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Hampshire County Council Social Care Policy and Review Committee May 31st 2002 Options Report for the Best Value Review of Adult Mental Health Residential Services. Mental Health Service Report of the Director of Social Services |
Contact Graham Collingridge ext. 7277
Project leader Graham Collingridge
Project managers Pamela Noble October 2001 - present
Steve Garnett May - October 2001
3 |
CONSULTATION AND CHALLENGE Consultation and Challenge were undertaken as described below. A Challenge Group for all three Best Value reviews posed a series of challenge questions to each review at the beginning of the process: (i) Should Hampshire County Council be providing residential care at all? (ii) If so, how many homes should Hampshire County Council have and should they compete with or compliment the independent sector? (iii) Is accommodation in the right place, as close to home as possible? (iv) Is it socially inclusive? (v) Does it meet a diverse range of needs, including those of people from black and minority ethnic cultures? (vi) Does it meet the needs for specialist provision, for example for those with complex needs? (vii) Does it encourage independence and resettlement into the community? (viii) What is the disparity in unit cost between provided and purchased care? (ix) How can greater consistency and equity of service for users across the County be achieved? (x) How can the gap between the demand for and supply of beds in the market place be closed? (xi) What should the "Hampshire rate" (at which care is purchased from the independent sector) to ensure an acceptable quality of care is delivered? (xii) How can the recruitment and retention of care staff be improved? (xiii) Are services effective in contributing to performance requirements such as the Performance Assessment Framework, National Service Frameworks and new are commission standards? |
3.1 |
Consultation Undertaken |
o ROCC Report. o Service User Consultation. | |
o Best Value Team Meetings. | |
o Feedback from Stakeholders. | |
o Challenge Event, January 2002. | |
o Follow-up Stakeholder Event, June 2002. | |
o Local Implementation Teams. | |
o Staff Consultation. | |
o NHS Trust Configuration. | |
o Forensic Services. | |
o Supporting People. | |
o Workforce. | |
o Literature survey of research. | |
3.2 |
Findings The key findings for this section are summarised in the ROCC Report summary findings. The key message is that maximum opportunity should be taken to move towards using non-registered provision. Provision of Residential Care One of the key challenge questions for the Best Value Review is: Should Hampshire County Council be providing residential care at all? The vast majority of people with mental health problems live in their own accommodation with family or friends or in supported housing and therefore the question to be addressed concerns what added value is Residential Care providing and is it necessary. A small minority of people with severe and enduring mental illness have highly complex and diverse needs, often including dual diagnosis and which results in a high level of risk, both for the person themselves and others. This multiplicity of need and management of risk requires a high level of skilled multidisciplinary staff which could be more effective and efficient if concentrated in one place, i.e. a Residential or Nursing Home. For this small group of people residential care is probably necessary, however, work could be undertaken to develop and promote independence in these care settings. |
3.2.1 |
ROCC Report summary findings 1. Need for more consistent and holistically focussed Care Coordination (assessment and care management) practice with sufficient information and training available to staff on specific housing practice, needs and related finances. |
2. Range of provision and quality of service showed wide variations: (i) Inequality in the number of units of supported housing. (ii) No local authority has the full range of provision, or a plan for provision and development (iii) No service was available in some specialist categories e.g. specialist floating support, specialist lodgings, services for women only, or particular ethnic groups (iv) Scarcity of specialist services for challenging behaviour and dual diagnosis (mental health / learning disability; or mental health / substance misuse), adult placements, accommodation in rural areas (v) Inappropriate use of some accommodation, hostels, night shelter and non-specialist crisis accommodation (vi) Many Care Homes registered inappropriately for people under age 60 with mental health problems 3. Need for improved multi-agency working at both strategic and operational levels 4. Need for effective consultation process to involve users and carers in the planning and development processes both in statutory and independent agencies. 5. Improved financial management through better financial information and use of partnership arrangements including Health Act flexibilities to maximise new developments. (See appendix 1, ROCC Report Executive Summary) | |
