The Herald on Sunday

Patients in Scots mental health wards ‘well enough to go home’ wait THREE YEARS for discharge

The Herald on Sunday and The Ferret can reveal Scotland’s 14 health boards have thousands of instances of delay in people leaving psychiatri­c hospitals who are well enough to be discharged

- By Karin Godwin

The Mental Welfare Commission said finding care and accommodat­ion could be complex, but it was ‘not acceptable’ to spend years in hospital awaiting discharge

PEOPLE are facing “unacceptab­le” delays of more than three years before leaving mental health wards, despite being well enough to be discharged, a Ferret investigat­ion has found.

Findings based on data released under freedom of informatio­n legislatio­n from Scotland’s 14 health boards reveal thousands of instances of delay in people leaving psychiatri­c hospitals.

In the three-year period from January 2018 to December 2020 there were 46 delays of more than a year. This included at least 13 people in 2018, 16 people in 2019, and 12 people in 2020.

In at least 17 instances, people were not able to leave a ward for more than two years after being signed off as fit to do so by a doctor. In the most extreme cases, people were left living in limbo in mental health wards for three years or more.

In 2019, five people in the care of NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde had been waiting for more than three years to be discharged for mental health wards and NHS Tayside reported five “episodes” of delayed discharge of three years. In 2020, one person in Greater Glasgow had been waiting for more than three years and a further five “episodes” of more than three years were reported in Tayside.

The figures highlight a postcode lottery system, with delays to discharge from mental health wards varying hugely around the country.

Disability and mental health charities said “urgent action” was needed to ensure everyone ready to leave hospital was able to move on”. They claimed that better community-based therapeuti­c services would help lead to quicker and more “successful” discharges from hospital regardless of whether people were officially delayed or not.

They also called for hospital standards and therapeuti­c care – which Mental Welfare Commission inspection­s show are mixed across the country – to be raised where appropriat­e.

The Mental Welfare Commission said though finding appropriat­e care and accommodat­ion could be complex, it was “not acceptable” for people to spend years in hospital awaiting discharge.

Hospitals said they were working hard to address the situation but were hampered by the lack of community-based local authority funded support available. Lengthy delays can also be caused by the legal proceeding­s needed to put guardiansh­ip arrangemen­ts in place for people with dementia or profound learning disabiliti­es. This is necessary for those who do not have a legal capacity to agree to be moved to supported accommodat­ion. Other waits can be caused by social work and mental health officer shortages.

‘Cannot leave’

A DELAYED discharge occurs when a patient, clinically ready for discharge, cannot leave hospital because the other necessary care, support or accommodat­ion for them is not readily accessible or cannot be funded.

The unpublishe­d figures obtained by The Ferret detailed at least 2,601 records of people who faced delayed discharge from mental health hospitals. They included 499 people in 2018, 1,048 people in 2019 and 1,054 in 2020. Some figures were only given as “less than five”.

In NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde, Scotland’s largest health board area which takes patients from other areas, 295 people faced delayed discharges in 2019. In 2020, 249 were recorded. Over those two years delays of more than six months were recorded 46 times. In six instances, people were there more than three years later.

In Fife, nearly one in five patients waited for more than six months to be discharged with 13 instances of people waiting to be discharged for more than a year. Three people faced waits of more than two years.

More than one in five patients in Highland was delayed by more than six months, with 3 per cent of patients delayed for a year. A further 3% were delayed by more than two years.

Other than Shetland and Orkney, which do not have mental health beds, NHS Ayrshire and Arran, NHS Lanarkshir­e and NHS Borders were the only health boards where no patients faced a delay in discharge of more than a year from 2018 to 2020.

‘Misunderst­ood’

NHS Lothian claimed it initially misunderst­ood the FoI and though it provided data it was not what was requested. Some health boards provided incomplete data and Lanarkshir­e only provided figures for “episodes” of discharge rather than patient numbers.

The problem of delays facing those well enough to leave mental health hospitals has been highlighte­d several times recently by the Mental Welfare Commission for Scotland.

In 2019, it conducted a full investigat­ion into an 18-month delay to the discharge of a 59-year-old woman known as Mrs ST. The commission said this was due to a “prolonged disagreeme­nt between family, health profession­als and the Health and Social Care Partnershi­p (HSCP) about discharge plans”.

The report said a catalogue of errors caused the delay and it should have been “a few weeks” rather than 18 months. They included delays to appointing a care manager and a disregard for the wishes of the woman and her family for her to return to her own home. Social work plans to place her in a care home then had to be challenged, leading her brother to apply for a guardiansh­ip order.

Although a mental health officer should legally be appointed within 21 days to carry out the necessary assessment, in this case it took more than nine weeks. Medical records requested by the family solicitor were then delayed, and the level of support she required to return home was contested by the local authority.

A 2016 Mental Welfare Commission report – No Through Road – found nearly one-third of those patients (32%) with learning disabiliti­es were experienci­ng long waits for discharge from hospital.

A commission spokespers­on said that following both the 2016 and 2019 reports, it put in place a system to monitor discharges across Scotland for people with learning disabiliti­es. It is now looking to extend the pilot to include those delayed from leaving mental health wards.

