Daily Mail

Get ready for the DIY NHS

Hospitals try to offload sick on to families Relatives are told to carry out injections GPs called in to clear wards

- By Sophie Borland and Tom Payne

HOSPITALS are sending patients home early into the care of relatives as they try desperatel­y to free up beds.

They have warned families to ‘ be prepared’ to look after loved-ones at home – by perhaps administer­ing injections or moving those who are bedbound.

The notice was been sent out by a Leicesters­hire health trust in a last- ditch attempt to relieve pressure on its beleaguere­d A&E unit.

The latest indication of the depth of the NHS crisis follows a string of revelation­s about intense pressures it faces.

The news came yesterday as it emerged that GPs at another health trust were being asked to come into hospitals to help discharge patients early and take over their care.

Dr Andrew Green, chair of the British Medical Associatio­n’s GP clinical and prescribin­g subcommitt­ee, said the request was ‘incredible’.

The unpreceden­ted move is, again, an attempt to free up space on wards to alleviate the pressure on casualty department­s.

Widespread bed-blocking and a social care crisis have made it hard for hospitals to free space for patients stuck on trolleys or in A&E.

‘This looks like a recipe for unsafe care’

As the NHS crisis showed no signs of abating last night, it was revealed that: ÷ Patients at one hospital returned to their wards after operations only to find that someone else has been moved into their beds; ÷ A record 6,825 bed-blocking patients were stuck in hospital in November – a 40 per cent increase on the previous year; ÷ The NHS Confederat­ion said it was time for the Government to accept that ‘limited investment’ had ‘consequenc­es’; ÷ Another senior NHS boss and a former Tory MP blamed the Government for failing to invest in social care.

Campaigner­s described the attempts by hospitals to offload patients on to relatives as a ‘ recipe for unsafe care’ yesterday.

The request to families was issued on Wednesday by West Leicesters­hire Clinical Commission­ing Group, which serves a population of 366,000.

A spokesman said the local A&E at Leicester Royal Infirmary was ‘extremely busy’ with many ‘seriously ill’ patients waiting on trolleys for beds.

He added that where patients were medically well enough to go home – but not yet recovered – doctors might sit down with families and teach them to carry out some care duties.

This might include administer­ing an injection three times a day to prevent a patient who has had a hip operation from getting blood clots. Relatives may also consider moving in with patients’ temporaril­y to help them recover.

Dr Nick Willmott, GP and clinical lead for the commission­ing group, said: ‘The hospital will support you to know how to care for your loved-one, and people shouldn’t be afraid to ask questions to make sure they are confident in any techniques they will need.

‘The idea of supporting recovery may seem daunting, but learning these basic techniques, such as administer­ing injections or supporting someone to move from their chair to their bed in the correct way, means that your loved-one can be discharged earlier, and recover more quickly at home.’

But former Lib Dem health minister Norman Lamb said the measures were ‘extraordin­ary’.

He added: ‘It gives the impression that patients could be discharged from hospital before it is safe to do so. Many people will be frightened by the idea of administer­ing injections. It is irresponsi­ble.

‘The Government and the NHS should be focusing attention on the horror of the record numbers of people stuck in hospital long after they are actually ready for discharge.’

Caroline Abrahams, of the charity Age UK, said: ‘ Dis- charging patients before they are medically fit to leave and without the support at home they need to recover cannot be the right solution – and could get close to breaching the hospital’s duty of care.

‘It is one thing to ask families to help with routine care for an older person, quite another to expect them to take on the full responsibi­lity for administer­ing injections or moving someone who is bedridden when they have not been properly trained.

‘This looks like a recipe for unsafe care.’

Managers at North Lincolnshi­re Clinical Commission­ing Group, meanwhile, are trying to draft GPs into hospital to

help discharge patients early. An email sent to GPs – uncovered by Pulse magazine – urges them to assess patients and take charge of their care.

This could include providing visits from district nurses from the surgery, for example.

Figures yesterday showed bedblockin­g had reached unpreceden­ted levels, with 6,825 patients in hospital unable to be discharged. This is fuelling the crisis in A&E, and leaves very sick patients having to lie for hours on trolleys waiting for a bed.

The claim on Wednesday by the head of the NHS, Simon Stevens, that Theresa May had not spent enough on health and social care was backed yester- day by former Tory MP Stephen Dorrell, and the head of the NHS Confederat­ion, Stephen Dalton.

Mr Dalton, whose organisati­on represents NHS managers in England, said: ‘We have been issuing warnings of the system approachin­g a tipping point for some time, but we are now starting to see proof that this point has been reached.’

The news came as whistleblo­wers at the Royal London Hospital in East London told how, in the past week, four patients were moved back to wards following operations only to discover that their beds has been taken by others.

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