3.2.2 |
Service User Feedback 1. ROCC Report The ROCC Report research team contacted service users and carers both individually and at consultation events, which included a specific Users Involvement event. Also, the effectiveness of existing mechanisms for involving users and carers was scrutinised resulting in a number of overall issues, including: the need to develop an identified network of user groups; the need for funding to ensure effective consultation is carried out; need for consistent approach to county wide consultation. The recommendations from service users include blocks to user involvement as well as drivers for it and ideas for improvement. The ROCC Report details recommendations (page 44 - 48) which include: _ Need to provide "ordinary" homes/housing _ Improved multi-agency working _ Resettlement workers and specialist support for vulnerable groups, e.g. services for women with children need developing _ Need for more information about housing _ Need for better trained staff 2. Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health "Working for Inclusion" 2002 User led research supports local findings reported by the Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health. The work is based on the issues considered important by mental health service users and survivors and is carried out by service users and survivors. The main findings with regard to housing issues include the need to: _ Improve provision for people with multiple needs, such as those with drug or alcohol problems and mentally ill offenders, people in crisis and those with episodic high care needs. _ Improve provision of intensive support and 24 hour supervision. _ Improve active programmes of skill development and rehabilitation. _ Reduce the number of large residential care homes and increase supported housing. _ Plan housing and support services together to create a comprehensive and effective service. |
3.2.3 |
Feedback from stakeholders The Challenge Event showed a general agreement with the findings and draft recommendations of the ROCC Report and comments from this and other sources can be found in documents listed in Appendix 4. |
3.2.4 |
Feedback from Local Implementation Teams (LITs) Five targets for LITs have been identified as outcomes necessary for the implementation of an effective mental health Residential and Housing Strategy and Service. (i) LITs to update mapping, validate and identify priorities for their area (ii) LITs to consider Best Value Review options and feedback comments (iii) Each LIT to identify a Housing Champion (iv) Each LIT to access training and information about Supporting People (v) User / carer involvement in strategic planning and specific housing development through membership of LITs. A general finding is that LITs are actively involved in the Housing agenda at different levels. Work will be needed to monitor strategies to identify gaps and inequalities. |
3.2.5 |
Feedback from Social Services Managers across the County Priority areas which need addressing at strategic and operational level include: (i) Out of County placements (ii) Contracting (iii) Planning mechanisms (iv) Assessment and review of need (v) Crisis care (vi) Challenging behaviour resources |
3.2.6 |
NHS Trust Consultation West Hampshire Trust have commissioned three reviews in order to develop services to respond to the needs and strengths of service users. 1. Review of NHS 24 hour Nursed Care (Covering Southampton, New Forest, Eastleigh / Test Valley South, and Mid Hampshire) 2001 2. Sainsbury Centre review - Building Better Mental Health Services Together, February 2002. 3. The Mental Health Rehabilitation Service Consultation 2002 builds on the previous two pieces of work. |
A similar review in currently underway with Surrey Hampshire Borders NHS Trust. The Social Services Department's initial response to the West Hampshire Trust work is to welcome proposals seeking to address poor quality NHS accommodation which is less than satisfactory. However, this may result in a cost shunt to the County Council unless specific measures are in place to prevent this. Proposals also need to be considered alongside the Supporting People framework and incorporated in local housing strategies. | |
3.2.7 |
Forensic Services Recommendations following consultation by the Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health and the ROCC Report (drawing on work by the Wessex Consortium) conclude that the accommodation needs of most Mentally Disordered offenders can be met in the community with the appropriate level of flexible support. |
3.2.8 |
