Transcript Slide 1

IPC
What can Extra Care deliver and how
do we know
This strand of Raising the Stakes
 What evidence is there to support the beneficial
outcomes that have been claimed for Extra Care
Housing?
 How is the industry currently measuring success?
 Where ECH is delivering good outcomes, what seem
the critical success factors in delivering them.
Institute of Public Care
 Review undertaken on behalf of the ‘Raising the
Stakes’ project group by IPC
 Centre of Oxford Brookes University
 Applied research and knowledge transfer
 Work with central and local government, health
service, private and voluntary sector
 Projects cover housing, social and health care
 Housing examples:
- ECH Toolkit and other work for Housing LIN
- Evaluation of ECH schemes for RSLs
- Development of accommodation and support
strategies for LAs
Activities
 Literature review of evidence for achievement of
good outcomes and critical success factors
 Structured interviews with scheme managers to
determine their experience and what monitoring
tools they are currently using
Literature review
 A key element of the review was the work recently
published by Karen Croucher and colleagues for the
Joseph Rowntree Trust
 Also the ECH Toolkit and the review of housing
options undertaken as part of the Wanless review
 Additionally looked across the literature at
evaluations of ECH and at what older people say that
they want
 Review still in ‘draft’ form to enable updating as new
related work is published
Main questions being asked
Can ECH offer:
 Quality of life overall
 ‘Aging in place’, including for people with specialist
needs
 Genuine alternatives to residential or nursing care
 An environment that supports diversity
Main questions being asked
Can ECH offer:
 Improvements in the capacity to sustain health
 Opportunities to mix with others and join in the local
community
 Opportunities to sustain friendships/connections
 Continued involvement of family carers
Main questions being asked
Additionally, where ECH was deemed to be successful,
to begin to identify what made it so. For the
interviews we have based this around the domains
developed for the questionnaire and self assessment
ie:
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Customer base
Environment
Services
Ethos/lifestyle
Findings so far from literature
 Is Extra Care Housing able to achieve ‘aging in place’
for its occupants?
and
 Does ECH provide a realistic alternative to care home
admission?:
- Does seem that most ECH occupants do age in place
and do not need to move on into care
- Where people have moved on, it is mainly to care
homes with nursing or specialist EMH care homes
- studies of care home residents suggest many could
have moved into ECH instead
Findings so far
 Seems could offer a realistic alternative to ‘standard’
residential care if sufficient schemes
 Less able to support people with high level needs,
particularly severe dementia
 Therefore probably does not represent an alternative
to specialist and care homes with nursing
Findings so far
 Does ECH improve health and well being, reduce, or
prevent increased need for, formal health and social
care input?:
- Self reported feelings of improved well being are well
documented
- Fewer objective measures of improved functioning
- Some evidence of shorter hospital stays, fewer
admissions
- Some evidence of reduced need for care hours from
that received in previous accommodation
Findings so far
 Improved feelings of well being can relate to a
cluster of factors, better housing, more social
contact
 There is less evidence for specific measured health
gain
Findings so far
 Does ECH reduce social isolation, encourage
involvement and provide support to other local older
people?:
- Opportunity is certainly there and relatively active
elders can benefit
- Some evidence of isolation of those with dementia
and potentially BME elders
- Insufficient information as yet about value to local
community.
Findings so far
 Does ECH enable continued involvement of family
carers?
- Clear value of enabling carer and supported person
to remain together
- Higher proportion of families retain contact than in
care homes
- Less evidence available of direct impact on carer
themselves
Findings so far
 Does ECH offer quality of life to its occupants?
- Partly a summation of the previous questions
- Seems clear that for most people it does offer a good
quality of life, particularly in terms of independence
and security
- Also seems to apply to many with dementia
- Quality of life has to be seen in the context of
possible losses associated with moving, aging,
reduced abilities etc
Findings so far
 What factors seem to lead to success in achieving
these outcomes? Only so far some very broad
indications from the literature:
- For people with dementia – admission at earliest
stage, staff training and expertise
- Design – space in scheme and each unit
- Support and care – continuity, positive attitude,
flexibility of response to need, effective use of
assistive technology
Structured interviews
 So far nearly all the elements within the domains are
seen as important or very important to achieving
success, particularly around environment and
service
 The main outliers to this are ‘mix of tenure’ and
‘balanced dependency levels’ which are not seen as
so important
Monitoring tools
 So far it appears that there is extensive monitoring
undertaken within schemes over a number of areas
 This is collected both manually and electronically
 However, it does not seem to be used as much as it
is collected!
Next steps
 Continue with the structured interviews with scheme
managers
 Opportunity tomorrow for some of you to contribute
 Collate the findings
 Information gathered wil contribute to the outputs of
the wider Raising the Stakes project, such as a Steps
to Success guide, and appraisal tools