Skip to main content
3 replies [Last post]
kevin
kevin's picture
Offline
Last seen: 51 weeks 2 days ago
Joined: 09/03/2009

kevin
kevin's picture
Offline
Last seen: 51 weeks 2 days ago
Joined: 09/03/2009
Community Care Statistics 2008-09: Social Services Activity Repo

Community Care Statistics 2008-09: Social Services Activity Report, England

Summary

Community Care Statistics 2008-09: Social Services Activity Report, England presents information on referrals, assessments and packages of care, including information relating to residential care placements and residents during 2008-09, at a council level.

Key facts

Access to Services

  • An estimated 2.04 million contacts from new clients were made to Councils with Adult Social Services Responsibilities (CASSRs) in England in 2008-09. This figure has shown a decrease of 1 per cent from 2.06 million in 2007-08.
  • 1.08 million of these contacts (53 per cent) resulted in further assessment of need or the commissioning of ongoing services, and 957,000 (47 per cent) contacts were attended to solely at or near the point of contact.
  • Of the 2.04 million referrals, 539,000 (26 per cent) were self-referrals; 465,000 (23 per cent) were referred from Secondary Health sources (e.g. hospital wards); 306,000 (15 per cent) were referred by family, friends or neighbours; with a further 261,000 (13 per cent) referrals from Primary/Community Health. The remaining 23 per cent were split between internal, Local Authority (LA) housing department, other LA, legal agency, other referrals and where the source of referral was unknown.
  • There were an estimated 693,000 new clients for whom the first assessment was completed during 2008-09. This is an increase of 5 per cent from 660,000 in 2007-08.
  • In respect of waiting times for new clients aged 65 and over, 32 per cent of all new older clients had their assessment completed within 2 days of first contact and 62 per cent were assessed within 2 weeks. This is a decrease of 3 percentage points on the 2007-08 figure of 65 per cent complete within 2 weeks.
  • Around 1.37 million reviews for existing clients were carried out in 2008-09, a rise of 2 per cent from 1.34 million in 2007-08.

Packages of Care

  • An estimated 1.78 million clients were receiving services during 2008-09, this is a slight increase from 2007-08. 28 per cent (495,000) of the 1.78 million clients receiving services during 2008-09 were new clients.
  • An estimated 1.22 million (68 per cent), of those receiving services as part of a package of care following an assessment, were aged 65 and over.
  • 1.54 million (86 per cent of all clients receiving services) received community based services (this is a slight increase from the 2007-08 figure), 222,000 received residential care and 97,000 received nursing care (down 4 per cent from 102,000 in 2007-08).
  • 80 per cent of new older clients had received all services specified in their care plan within 2 weeks of their completed assessment. A further 11 per cent waited up to 4 weeks for all services to be provided.

Community Based Services

  • In 2008-09, of the 1.54 million clients receiving community-based services, 582,000 clients received home care; 547,000 clients received equipment and adaptations; 501,000 received professional support (e.g. occupational therapy), 214,000 received day care and 121,000 received meals as a service following assessment. Clients receiving more than one type of community-based service are included for each service received so there will be some double counting.
  • Most services (72 per cent) were received by clients classified in the primary client type 'physical disability, frailty and sensory impairment' while 18 per cent of clients were in primary client type 'mental health'.
  • 86,000 adults aged 18 and over received direct payments during the year. This is an increase of 29 per cent from 67,000 in 2007-08. Residential Care
  • Since 2003 there has been a steady decline in the number of supported residents with a fall of 3 per cent between 2008 and 2009 to 229,900
  • Numbers of supported residents in CASSR staffed homes have continued to decline with a 9 per cent fall from 22,000 at 31 March 2008 to 20,000 at 31 March 2009.
  • The number of clients placed in adult placements was 4,000 at 31 March 2009, an increase of 36 per cent from 2,900 in 2008.