Supporting People The main recommendations of the ROCC Report and related joint developments, e.g. with the WHT, have been identified as the key priorities to the Supporting People Team, and the Supporting People Strategy, and will be incorporated within. |
4 |
COMPARISON Comparison work looked at the range and quality of services across Hampshire, activity and financial information, and national performance information. | |||
4.1 |
Work Undertaken | |||
· Mary Rose Tarpey Housing Analysis 1996. | ||||
· ROCC Report accommodation Mapping. | ||||
· Analysis of budgets. | ||||
· Review Alton Aldershot Residential Spend 2000/01. | ||||
· Internal area by area comparison of Activity / Spend / Community Resources 2001. | ||||
· Costs above "Hampshire Rate" analysis. | ||||
· Neighbouring and comparator local authorities analysis in terms of places, placement and cost. | ||||
· National Performance Information. | ||||
4.2 |
Findings Key Messages: 1. There are significant service gaps, lack of equity of housing provision and inequality of investment in community services across Hampshire with low investment resulting in high residential costs. 2. A steady rise in costs of residential care is apparent as services focus on more dependent groups of service users, with history of detention under Section 3 of the Mental Health Act. 3. Mental Health service costs are lower than other adult groups. 4. Hampshire is average or above average in relation to national performance measures looking at cost and number of users helped to lived independently. 5. Twenty six percent of placements are Out of County, with the vast majority living in neighbouring authorities, within a few miles of home. However, any out of County placements result in a degree of uncoordinated care as the placing social services authority retains responsibility for care, whilst the new area assumes NHS responsibilities. 6. The Hampshire rate is met for approximately fifty percent of placements, the remainder being above this rate. | |||
4.2.1 |
The Mary Rose Tarpey Report The report in 1996 mapped housing need for people with mental health problems across Hampshire by District Council. It includes a number of key findings which support the need to extend the Housing provision to meet specialised client need, e.g. crisis beds, provision for younger people and increased support assistance to promote independence. Information from this report is included in the ROCC Report. | |||
4.2.2 |
ROCC Report Mapping Information about provision was gathered from written sources and a range of staff interviews and mapped against District Council boundaries (which are not coterminous with Hampshire Social Services, except for Basingstoke). The mapping for each District Council concludes, as far as possible, with both a quantitative and qualitative estimate of housing need. See 3.2.2 and gap analysis in Appendix 4. | |||
4.2.3 |
Budget Issues The total Mental Health Budget for 2000/2001 was £8,580,000, with a gross Residential budget of £2,561,000 and a net outturn of £1,582,000. 1. Analysis of Budget Outturns, 2000/2001 o Area comparisons of net budget against net actuals indicates considerable variance, from 15% underspend in the New Forest, to 47% overspend in Alton / Aldershot, and 62% overspend in Basingstoke. (See appendix 6a & 6b). o Budget allocation has followed an historical pattern, not taking into account the variation in population or prevalence of mental illness across areas. | |||
Area |
WAP (Working Age Population) |
Prevalence Rate SMI (Severely Mentally Ill) | ||
Alton / Aldershot |
156,000 |
6,240 | ||
Basingstoke |
102,000 |
4,080 | ||
(See Appendix 7) | ||||
o Budget allocation per capita varies from £8.63 (Alton / Aldershot) to £13.43 (Basingstoke). Allocation based on population figures for 2002 and 2003 indicates the size of the under and over allocation per area and the readjustments needed to ensure equity of allocation (see below). Annual readjustments would also need to take place as population changes occur. o Full analysis requires examination of NHS investment and prevelance rates of mental illness. This began in the NSF monitoring but is currently not on a consistent basis to allow comparison. Primary Care Trusts (PCTs) who have funding responsibility will not transfer funds to neighbouring PCTs so achieving equitable distribution of mental health resources will remain a significant challenge. | ||||
Estimates for 2002 based on cash limit as 31st October |
||||||||
Population 2002 |
Percentage of total population |
Allocation based on population |
Per Capita |
Current Allocations |
Per Capita |
(Under) / over allocation | ||
% |
£ |
£ |
£ |
£ |
£ | |||
North and Mid Hants |
||||||||
Alton / Aldershot |
156785 |
19.91 |
1,697,566 |
10.83 |
1,352,300 |
8.63 |
(345,266) | |
Basingstoke |
103579 |
13.15 |
1,121,195 |
10.82 |
1,391,300 |
13.43 |
270,105 | |
Winchester / Andover |
103059 |
13.09 |
1,116,080 |
10.83 |
1,336,000 |
