The Independent

How to save the hospice

These vital resources are facing increasing cost pressures, but without them end-of-life care would seriously suffer. David Clark considers how to keep them from collapse

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For the first time ever, one of Britain’s 200 independen­t hospices has closed its doors.

St Clare’s in Jarrow near Newcastle had been serving its community in the northeast of England for 30 years, raising most of its annual costs of £2.2m from local charitable giving. But after a trying period of medical understaff­ing, concerns from independen­t regulator the Care Quality Commission and mounting financial problems, it has had no choice but to shut down.

St Clare’s supporters are saddened and dismayed. The local MP has raised his concerns with the prime minister. Worryingly, the closure may be a sign of much bigger problems in the sector. Senior sources

familiar with hospice finances tell me that up to 50 more hospices may be in difficulti­es.

Inspired by pioneers such as the English doctor Cicely Saunders, the hospice movement took root outside the National Health Service more than 50 years ago and quickly flourished. In the 1980s, 10 new independen­t hospices were coming into being in the UK every year. By the early 1990s a Conservati­ve government pledged to match hospice fundraisin­g pound for pound.

Since then, however, hospices have faced increasing cost pressures, of which the recent NHS pay rise is a typical example. Hospice managers want to implement it for their staff to keep in line with NHS practice, but it won’t be covered by new government money. Costs have also been driven up by greater regulation and the demands of commission­ers and quality inspection­s.

As for the 50-50 funding pledge of the 1990s, it has never been met. Instead hospices are now receiving just one-third of their needs from the NHS. The rest of the their annual £1bn income comes from fundraisin­g events, bequests and local charity shops. With the sector’s income from legacies also down £17m year on year, the umbrella charity Hospice UK, of which I am a vice president, has been sounding warning bells about sustainabi­lity. It has called a special conference on 12 February to work out how to respond.

Money matters

Despite these issues, independen­t hospices have been a success story in Britain. When the movement got properly underway with the opening of St Christophe­r’s in London in 1967, it went on to play a major part in caring for people at the end of their lives at a time when the NHS had little time for terminal care. Set up by their communitie­s and run by local charities, scores of other hospices soon sprang up around the country, following St Christophe­r’s model of inpatient treatment.

In an era where charitable giving has been hit by austerity, hospices simply cannot afford to do all the things they once could

Soon they started moving into caring for very sick people at home as well. They offered educationa­l courses to train both hospice and NHS staff and did research studies and evaluation­s of their methods and outcomes. By the 1980s they were helping the UK health system to pioneer what came to be called “palliative care” – improving the quality of life of patients and their families by preventing and relieving suffering and in managing pain and other distressin­g symptoms.

So what has gone wrong? In an era where charitable giving has been hit by austerity, hospices simply cannot afford to do all the things they once could – especially when demand is growing. The reality is that they are currently propping up the NHS to the tune of £1bn in care each year, much of which should be provided by the state.

It’s time for radical action. That means closing expensive hospice inpatient facilities in a planned way – and investing resources elsewhere.

Compassion­ate communitie­s

In this changed approach, hospices should enhance their commitment to home care while also using their buildings and gardens to offer various kinds of day services to people with severe illnesses, like counsellin­g, massage, yoga, horticultu­re or art and music therapy. They can step up support for care homes, engage in more public education and foster debate in their communitie­s about the “good death”. As the chief executive of the clinical commission­ing group that helped fund Jarrow put it: “I think this is an opportunit­y to have a conversati­on about what to do in end of life care.”

A road map has already been laid out by the “compassion­ate communitie­s” movement. Inspired by Australian academic Allan Kellehear, it argues for communitie­s taking a greater role in supporting people with chronic and life-threatenin­g conditions. It sees end of life care as “everyone’s business” and believes that neighbourh­oods, workplaces and local groups should all get involved. Some hospices have signed up to a compassion­ate cities charter and initiated local projects, such as Hackney’s compassion­ate neighbours in east London.

The Indian state of Kerala has hosted a remarkable experiment that is hand in glove with this approach. Local action groups identify seriously ill people in villages and townships and help them access medical care – be it driving them to hospital or getting them in touch with relevant profession­als and sources of help. They offer patients social and economic support, raise public awareness and build local alliances. Inpatient palliative care facilities are the exception, not the rule.

These groups receive funding from the likes of local trades and political parties, and attract many volunteers from young people in schools and colleges. They also micro-fundraise within communitie­s – such as bus drivers contributi­ng a rupee a day in one part of the state. This bottom-up, non-institutio­nal approach can be adapted at scale to our own risk-averse, profession­alised healthcare culture. And Britain’s hospices would be more likely to fully take on the challenge if they were unshackled from expensive inpatient palliative care.

Acting now could secure another half-century of success. If hospices cut back their medical operation and leave it to the wider system, the energy and resources released will fuel a game-changing wave of new hospice-led developmen­t. If they resist change or make mere incrementa­l adjustment­s, hospices may well enter their own terminal decline, where no amount of palliation will make any difference.

David Clark is a professor of medical sociology at the University of Glasgow. This article originally appeared on The Conversati­on

 ?? (Getty/iStock) ?? Austerity and growing demand put pressure on all aspects of healthcare
(Getty/iStock) Austerity and growing demand put pressure on all aspects of healthcare
 ?? (Getty/iStock) ?? Hospices should enhance their commitment to home care while using their buildings and gardens to offer day services for people with severe illnesses
(Getty/iStock) Hospices should enhance their commitment to home care while using their buildings and gardens to offer day services for people with severe illnesses

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