a programme of developmen­ts, including supported accommodat­ion, to meet this need.”

Gail Smith of Angus HSCP, said: “Continual improvemen­ts are being made in both numbers of patients and the number of days they are delayed. We continue to work closely with our hospital colleagues and care home providers to support these patients with more complex circumstan­ces, which includes completion of legal procedures.”

 ?? Picture: Getty. ?? A spokesman for NHS Tayside said a number of factors can thwart a timely discharge from hospital.
Picture: Getty. A spokesman for NHS Tayside said a number of factors can thwart a timely discharge from hospital.
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