12.96 |
219,920 | |
Sub Total |
363423 |
46.15 |
3,934,841 |
10.83 |
4,079,600 |
11.23 |
144,759 | |
South West |
||||||||
Eastleigh / Romsey |
101,740 |
12.92 |
1,101,585 |
10.83 |
882,900 |
8.68 |
(218,685) | |
New Forest |
101,132 |
12.84 |
1,094,764 |
10.83 |
1,257,700 |
12.44 |
162,936 | |
Sub Total |
202,872 |
25.76 |
2,196,349 |
10.83 |
2,140,600 |
10.55 |
(55,749) | |
South East |
||||||||
Fareham & Gosport |
116,757 |
14.83 |
1,264,436 |
10.83 |
1,077,400 |
9.23 |
(187,l036) | |
Havant & Petersfield |
104,440 |
13.26 |
1,130,574 |
10.83 |
1,228,600 |
11.76 |
98,026 | |
Sub Total |
221,197 |
28.09 |
2,395,010 |
10.83 |
2,306,000 |
10.43 |
(89,010) | |
Total |
787,492 |
100.00 |
8,526,200 |
10.83 |
8,526,200 |
10.83 |
0 | |
Estimates for 2003 based on cash limit as 31st October |
||||||||
Population 2002 |
Percentage of total population |
Allocation based on population |
Per Capita |
Current Allocations |
Per Capita |
(Under) / over allocation | ||
% |
£ |
£ |
£ |
£ |
£ | |||
North and Mid Hants |
||||||||
Alton / Aldershot |
157,780 |
19.87 |
1,694,156 |
10.74 |
1,328,300 |
8.42 |
(365,856) | |
Basingstoke |
105,001 |
13.23 |
1,128,016 |
10.74 |
1,400,300 |
13.34 |
272,284 | |
Winchester / Andover |
103,829 |
13.08 |
1,115,227 |
10.74 |
1,351,000 |
13.01 |
235,773 | |
Sub Total |
366,610 |
46.18 |
3,937,399 |
10.74 |
4,079,600 |
11.13 |
142,201 | |
South West |
||||||||
Eastleigh / Romsey |
102,532 |
12.91 |
1,100,732 |
10.74 |
882,900 |
8.61 |
(217,832) | |
New Forest |
102,219 |
12.88 |
1,098,175 |
10.74 |
1,257,700 |
12.30 |
159,525 | |
Sub Total |
204,751 |
25.79 |
2,198,907 |
10.74 |
2,140,600 |
10.45 |
(58,307) | |
South East |
||||||||
Fareham & Gosport |
117,914 |
14.85 |
1,266,141 |
10.74 |
1,077,400 |
9.14 |
(188,741) | |
Havant & Petersfield |
104,636 |
13.18 |
1,123,753 |
10.74 |
1,228,600 |
11.74 |
104,847 | |
Sub Total |
222,550 |
28.03 |
2,389,894 |
10.74 |
2,306,000 |
10.36 |
(83,894) | |
Total |
793,911 |
100.00 |
8,526,200 |
10.74 |
8,526,200 |
10.74 |
0 | |
2. Section 117 (aftercare) Mental Health Act 1983 People detained under Section 3 or 37 of the Mental Health Act 1983 are entitled to Section 117 aftercare once the period of compulsory detention has ended. It is illegal for local authorities to charge for services provided under this section, and though currently subject to an appeal to the House of Lords, it appears likely that this position will be upheld (some local authorities have continued to charge for residential care and have unsuccessfully argued that they are providing residential care under alternative legislation). Hampshire has operated a non-charging policy for services provided under Section 117 since 1995. (i) Performance over the last three years in terms of net cash limit compared to net outturns indicates a steady rise in % variance (overspend) from 6.2% in 1998/9 to 22% in 2000/1. (ii) One factor (the other being the high cost of specialised mental health placements) in this overspend is that 29.2% of mental health service users accessing residential care are subject to Section 117 aftercare regulations which state that services for this group will be free of any charge. (iii) A project is currently taking place to assess the cost to Hampshire County Council of providing for Section 117 aftercare services across all care groups and the results should be ready for the final report. (iv) Breakdown by area of loss of income gives Alton / Aldershot (46%) and Eastleigh / Romsey (50%) areas the highest percentage of clients subject to Section 117, and therefore the highest percentage loss of income. (v) Adjusted figures, for the same period, indicate the following loss of income per annum by area: | ||||
Alton / Aldershot |
£89,406 |
|||
Basingstoke |
£32,106 | |||
Winchester / Andover |
£44,840 | |||
Fareham / Gosport |
£12,800 | |||
Havant / Petersfield |
£13,400 | |||
Eastleigh / Romsey |
£25,600 | |||
New Forest |
£64,000 | |||
Total |
£281,752 | |||
(vi) The £286,000 overspend indicated in Residential outturn 2000/01 is equivalent to the loss of Section 117 income. This needs to be taken into account when setting net income targets for mental health services. | ||
3. Preserved Rights Issue (i) As from April 2002, Service Users who were previously classed as having "preserved rights", i.e. residential funding commenced prior to April 1993 and was the responsibility of the Benefits Agency, become the responsibility of Social Services departments. There are approximately 35 mental health service users affected by this change. (ii) The additional demand on the mental health budgets is still being assessed but given the relatively small numbers (there are just over one thousand people who were subject to preserved rights in April 2003) the impact is likely to be slight. | ||
4.2.4 |
