Yorkshire Post

Failure of social safety net traps elderly on wards

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A KEY cause of the NHS winter crisis was pretty much summed up by the plight of an elderly friend who found herself stuck in a hospital bed because there was nowhere for her to go.

A broken ankle requiring surgery is a very serious injury for somebody of 79, who suddenly found her cherished independen­ce compromise­d – and her pride deeply wounded by knowing she was a so-called ‘bed-blocker’.

Managing at home by herself was out of the question. She needed help with bathing and dressing, and standing up to cook meals was beyond her for now.

Add to that a fear of falling and being unable to help herself, and the need for a couple of weeks’ care until she regained enough mobility to return home – which she dearly wanted – was clear.

Except no council-run or funded care home place was available. She couldn’t afford to go private, and so she was stuck in hospital. This lasted for a week, and every time I visited, it was apparent that it was hampering her recovery.

She fretted constantly at taking up a bed that should have gone to somebody in greater need, feeling guilty at being what she saw as a burden on a system that had helped her.

And faultlessl­y kind though the nursing staff were, they were so rushed off their feet that they had too little time to get her out of bed and moving to start improving her mobility.

One of those staff told me that she was not the only elderly patient stuck on the ward because of a shortage of care home places.

Just how upsetting this all was, coming on top of an injury that had badly shaken her, was apparent when she wept at being told that a place had become available which meant she could leave hospital.

Happily, she’s now on the mend and will soon be back at home.

Individual crises like this, not just here in Yorkshire but across the country, make it apparent that the NHS’s problems cannot be fixed in isolation, but demand to be addressed in the wider context of care.

Last week’s stark warning by accident and emergency doctors that patients are dying prematurel­y because there are insufficie­nt hospital beds makes this winter’s health crisis one the bleakest Britain has faced.

The queues of seriously ill people lying on trolleys in corridors for hours, or of makeshift wards set up to accommodat­e them, speak not only of a service struggling to cope but cries out for a longoverdu­e rethink on the part social care must play.

It is intolerabl­e that somebody rushed into hospital by ambulance cannot find a place on a ward because beds are occupied by people who no longer need them.

The social care crisis mirrors that of the NHS, and is aggravatin­g the problems that hospitals face.

As the population ages, and well, yet on the other fails to help them along the road to recovery, is deeply flawed.

Last year, the Government engaged in a disgracefu­l exercise in buck-passing over social care, shoving responsibi­lity onto local authoritie­s by allowing them to introduce a council tax rise to pay for it.

That was only ever going to produce patchy results, because wealthy areas would raise much more than poor ones, and completely missed the point that caring for the elderly coming out of hospitals must be addressed on a countrywid­e basis.

Adding responsibi­lity for social care to Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt’s brief in last week’s reshuffle was a long-overdue acknowledg­ement that it cannot be regarded in isolation nor left to already hard-pressed councils.

As with every problem that the health system faces, it will all come down to money. But the NHS winter crisis cannot be solved by funding that service alone. If lack of social care provision is not tackled as well, the queues of patients on trolleys in hospital corridors will only grow longer.

 ??  ?? Peers and political rivals Peter Mandelson and Michael Heseltine both have vital experience on industrial strategy that the Prime Minister could benefit from.
Peers and political rivals Peter Mandelson and Michael Heseltine both have vital experience on industrial strategy that the Prime Minister could benefit from.
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