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Andrea Sutcliffe, Chief Inspector of Adult Social Care
National Children and Adult Services Conference
4 November 2016
Adult
social care:
Quality
Matters
Speech notes for the below entitled
presentation
2
This is the fourth time I have been asked to speak at the NCAS conference
since I became Chief Inspector of Adult Social Care in 2013. So, thank you
once again for giving me the opportunity. It is, as ever, a real pleasure to be
here.
But I’ve got a problem. After three previous speeches, what on earth can I say
that you have not heard before?
Introduction - notes for slide 1
3
You know what the Care Quality Commission is here for – we make sure health
and social care services provide people with safe, effective, compassionate,
high-quality care and we encourage care services to improve.
Purpose - notes for slide 2
4
You know how we do it – registering services that meet fundamental standards;
monitoring, inspecting and rating them; taking enforcement action when
necessary; and using our independent voice to influence change and
encourage improvement.
Operating model - notes for slide 3
5
You know about the Mum Test – that vital question I want our inspectors to ask.
Is this a service I would be happy for anyone I love and care for to use? And
you know what we ask to make that judgement – is the service safe, effective,
caring, responsive to people’s needs and is it well led?
You’ve met my Mum – well seen her picture at least. I have used it so often I
bet some of you can even tell me when it was taken. For those not in the know
– it was my wedding day and she’s looking happy because it too me nearly 17
years to persuade David to marry me and she was pretty chuffed when I pulled
it off.
What more could there be?
Mum test - notes for slide 4
6
Well fortunately CQC and NCAS have been an exemplar of collaboration and
coordinated working and have made sure this conference is happening after
the publication of our State of Care report in October.
The State of Care is our annual report to Parliament and this year’s was a
pretty important one for CQC and I think for the adult social care sector in
particular.
It is our second report since we started our new approach of monitoring,
inspecting and rating services in 2014 and is drawn from the most
comprehensive evidence base about the quality of care we have ever
assembled. I think it is a compelling, fascinating read. I know I am biased but I
hope you will find out for yourselves if you have not already done so. From the
many mentions the report has had this week, it certainly sounds like a lot of
you already have.
What I would like to do today is to share the good news, the worrying trends
and then focus on the most important question – what can we all do about it?
State of Care - notes for slide 5
7
Our latest ratings for adult social care show over 70% of services are providing
good or outstanding care – a positive increase on last year – and three
quarters of those services originally rated as inadequate were better when we
re-inspected. That is positive news and I am pleased the vast majority of
people, their families and carers, are experiencing services that do indeed
meet the Mum Test.
There are particular services that consistently perform well – 84% of
community social care locations, including 92% for Shared Lives services,
were rated as Good or Outstanding overall. So now you know the answer to
the badges Shared Lives Plus has been handing out this week – what does
92% look like? It looks like a Good or Outstanding Shared Lives service!
The good news - notes for slide 6
8
A striking finding is that 90% of services are rated as Good and 2% as
Outstanding when we ask whether the service is Caring. Take a look at these
quotes from some of our recent reports – when we get it right in social care we
can really make a difference to people’s lives.
The strong performance in this area has been a feature of our new approach
and is due to the amazing dedication and commitment of the many staff
working in adult social care.
They are our unsung heroes but I am sure you agree their contribution
deserves to be recognised, appreciated and valued.
Great care - notes for slide 7
9
So today, I would like to pay my own tribute and say thank you.
Thank you - notes for slide 8
10
But despite the good and outstanding services we see, State of Care also
highlights the stark reality that great care is not everybody’s experience, with
over a quarter of adult social care services not consistently providing safe, high
quality and compassionate care.
Ratings for safety and leadership remain our greatest concern. 3% of services
have been rated as Inadequate in both these areas with a further 26%
requiring improvement for leadership and 29% for safety.
We are seeing too many services struggle to improve.
Nearly a quarter of inadequate services had not improved when they were re-
inspected – while others closed before we got back to them.
Half of services rated Requires Improvement did not improve on re-inspection
and 8% deteriorated so much we rated them as Inadequate.
The worrying news - notes for slide 9
11
Let’s just remember these services provide care and support for people either
in their own homes or they are a 24 hour seven day a week experience for
people living in a residential setting. Poor care like this can have a devastating
impact on the lives of people who depend upon them – it is not acceptable and
in 2016 we cannot and should not tolerate it.
None of us would want services like this for the people we love.