Carers

  • 398,000 carers received a carer's assessment or review during 2008-09, either separately or jointly with the client. 142,000 (36 per cent) of these carers were assessed or reviewed separately from the person they cared for.
  • Of the 398,000 carers assessed or reviewed, an estimated 355,000 carers (89 per cent) received a service following a carer's assessment or review. Of these, 58 per cent received 'carer specific' services, and 42 per cent received information and advice only.
  • The majority of assessments and reviews completed are for carers caring for an adult with a physical disability at 275,000 in 2008-09 which was a very slight decrease from 276,000 in 2007-08. 60,000 carers caring for adults with mental health needs received an assessment or review in 2008-09 this is an increase of 15 per cent from 52,000 in 2007-08.
  • In 2008-09 355,000 carers received a service (including information and advice only) compared to 337,000 in 2007-08.
  • There has been a 15 per cent increase in the number of carers receiving information only from 128,000 in 2007-08 to 148,000 in 2008-09. The numbers receiving carer specific services was 208,000 which is slightly lower than the 2007-08 figure of 209,000.

Access the data

The underlying data for this publication is available through our National Adult Social Care Intelligence Service (NASCIS) online analytical tool. NASCIS provides a set of analytical, query and reporting tools which can be accessed from http://nascis.ic.nhs.uk

To access the data, you will need to complete the self registration process, this should only take you a couple of minutes.


This publication was previously released in provisional form on 30 September 2009 as Community Care Statistics: Social Services Activity, England - Councils with Adult Social Services Responsibilities tables, provisional, 2008-09.

The final data from this publication is now available above.

Download a list of those who received pre-release access to the provisional report here (pdf 0.2MB)

http://www.ic.nhs.uk/statistics-and-data-collections/social-care/adult-s...

kevin
kevin's picture
Offline
Last seen: 51 weeks 2 days ago
Joined: 09/03/2009
Social Care and Mental Health Indicators from the National Indic

Social Care and Mental Health Indicators from the National Indicator Set - further analysis, provisional, England 2008-09

Please note: This spreadsheet publication supersedes the data published on the 30th September 2009 - Social Care and Mental health indicators from the National Indicator Set further analysis, Provisional, England 2008-09

Summary

The Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government announced a new set of national indicators (NIS) for English local authorities and local authority partnerships as part of the Chancellor's Comprehensive Spending Review announcement on Tuesday 9 October 2007. The set underpins the new performance framework for local government and meets the Government's commitment to introduce a clear set of national outcomes and a single set of national indicators by which to measure them. The first official year for these indicators is 2008-09.

Key facts

  • 21.3 per cent of adults with mental health problems aged 18-69 in contact with secondary mental health services were known to be in settled accommodation at the time of their assessment or latest review (NI 149).
  • 3.4 per cent of adults with mental health problems aged 18-69 in contact with secondary mental health services were known to be in paid employment at the time of their assessment or latest review (NI 150)1
  • 64.5 per cent of adults with learning disabilities aged 18-64 and known to Councils with Adult Social Services Responsibilities (CASSRs) were in settled accommodation at the time of their assessment or latest review (NI 145).
  • 6.8 per cent of adults with learning disabilities aged 18-64 and known to Councils with Adult Social Services Responsibilities (CASSRs) were in paid employment at the time of their assessment or latest review (NI 146).
  • 288 adults and carers per 100,000 population received self directed support via direct payments. This equates to 6.7 per cent of all service users (NI 130).
  • 3,203 adults per 100,000 population were assisted directly through social services funded support to live independently. This includes those supported through services provided by grant funded organisations (NI 136).
  • 79.8 per cent of adults aged 18 and over waited 4 weeks or less for their assessment to be completed, a slight increase from the 2007-08 figure of 79.5 per cent (NI 132).
  • 90.7 per cent of adults aged 65 and over waited 4 weeks or less from completed assessment to receipt of all services, a slight decrease from the 2007-08 figure of 90.9 per cent (NI 133).
  • The total number of carers receiving a carer's specific service or advice and information as a proportion of clients receiving a community based service in the year is 23.1 per cent (NI 135).
  • The number of older people (aged 65 over) discharged from hospital where there was the intention to return home was 37,000 clients, of which 28,900 (78.2 per cent) were still at home after 91 days (NI 125).

Access the data

Access the data The underlying data for this publication is available through our National Adult Social Care Intelligence Service (NASCIS) online analytical tool. NASCIS provides a set of analytical, query and reporting tools which can be accessed from http://nascis.ic.nhs.uk

The data can be found in the NASCIS online analytical processing tool, headline figures are available in the NIS table and the underlying information to calculate the indicator values for all indicators except NI 149 and NI 150 is within the RAP, ASC-CAR and PSS Ex1 tables.

To access the data, you will need to complete the self registration process, this should only take you a couple of minutes.


Provisional publication

This publication supersedes the data published on 30 September 2009 - Social Care and Mental health indicators from the National Indicator Set further analysis, Provisional, England 2008-09. Please see the spreadsheets provided above for final 2008-09 data.

We are not re-publishing a final commentary and further analysis of the NI Set by age group, client type and gender with this publication, but you may find it useful to refer to the one we produced for the provisional publication:

http://www.ic.nhs.uk/statistics-and-data-collections/social-care/adult-s...

kevin
kevin's picture
Offline
Last seen: 51 weeks 2 days ago
Joined: 09/03/2009
Personal Social Services Expenditure and Unit Costs, England

Personal Social Services Expenditure and Unit Costs, England Final 2008-09

Summary

Information on the money spent on social care by Councils with Adult Social Services Responsibilities, during 2008-09. It enables analysis of money spent on different types of provision and different client groups within adult services.

Key facts

  • Local Authorities have reported an increase in Adult Social Service spend from £15.3 billion in 2007-08 to £16.1 billion in 2008-09, this is approximately 5 per cent in cash terms and 3 per cent real terms. Over a longer term, this represents a real term increase of 13 per cent since 2003-04 and 54 per cent over the 10 years from 1998-99.
  • Expenditure on adults aged 18-64 with a Learning Disability has increased from £3.5 billion in 2007-08 to £3.8 billion in 2008-09 (10% in cash terms and 8% in real terms).
  • Expenditure on Older People has increased from £8.8 billion to £9.1 billion in 2008-09 an increase of 4 per cent in cash terms and 1 per cent in real terms.
  • Expenditure on Asylum Seekers has seen the largest rise of 28 per cent in real terms, although spend for this client group accounts for less than 1 per cent of total adult social care spend. This may in part be due to the transfer of monies between departments into the adult social care budget.
  • Expenditure on Residential Care has increased from £7.4 billion in 2007-08 to £7.6 billion in 2008-09 (3 per cent in cash terms and under 1 per cent in real terms. However expenditure on nursing care for older people has fallen by 5 per cent in cash terms and 7 per cent in real terms to £1.4 billion in 2008-09.
  • The unit cost of providing residential and nursing care to adults with Learning disabilities has increased by 7 per cent in cash terms and 5 per cent in real terms from £1,047 per person per week in 2007-08 to £1,125 in 2008-09.
  • The average cost per adult aged 18 and over supported in residential care, nursing care or intensively in their own home was £593 per person per week in 2008-09, an increase from £559 in 2007-08 (6 per cent in cash terms and 3 per cent in real terms).
  • The unit cost of providing nursing care to adults with mental health needs has decreased by 3 per cent in cash terms and 6 per cent in real terms from £670 per person per week in 2007-08 to £648 in 2008-09.
  • Expenditure on Day/Domiciliary (non-Residential) care spend has increased in cash terms over 2008-09 by 8 per cent and 5 per cent in real terms from £6.0 billion in 2007-08 to £6.5 billion in 2008-09. This is in line with Government policy to improve independence, choice and promote people's ability to live at home.
  • The expenditure on Direct Payments for adults was £610 million in 2008-09. This is an increase of 35 per cent in cash terms and 31 per cent in real terms from 2007-08. The percentage of gross expenditure used for direct payments for adults is increasing and equates to 4 per cent of the overall gross current expenditure in 2008-09.

Access the data

This data is available in our National Adult Social Care Intelligence Service (NASCIS) online analysis tool, which can be found at: http://nascis.ic.nhs.uk/

To access the data, you will need to complete the self registration process, this should only take you a couple of minutes.


This publication was previously released in provisional form on 30 September 2009 as Personal Social Services Expenditure and Unit Costs, England Provisional 2008-09.

The final data from this publication is now available above.

Download a list of those who received pre-release access to the provisional report here (pdf 0.2MB)

http://www.ic.nhs.uk/statistics-and-data-collections/social-care/adult-s...

http://www.ic.nhs.uk/statistics-and-data-collections/social-care/adult-s...

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
X
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Loading