Review of Alton / Aldershot Residential Spend The review was conducted during April-June 2000 and reported in January 2001. It was commissioned due to a proportionally high budget spend in this area. Outcomes include - on an area by area comparison: (i) Alton and Aldershot has highest predicted prevalence rates per head of population of severe and enduring mental illness / hard to engage clients. See appendix 6. (ii) Alton and Aldershot, whilst not having the highest deprivation scores as a whole (Havant / Petersfield has highest) has pockets of deprivation equal to Havant / Petersfield. (iii) The three areas with highest number of Residential clients have lowest numbers of Domiciliary clients - the New Forest, Alton and Aldershot, and Fareham and Gosport. (iv) The two lowest spend areas on Residential Care (Havant / Petersfield & Eastleigh / Romsey) spend more in gross terms on non-residential care, indicating a correlation between high level of community services spend and low numbers of residential placement (Appendix 7). (v) Comparison of gross and net actual spend on Residential care indicates Fareham and Gosport area having second highest gross spend with one the lowest net spends, showing significant income generated from Health service (due to reprovision of long stay hospital) - (Appendix 5b). This gives Fareham / Gosport a disproportionately low cost Residential spend. (vi) Average unit cost comparison shows Alton and Aldershot have highest cost for Residential as well as non-Residential indicating generally high cost area in line with the adjacent county Surrey, and proximity to London. | |
(vii) Basingstoke (neighbouring area) has significantly lower costs for both services and indicates possible improved community and health services and finance from previous reprovision of long stay hospital. Havant / Petersfield with lowest Residential unit cost and fairly low non-Residential and the New Forest with low Residential but high non-Residential cost indicating local variations perhaps due to workforce availability. (viii) Analysis of average Residential spend per client across old Health Authority areas, shows North and Mid Hampshire higher than South East and South West areas. Overall Conclusions (i) Alton and Aldershot has high costs in both Residential and Domiciliary Services. (ii) Areas with highest number of Residential clients have lowest number of non-Residential clients. | ||
(iii) Past Health reprovision and finance in Fareham/Gosport lead to lower Residential Social Services costs and improved community provision. | ||
4.2.5 |
Internal Comparison of Activity, Spend and Community Resources, 2001 The area by area comparison undertaken between April and August 2002 indicates the following main findings: (i) Findings of ROCC Report mapping endorsed. (ii) A complex picture has emerged across the areas showing a substantial variation in: accommodation provision; spend; community resources; health provision and approach taken by Local Housing forums. (iii) The main gaps in the service are detailed in point 5.2.3. Needs identified other than accommodation provision include: staff training in housing related issues; culture change within Health and Social Services; increase in accessible transport and employment schemes and rural deprivation schemes. (iv) Alton / Aldershot area is not funded in line with the high prevalence rate of the severely mentally ill: · 6,250 people per 100,000 compared to 4,000 - 4,600 per 100,000 in other areas. (v) High rate of staff vacancies in Basingstoke and Alton / Aldershot areas. (vi) High cost of placements in Alton / Aldershot. (vii) High number of Out of County placements in New Forest, i.e. 13 from a total of 25. (viii) Difficulty in accessing robust and accurate data from the existing systems leads to inaccurate information for budget management and financial longer term planning. In this review it has resulted in a significant amount of project time devoted to manual gathering of information. | |
4.2.6 |
Costs above Hampshire rate A comparison has been undertaken of the cost to the Service of Out of County placements above the Hampshire County Council rate compared to the cost of In County placements above the Hampshire County Council rate, based on service mapping April - August 2001. Cost There were 38 out of County placements and 107 in County placements from a total of 145 (2000/01). | |
Out of County placements Within HCC rate Over HCC rate |
38 18 20 excess funding = £153,800 | |
Plus 6 part-funded by Health with Social Services contribution at HCC rate. | ||
In County placements Within HCC rate Over HCC rate |
107 49 58 excess funding = £357,600 | |
Plus 6 part-funded by Health with Social Services contribution at HCC rate. | ||
Out of County |
In County | |||||||
Total no. of Res. placements |
Area |
No. out of County placements |
No. above HCC rate ( ) indicate cases with Social Services costs |
Cost to Social Services (only) above HCC rate |
No. in County placements |