Poor care - notes for slide 10
12
An interesting analysis we carried out this year was to look at the comparison
of ratings for services provided for people with a learning disability and those
for older people.
As you can see, services for older people fare worse than those for people with
a learning disability, another worrying trend.
There is so much more that I could draw out from our analysis but I hope I
have given you enough of a flavour to inspire you to take a look at the whole
document.
Older people’s services - notes for
slide 11
13
I said this year’s State of Care was a pretty important one for our sector and I
think the headlines proved that. Unusually, it was adult social care that
dominated the newspaper print and the airwaves. That strong evidence base I
mentioned meant we could give our clearest warning yet about our concerns
for the sustainability of quality in adult social care. These themes have
dominated our conversation this week.
After a long internal debate about what was the right thing to say we declared
that we felt adult social care was approaching a tipping point. It is eye-catching
language and we needed to be on sure ground to say something like that. So
why did we?
Headline news - notes for slide 12
14
First, let’s consider the context of an extremely challenging environment for
health and social care.
People are living longer with individual needs for people of all ages becoming
more complex leading to a greater demand for adult social care. If adult social
care isn't there or isn't good enough, it has a direct impact on people’s lives
and their well-being and the pressure shifts to other parts of the health and
care system.
And we are undoubtedly seeing problems in the health service – for example,
increases in A&E attendances, emergency admissions and delayed
discharges; while two thirds of NHS providers recorded a deficit last year.
Though, I should say this is not just about social care causing all the problems
– we have GP vacancies and reductions in district nursing too.
Challenging environment - notes for
slide 13
15
But why approaching a tipping point now? Our view is based on the evidence
from our inspections, CQC’s market oversight function, and a variety of
external data.
In 2015, Age UK estimated that more than a million older people in England
were living with unmet social care needs; a rise from 800,000 in 2010. This
evidence echoes analysis from ADASS itself, The King’s Fund, the Nuffield
Trust and so many other commentators.
The number of older people receiving local authority-funded social care fell
26% from more than 1.1 million in 2009 to around 850,000 in 2013/14. And
81% of local authorities have reduced their real-term spending on social care
for older people over the last five years.
Tipping point? - notes for slide 14
16
A word of caution here – so much of our policy planning for social care in the
future seems to rely upon a loving family being available, capable and willing to
provide care. But with one in five people over 50, including me, ageing without
children, that may not be the case and strong social care provision at home
and in residential care will be an ongoing necessity.
CQC data shows that a five-year period of steady increase in the number of
nursing home beds – going from 205,000 beds in 2009 to 224,000 beds in
March 2015 – has now stalled, with numbers remaining static since that time.
We have seen examples of providers starting to hand back contracts that they
think they are undeliverable; and I know local authorities are warning of more
to come.
And we all know about the continuing recruitment and retention challenges
across the sector, but especially in nursing.
Tipping point? - notes continued for
slide 14
17
In many ways the system as a whole is failing the Mum Test - with too many
people facing a situation we would not want anyone we love to experience.
One of the clearest ways we can see that is the analysis of reasons why
people’s transfer of care is delayed from hospitals to the place that is best for
them. This graph shows the dominant trend in the last four years is for delays
to be increasingly caused awaiting a package of care in someone’s own home,
with placements or availability of nursing and residential homes also rising.
The situation in home care is particularly worrying. The late, great Harold
Bodmer whose tragic absence at this conference has been so keenly felt, spoke
for many of us in his Presidential address at the ADASS Spring Seminar when
he said:
“Sustainability of home care is certainly what keeps me awake at night.”
These figures give one indication why. Harold urged us to “up the level of
debate on this and increase the volume” and cautioned against the focus on
“time and task”. He was right then and he would have been right now if he had
been able to say that again.
System failing the Mum test - notes
for slide 15
18
I hope you will agree with me that Ray James did a fantastic job on Wednesday
speaking on Harold’s behalf. You did him proud Ray.
So before I thoroughly depress you with further facts and figures, we can safely
say yes, it is encouraging that despite all these challenges, there are still so
many services providing good and outstanding care but our analysis of the
pressures and the fragility of the adult social care sector does indeed give
cause for concern for the future.
System failing Mum test - notes
continued for slide 15
19
As I said earlier, CQC is here to encourage improvement and we will work hard
to try and move the curve on this graph to the right. But I fear that nearly
everything else is pushing the curve to the left. Can we be confident that the
good quality care we see now can be sustained and the improvements
necessary delivered? Certainly, I am not as confident as I would like to be or
indeed need to be.
