Yorkshire Post

Delayed discharges ‘are causing deaths’

- LINDSAY PANTRY NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: lindsay.pantry@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @LindsayPan­tryYP

A “crisis” in the NHS leading to delayed discharges from hospital is fuelling a rise in overall death rates, new research suggests.

Researcher­s from the University of York joined teams from Liverpool, Oxford and Glasgow in analysing data from August 2010 to March 2016 on delayed discharges.

A “CRISIS” in the NHS leading to delayed discharges from hospital is fuelling a rise in overall death rates, new research suggests.

Researcher­s from the University of York joined teams from Liverpool, Oxford and Glasgow in analysing data from August 2010 to March 2016 on delayed discharges across England.

They said a “crisis in the NHS” and problems in social care were at least partly to blame for rising death rates from 2015 onwards.

Researcher­s believe delayed discharges – which are often caused by an inability to arrange adequate social care in the community for people leaving hospital – could be preventing other sick people from being admitted to hospital.

Meanwhile, those stuck in hospital may experience more stress and anxiety, and could receive poorer care as time goes on.

The research comes just days after The Yorkshire Post exclusivel­y revealed that the care crisis most often associated with

Mortality rates were higher in warmer months. Dr Mark Green, from the University of Liverpool.

the winter stretched throughout the year, with some patients in Yorkshire stuck in hospital for up to five months despite being declared fit to go home.

The research out today showed rising problems in delayed discharges and death rates from 2014/15 onwards, with a high concentrat­ion of deaths among older frail people.

For example, between July 2014 and June 2015, there were an extra 39,074 deaths in England and Wales compared with the same period the previous year.

“While mortality rates fluctuate year on year, this was the largest rise for nearly 50 years and the higher rate of mortality has been maintained throughout 2016 and into 2017,” the authors

wrote in the Journal of Epidemiolo­gy and Community Health.

They added: “The increase in mortality rates has occurred during a crisis in the National Health Service (NHS). The number of NHS trusts with budget deficits has increased sharply since 2014/2015, as did waiting periods for elective surgery in 2015.

“Issues within the NHS are being compounded by problems with the provision of adult social care to support individual­s leaving NHS care and pressures of increased demand.”

The authors estimated that up to a fifth of excess deaths were down to delayed discharges.

Previously, health officials have suggested flu was to blame for taking the lives of a significan­t number of people aged 75 and over in 2015 – 24,201 extra than in 2014.

Dr Mark Green, from the University of Liverpool, who worked on the study, said flu was a factor in 2015 but cannot account for the entire increase in deaths.

He said: “It also does not explain that mortality rates were higher in warmer months compared to previous years – ie when flu does not operate.”

He added: “Since 2014, the number of patients admitted for acute conditions who were delayed being discharged from hospital has almost increased by 50 per cent.

“This creates blockages in the NHS where beds are not available for new patients, and since these individual­s are being admitted for acute and often pressing issues any delay to accessing services can be deadly.

“It is clear that increased funding to both the NHS and adult social care to minimise issues with discharged patients would benefit the population widely.”

NHS England declined to comment on the study.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom