In March 2007, Mencap published ‘Death by indifference’, which reported the death of 6 people with learning disability as a result of failings in the NHS. This report triggered an independent inquiry ‘Healthcare for all’ which set out 10 key recommendations, all of which were accepted by the government. This report looks at what progress has been made since these publications. It confirms that, although some positive steps have been taken, many health professionals are still failing to provide adequate care to people with a learning disability. It describes the deaths of 74 people with a learning disability in NHS care over the last 10 years believed to be as a direct result of institutional discrimination. It highlights an NHS that continues to fail people with a learning disability, doctors whose practices appear to show no regard to the Equality Act or Mental Capacity Act, and nurses who fail to provide even basic nursing care to people with a learning disability. The report calls on the government to ensure that people with a learning disability receive the same quality of care as the rest of the population. Among the recommendations are for: annual health checks to become a permanent part of the GP contract; all health professionals to get training around the Equality Act and Mental Capacity Act; regulatory bodies to conduct rigorous investigations and deliver appropriate sanctions; and a standard hospital passport for all people with a learning disability.
In March 2007, Mencap published ‘Death by indifference’, which reported the death of 6 people with learning disability as a result of failings in the NHS. This report triggered an independent inquiry ‘Healthcare for all’ which set out 10 key recommendations, all of which were accepted by the government. This report looks at what progress has been made since these publications. It confirms that, although some positive steps have been taken, many health professionals are still failing to provide adequate care to people with a learning disability. It describes the deaths of 74 people with a learning disability in NHS care over the last 10 years believed to be as a direct result of institutional discrimination. It highlights an NHS that continues to fail people with a learning disability, doctors whose practices appear to show no regard to the Equality Act or Mental Capacity Act, and nurses who fail to provide even basic nursing care to people with a learning disability. The report calls on the government to ensure that people with a learning disability receive the same quality of care as the rest of the population. Among the recommendations are for: annual health checks to become a permanent part of the GP contract; all health professionals to get training around the Equality Act and Mental Capacity Act; regulatory bodies to conduct rigorous investigations and deliver appropriate sanctions; and a standard hospital passport for all people with a learning disability.
This publication provides unit costs for a wide range of health and social care services using a standardised methodology. The report is organised into five main sections. Section I covers services used by a particular client group, and includes services for older people, people with mental health problems, people who misuse drugs/alcohol, people with learning disabilities, younger adults with physical and sensory impairments, services for children and their families, hospitals, and care packages. Sections II, III and IV deal with the unit costs of professionals in community-based health care, community-based social care, and hospital-based health care. These include social care staff, health and social care teams, doctors, nurses, and other health professionals. Section V details the sources of information used. This volume also includes three focused articles which explore: approaches to costing for those involved in planning and implementing integrated care initiatives; understanding the costs of shared lives, and the intervention costs of the reminiscence intervention Remembering Yesterday Caring Today (RYCT) and the Carer Support Programme (CSP).
(Edited publisher abstract)
This publication provides unit costs for a wide range of health and social care services using a standardised methodology. The report is organised into five main sections. Section I covers services used by a particular client group, and includes services for older people, people with mental health problems, people who misuse drugs/alcohol, people with learning disabilities, younger adults with physical and sensory impairments, services for children and their families, hospitals, and care packages. Sections II, III and IV deal with the unit costs of professionals in community-based health care, community-based social care, and hospital-based health care. These include social care staff, health and social care teams, doctors, nurses, and other health professionals. Section V details the sources of information used. This volume also includes three focused articles which explore: approaches to costing for those involved in planning and implementing integrated care initiatives; understanding the costs of shared lives, and the intervention costs of the reminiscence intervention Remembering Yesterday Caring Today (RYCT) and the Carer Support Programme (CSP).
(Edited publisher abstract)
Subject terms:
care homes, childrens social care, cognitive behavioural therapy, costs, health care, health professionals, hospitals, learning disabilities, mental health problems, residential care, residential child care, social care staff, integrated care, shared lives schemes, reminiscence therapy, substance misuse, social workers, older people, nurses, doctors;
This report provides unit costs estimates for a range of health and social care services and staff. It comprises five sections. Section 1 estimates the costs of services for older people, people with mental health problems, people who misuse drugs or alcohol, people with learning disabilities, adults with physical disabilities, children and their families, hospital and related services and care package. Sections 2, 3 and 4 provides cost estimates for community-based health and social care staff and hospital-based staff. These include: allied health professionals, nurses, general practitioners, social workers, home care staff, scientific and professional staff and specialist doctors. Section V details the sources of information used. The report also includes four discussion and research papers, examining some of the implications of the 2014 Care Act, the development of a new survey tool to gather self-reported data about respondents’ care needs, use of formal care, and their use and provision of informal care, the costs of vision rehabilitation services in England, and resource-use questionnaires used in trial-based economic evaluations.
(Edited publisher abstract)
This report provides unit costs estimates for a range of health and social care services and staff. It comprises five sections. Section 1 estimates the costs of services for older people, people with mental health problems, people who misuse drugs or alcohol, people with learning disabilities, adults with physical disabilities, children and their families, hospital and related services and care package. Sections 2, 3 and 4 provides cost estimates for community-based health and social care staff and hospital-based staff. These include: allied health professionals, nurses, general practitioners, social workers, home care staff, scientific and professional staff and specialist doctors. Section V details the sources of information used. The report also includes four discussion and research papers, examining some of the implications of the 2014 Care Act, the development of a new survey tool to gather self-reported data about respondents’ care needs, use of formal care, and their use and provision of informal care, the costs of vision rehabilitation services in England, and resource-use questionnaires used in trial-based economic evaluations.
(Edited publisher abstract)
Subject terms:
costs, wages, community care, social care staff, social workers, health professionals, nurses, general practitioners, hospitals, doctors, care homes, childrens social care, older people, mental health services, learning disabilities, residential care, extra care housing, dementia, substance misuse, disabilities, looked after children, autism, palliative care, end of life care;