No. above HCC rate |
Cost to Social Services above HCC rate | |
16 |
WA |
9 |
8 (7) |
51.6k |
7 |
1 |
4.5k | |
25 |
NF |
13 |
6 (1) |
1.6k |
12 |
5 |
12k | |
26 |
AA |
5 |
5 |
75.8k |
21 |
14 |
161.4k | |
15 |
B |
2 |
1 |
£800 |
13 |
5 |
43k | |
37 |
FG |
2 |
2 |
11k |
35 |
19 |
94k | |
17 |
HP |
4 |
2 |
12k |
13 |
11 |
37.5k | |
9 |
ER |
3 |
2 |
£1000 |
6 |
3 |
5.3k | |
145 |
Totals |
38 |
20 |
£153,800 |
Totals |
107 |
58 |
£357,600 |
Average cost |
£7,690 |
Average cost |
£6,165 | |||||
Outcomes (i) Out of County placements = 26% of total number of Residential placements. (ii) Both out of County and in County placements have similar number of "HCC rate" and "over HCC rate" costs. (iii) Both have 6 placements part funded by Health not included in calculations. (iv) Wide local variations in costs above the Hampshire rate both out of and in County. (v) Alton / Aldershot and Winchester / Andover have significantly higher costs above the Hampshire rate for Out of County placements. (vi) Very wide variations in placements in County above the Hampshire rate particularly Alton / Aldershot, but also Fareham / Gosport, Basingstoke, and Havant / Petersfield. (vii) Average extra cost of "above HCC rate" out of County placements is £7,690 per annum compared to In County average extra cost at £6,160 per placement. (viii) Fareham / Gosport - high number of placements is due to 9 Health funded placements following long stay hospital reprovision. | ||||||
However: (i) Theoretically a saving of £153,000 could be made if Service Users were found placements in County at HCC rate. (ii) These placements do not presently exist. (iii) The overarching problem is the high cost of care for people with complex mental health needs. (iv) Consideration should be given to developing a new model of mixed economy of care within County, which in partnership with Health may be more cost effective and meet needs locally. Location Although there are in total 38 Out of County placements, (26% of total placements), given the geographical size of Hampshire and the recent Local Government reorganisation, the vast majority of placements are as "close to home as possible" and therefore could be seen to meet the NSF requirement, e.g. Alton clients placed in Surrey, New Forest clients placed in Bournemouth. (Appendix 8) | ||||||
However, as previously stated, it is desirable for successful care coordination and prevention/management of risk, plus quality of life in retaining links with family and employment, for placements to be located in County where both Hampshire County Council and Health responsibilities coexist. The majority of out of County placements, 30 out of a total of 38, are located in neighbouring authorities, several within a few miles of Hampshire and Service Users normal residence: | ||||||
Neighbouring Authorities |
Remaining Placements |
|||||
Surrey Wiltshire Southampton Portsmouth Bournemouth Total |
6 6 7 4 7 30 |
Devon Somerset Gloucestershire Portsmouth Bournemouth Total |
3 1 1 1 2 8 | |||
4.2.7 |
Comparator and Neighbouring Local Authority Analysis 1. Comparison with other local Authority areas in terms of places, placement and cost. (note: a number of different comparator groups are used in this section drawn from different sources). Places o There has been a National year on year overall drop in the number of Residential Care Homes and places for people with Mental Illness since 1997. (Community Care Statistics 2001, Residential Personal Social Services for Adults, England (figures include elderly mentally infirm but general trend applicable).) | |||||
o A comparison of number of places in Hampshire with counties in the South East and South West shows Hampshire having: · Fourth lowest number of places in South East out of total of seven. · Seventh lowest number of places in South East and South West out of fourteen. Placements Hampshire has been relatively successful in 2000/1 in preventing admission to mental health Residential care (National Statistics publication, 2000/1, Number of supported residents (by Local Authority)) In terms of placements, Hampshire has the second lowest number of placements in a range of nine neighbouring and comparator authorities. | ||||||
Norm for % of Mental Health Placement | ||||||
England |
4.3% | |||||
South East Region |
3.6% | |||||
Shire Counties in S.E. Region |
3.3% | |||||
Hampshire |
2.8% | |||||
Kent, Surrey, West Sussex, Portsmouth, Southampton, Reading, West Berks, Wokingham |
8.7% - 2.7% | |||||
