NHS and local government team up with Age UK to improve care for older people
The commission hopes to report its findings in Spring 2012 but what happens between now and then.
Source : Age UK / NHS Confederation / LG Group
Published on 20 July 2011 12:30 AM
The NHS Confederation, Local Government Group (LG Group) and Age UK are joining forces to establish a commission on improving dignity in care provided to older patients in hospitals and care homes.
The commission is part of a new initiative from the three organisations called the Partnership on Dignity in Care which is being launched at Age UK’s Improving Essential Care event on Wednesday, 20 July 2011.
The commission will be jointly chaired by NHS Confederation Chair Sir Keith Pearson, Chair of Age UK Dianne Jeffrey, and Chair of the LG Group’s Community Wellbeing Board Councillor David Rogers. It will involve senior leaders from across health and social care coming together to take evidence from the full range of relevant groups – from specialist clinicians and healthcare leaders to patient advocacy groups – to get to the root of what needs to happen to improve care.
Understanding what older people want from care
The commission has been established in light of a series of reports on dignity and compassion in care ranging from the Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust inquiry to the Health Ombudsman’s report on patient complaints.
The NHS Confederation, the LG Group and Age UK will use the commission to understand the aspirations of older people and their families for dignity and care, to establish what really works to improve care, to identify good practice examples from across health and social care, and to drive change and improvements to the dignity and care provided to older people in hospital and residential settings.
NHS Confederation chairman Sir Keith Pearson said: ‘This commission will hear evidence from across the system. We want a warts and all picture of where care is going wrong and how we can put it right. Some of the evidence sessions may be uncomfortable listening for those of us who lead the health and social care system. But it is only through an honest look at the issues that we can come up with the right solutions that will work on the ground.’
Dianne Jeffrey, chair of Age UK, said: ‘We hear all too often about the appalling care of older people in hospitals and care homes but horrifying headlines alone do not change practice. This commission aims to build understanding of why and how older people’s essential care is going wrong and to set out practical solutions for getting it right in the future.’
Cllr David Rogers, Chairman of the LG Group’s Community Wellbeing Board, said: ‘There is widespread and legitimate public concern about the poor experiences some patients and residents have experienced. The LG Group is very keen to play our part in finding practical ways in which we can raise standards and eliminate bad practice.’
The commission hopes to report its findings in Spring 2012.
http://www.ageuk.org.uk/latest-news/commission-announced-to-improve-essential-care/