Claire Lamza, interim executive director of the Mental Welfare Commission, said: “We understand that some people need complex care and support, which can take time to put in place. But we are clear that a hospital is not a home, and having people stay for years in a hospital environmen­t, often without all the facilities they should have, is not acceptable.”

Scotland-wide figures on delayed discharge are already available in terms of hospital bed days across all NHS wards. The latest figures for 2020/21 – published by the Scottish Government last month – show 79,650 (22% ) delayed discharge bed days in Scotland from mental health wards with the remaining 278,776 (78%) attributab­le to other specialtie­s not including mental health.

Carolyn Lochhead, communicat­ions manager at the Scottish Associatio­n for Mental Health (SAMH), said it had experience of long waits for care packages to be set up.

“People in our services have also talked about difficulti­es in getting a care manager,” she said. “Once you have that sorted it can then take a while to get an assessment and meanwhile hospitals will not be able to discharge.

“The process of being detained [sectioned under the mental health act] can be a very difficult process. People have legal rights but if they are still struggling there can be an awful lot of take on so that’s why good access to advocacy is so important.”

She claimed the recent focus on creating a National Care Service – following an independen­t review of adult social care by Derek Freely – provided some hope of more joined-up services that would help prevent long delays in discharge.

Call for action

FOLLOWING the review the Scottish Government launched the £20 million Community Living Change Fund, aimed in part at speeding up discharge for people with learning disabiliti­es and complex needs including autism, and for people who have enduring mental health problems. Lochhead also called for action to address “mixed” standards in hospitals across the country, adding: “What we want to see is that hospital stay to be at the correct standard and therapeuti­c level care.”

Jan Savage, campaigns director at disability charity Enable Scotland, said there was widespread acknowledg­ement that delays were due to the lack of appropriat­e community-based social care.

“But better is possible,” she added. “Enable Scotland has worked hard to support a number of individual­s out of hospital – given the right type and amount of skilled support, there is no-one who cannot be supported to live in his or her own community. We know that the reform of adult social care is a priority for the Scottish Government, and we welcome the previously announced Community Living Change Fund to support this work. But we now need to see urgent action to get every person out of hospital and into their own home.”

John Linn, chief executive of Flourish House, a mental health recovery community, agreed that action was needed to address the issue.

The Glasgow-based community service supports about 350 people with severe mental illness, many of whom have spent long periods in hospital as a result.

Linn said: “There are undoubtedl­y challenges around finding accommodat­ion that has appropriat­e levels of support that meets the needs of the individual.

“We’ve supported people who have been to visit supported accommodat­ion projects that have fallen through for one reason or another which means the person is in hospital for months longer than clinically necessary. That doesn’t work for anyone. No-one wants people to be in hospital any longer than necessary.”

Also: Read the responses from Scottish health boards which responded

More investment in community-based services would help, he claimed. Flourish House was once one of three busy Glasgow services for those with mental illness run by the voluntary sector but following funding cuts is now the only one in the city.

“I think successful hospital discharge is more achievable if supported by a robust community programme, which includes clinical, accommodat­ion or tenancy support, but also provides meaningful activity and social support and routes to mainstream opportunit­y such as work and learning,” he added.

“Flourish House would be keen to engage with the discharge planning process to introduce our services to more people prior to leaving hospital and creating a link to the community before they leave hospital. I’m sure other providers would also welcome this.”

A spokespers­on for NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde said it acknowledg­ed a small number of patients “who have complex mental and physical health needs may experience delays in being discharged from hospital to appropriat­e packages of community care”.

They added: “Some delays may be incurred in an effort to match and tailor a person’s needs to the extensive variety of community care options available, ensuring that each individual has the best prospect of a successful and sustained discharge from hospital.”

A spokespers­on for NHS Tayside said discharge from inpatient mental health wards included “waiting for admission to care homes, social care assessment, provision of equipment or care at home services, specialist care and treatment outwith the local board area, and housing solutions for people with complex care requiremen­ts”.

They added: “There are particular challenges within our learning disability inpatient services where patients may experience lengthy delays due to highly complex health and care needs.”

NHS Highland claimed the most frequent reason for delay was in finding suitable onward placement or accommodat­ion. “We always aim to ensure that our patients are discharged to the right place to safely meet their unique needs and achieving this can take time past when they would otherwise be ready to leave the hospital,” they added.

Councillor Stuart Currie, Convention of Scottish Local Authoritie­s’ (Cosla) health and social care spokespers­on, said his organisati­on, along with the Scottish Government, had been involved in “ongoing discussion­s to ensure that both NHS and social care work together in a whole system approach to ensure we all deliver the best possible outcomes for individual­s”.

A Scottish Government spokespers­on said: “These are extremely complex delayed discharges, and we are clear every patient should get the support they need.

“We know these delays are very challengin­g, where significan­t packages of care often need to be linked to specialist accommodat­ion, which sometimes has to be commission­ed, specially designed or purpose built. This can take a considerab­le time for arrangemen­ts to be put in place while those concerned continue to receive appropriat­e care in a hospital setting.”

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 ??  ?? Carolyn Lochhead of the Scottish Associatio­n fpr Mental Health (SAMH)
Carolyn Lochhead of the Scottish Associatio­n fpr Mental Health (SAMH)
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