Cost Comparison with the official comparator group of fifteen Shire counties in 2000/01 regarding the weekly unit cost of supporting mentally ill adults in Residential and Nursing care (Personal Social Services expenditure and unit cost: England 2000/1): o England - £412 o Hampshire fifth lowest unit cost out of 15 Shire Counties (Appendix 9). o Hampshire unit cost is £372.04 in range of £205.74 - £639.58. o In the previous year, Hampshire was the second lowest place at £268.43, thus indicating the pressure on current budgets as prices rise, or more accurate information. The Hampshire unit cost of £372.04 is well above the Hampshire rate of £248 per week. These factors need to be taken into account: 1. When the numbers of people in Residential care drops, as more people are accommodated in supported housing in the community, the unit cost of residential care will rise. 2. The needs of people with severe and enduring mental health problems are complex and often require specialised residential units which are costly. | ||||||
3. The cost of residential and nursing care for adults with mental health problems is substantially lower than that for adults with a learning or physical disability. | ||||||
Unit Costs for England 2000/1 | |
Residential and Nursing Care for Adults | |
Mental Health |
£418 |
Learning Disability |
£644 |
Physical Disability |
£516 |
4.2.8 |
PAF Indicators The PAF returns relating to mental health performance are: A6 - psychiatric readmission rates B15 - unit cost of residential and nursing care C31 - number of people helped to stay in own home (per 100,000 population) C27 - number of people admitted to residential care (per 100,000 population) |
Performance is shown in terms of ●'s, with one ● = investigate urgently, and five ● ● ● ● ● = very good performance. The returns for 1999-2000 and 2000-2001 indicate: o B15 - GOOD. Hampshire Residential placement costs although slightly higher in 2000-1 than previously still remains acceptable and within the bottom two fifth of comparator Counties. Band ● ● ● ● - good performance. NOTE - However, within Hampshire there is significant variation in costs per area with Winchester/Andover, Basingstoke and Alton/Aldershot showing significantly higher than other areas in both gross and net terms. Also, there is a relationship between cost and quality which needs to be balanced to achieve high standards together with efficient use of resources. o C27 - GOOD. Hampshire is shown as successful in keeping people out of residential care with a rating of ● ● ● ● - good performance 1999/0 and 2000/1. o C31 - GOOD. Hampshire has improved significantly in 2000/01, the indicator moving from ● ● -low performance at 1.0, to ● ● ● ● - good performance at 2.8. This commitment to improving community resources will be one of the most important factors in lowering the admission rate to residential care. o A6 - This indicator is in the Health domain and data is collected for the three (previous) Health Authorities covering Hampshire. In 1999/0 only Portsmouth and South East Hampshire HA were rated ● ● ● ● - good performance, with Southampton and South West Hampshire HA and North and Mid Hampshire HA rated ● ● - question performance. |
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OPTIONS EMERGING FROM WORK TO DATE Two options have been identified to achieve these objectives: 1. Option 1: minimal change, within current resources, that will partly meet objectives 2. Option 2: significant change, requiring substantial changes to services and levels of investment to implement the NSF, including actions identified in the draft action plan. Option 2 has a number of components: i. Develop a mixed economy of provision, including the deployment of County Council capital resources to meet gaps in provision e.g. 24 hour specialist residential care provision. It would be jointly commissioned with NHS and housing partners, and consideration given to pooling capital and revenue ii. Jointly commissioning the above, but without County Council capital investment iii. Developing a range of community services through recycling of current resources and additional investment, which should reduce the demand for residential placements Appendix 12 uses the Best Value tool to evaluate the options. |
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RECOMMENDATIONS - PREFERRED OPTIONS Members' comments and preferences are invited on the preferred options outlined in this report. These will then be developed into a detailed Improvement Plan for inclusion in the final report. |
Section 100 D - Local Government Act 1972 - background papers The following documents disclose facts or matters on which this report, or an important part of it, is based and has been relied upon to a material extent in the preparation of this report and attached appraisal. NB - the list includes: 1. Published works. 2. Documents which disclose exempt of confidential information as defined in the Act. Title Challenge and Change: Developing a Mental Health and Housing Strategy for Hampshire County Council Social Services. (2 copies have been placed in the Members' Library). Appendix 3 of this report lists a number of documents referred to in this report that can be found on the Best Value Residential Care File. |