Reducing emergency admissions

2018-03-02

Emergency admissions cost the NHS £13.7 billion in 2015-16 and pose a serious challenge to both the service and financial position of the NHS, according to the report by the National Audit Office (NAO) on Mar 02,2018. Over the last four years, the NHS has done well to manage the impact on hospitals, despite admitting more people as emergency admissions. While progress has been made in some areas the challenge of managing emergency admissions is far from being under control.

Overall emergency admissions grew by 24% from 2007-08 to 2016-17. In 2016-17, there were 5.8 million emergency admissions of which 24% were considered avoidable by NHS England.

While more people are being admitted, the time they spend in hospital is getting shorter. Most (79%) of the growth in emergency admissions from 2013-14 to 2016-17 was caused by people who did not stay in hospital overnight.

The rise in emergency admissions of people aged 65 and over was 12% in the past four years. Demographic changes explain only just over half this rise, which the Department is aware of and is doing further work to better understand the other drivers.

The number of bed days as a result of people being admitted through emergency admissions has increased from 32.41 million in 2013-14 to 33.59 million in 2016-17. This is an increase of 3.6%, which is less than the 9.3% increase in emergency admissions during the same period.

The NAO estimates that the real terms cost of emergency admissions has increased by 2.2% since 2013-14, from £13.4 billion to £13.7 billion in 2015-16, while emergency admissions increased by 7% over the same period.

NHS England and partners have developed a number of national programmes that aim to reduce the impact of emergency admissions. While the rate of growth in emergency admissions has slowed slightly in 2016-17, there is limited evidence to show that initiatives such as the Better Care Fund and the urgent and emergency care programme have brought about that slow down.

Significant challenges do remain in managing emergency admissions:
•Bed closures have increased the pressures posed on acute hospitals by rising emergency admissions. From 2010-11 to 2016-17, the average number of available general and acute beds has fallen by 6,268 beds (5.8%). Bed occupancy has been increasing since at least 2010-11, reaching a seasonal peak of 91.4% in the fourth quarter of 2016-17.
•Using data from 72 Trusts, Healthwatch England has estimated emergency readmissions to have risen by 22.8% between 2012-13 and 2016-17. Over the same period we calculate overall emergency admissions rose by 10.2%. While there are some issues about the reliability and consistency of the data reported by Healthwatch, the rate of growth raises questions about the appropriateness of some decisions to discharge and/or the support provided to help people recuperate.
•Capacity in the community to prevent emergency admissions does not currently meet demand. As of October 2017, there was not a clear plan for how the £10 billion the Department of Health & Social Care estimates was spent on community health care could be better used to manage demand. Since then NHS England has set up a project to develop community services to support the Five Year Forward View.
•NHS England does not have good enough data on emergency admissions as the available hospital data does not always accurately record the causes, severity, source of referral and diagnosis of patients. According to an assessment by the Royal College of Emergency Medicine and NHS Digital, NHS England only has records on where people come from for 5% of attendances, for example, a road traffic accident. In response, from October 2017, NHS England has required emergency departments to collect more comprehensive data.
•In 2016-17, the number of emergency admissions across England varied between 73 and 155 admissions per 1,000 GP weighted population. The Department and NHS England do not fully understand the reasons for these considerable local variations so cannot identify the extent to which they are caused by local health and social care practices which lead to better management of emergency admissions, or other factors.

The NAO recommends that the Department and NHS England should establish an evidence base for what works in reducing emergency admissions and use this to inform future national programmes. They should also link hospital activity data with primary, community health care and social care data to enable health and social care practitioners so they can make the most informed decision about whether a patient requires emergency hospital treatment.

Source:UK National Audit Office