I can assure you that under these circumstances, CQC will not compromise on
our assessment of quality – we owe it to the people using services, their
families and carers to stay true to our purpose.
That’s why this week we have published information for the public and providers
that reinforces the rights of people living in care homes to have families and
friends to visit; and they and their visitors should not be penalised when they
raise concerns. We will not hesitate to use our powers to enforce these
standards if providers fail to respond appropriately when concerns are raised.
Encouraging improvement - notes for
slide 16
20
The message from State of Care is clear. Unless the system finds a better way
of working together then we are likely to see more poor care, less improvement
– and a damaging impact on people who use services if providers are tempted
to cut corners when it comes to quality.
This is not just about money – more resources are important but what also
matters is what we do with those resources – another theme of discussion at
this conference. That’s why we need a collective effort for quality.
Currently there is not a coherent and commonly agreed quality strategy for adult
social care. This undermines our collective efforts to make improvements and is
a cause for concern for everyone involved.
A quality strategy that listens to and acts upon the voice of people using
services, their families and carers and galvanises the sector as a whole to make
improvements strategically and practically, would go a long way to making high-
quality care a reality for everyone all the time.
Collective effort for quality - notes for
slide 17
21
This was something the previous Care Minister Alistair Burt recognised and in
early summer, he challenged the sector to listen to the uncomfortable voices
raising concerns and consider what we could all do to make a difference.
The purpose of a strategy would be to articulate what Adult Social Care can do.
It will be important to complement the quality strategy for the NHS led by the
National Quality Board. People’s experience of care and support is not isolated
within silos but integrated across many different health and social care services.
Our aim to achieve person-centred co-ordinated care needs to recognise and
respond to this reality.
A quality strategy for adult social care needs to speak to the concerns of the
public, people who use services, their carers and families; engage with staff,
providers and commissioners so they can take action; and be supported by the
regulator and national bodies to enable implementation to happen. It should
have influence nationally and be implemented at a local level.
We need to use this strategy for action not reflection.
A shared view of quality - notes for
slide 18
22
This is work in progress and much more needs to be done to reach agreement
about what we can do and how we can do it.
CQC needs to play its role by working across the national system of health and
social care and using our independent voice to provide leadership & support.
In line with our strategy published earlier this year we will encourage
improvement, innovation and sustainability in care and promote a single shared
view of quality to reduce duplication.
Over the next year we will build on our first round of comprehensive inspections
to learn from what’s worked, align our assessment frameworks across health
and social care and improve our ways of working.
Strategic aims like these are important to guide us but people want to see real
action and real progress so we will also collaborate on practical initiatives to
improve people’s experiences.
CQC contribution - notes for slide 19
23
But CQC cannot do this alone. In fact it would be quite wrong of me or anyone
else to think that regulation by itself will improve quality in social care.
The analysis in State of Care that I have shared today sets the challenge – I am
committed to playing my part, improving what CQC does – what will you do?
What will you do? - notes for slide 20
24
We all have a responsibility to make social care the priority it deserves to be.
My Mum, your loved one, the people who depend upon good quality social care
now and into the future, need us all to take that responsibility seriously.
Why? - notes for slide 21
25
Thank you
www.cqc.org.uk
enquiries@cqc.org.uk
@CareQualityComm
Andrea Sutcliffe
Chief Inspector of Adult Social Care
@CrouchEndTiger7
25

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Speech notes: Adult social care: Quality Matters - Andrea Sutcliffe

  • 1. 1 Andrea Sutcliffe, Chief Inspector of Adult Social Care National Children and Adult Services Conference 4 November 2016 Adult social care: Quality Matters Speech notes for the below entitled presentation
  • 2. 2 This is the fourth time I have been asked to speak at the NCAS conference since I became Chief Inspector of Adult Social Care in 2013. So, thank you once again for giving me the opportunity. It is, as ever, a real pleasure to be here. But I’ve got a problem. After three previous speeches, what on earth can I say that you have not heard before? Introduction - notes for slide 1
  • 3. 3 You know what the Care Quality Commission is here for – we make sure health and social care services provide people with safe, effective, compassionate, high-quality care and we encourage care services to improve. Purpose - notes for slide 2
  • 4. 4 You know how we do it – registering services that meet fundamental standards; monitoring, inspecting and rating them; taking enforcement action when necessary; and using our independent voice to influence change and encourage improvement. Operating model - notes for slide 3
  • 5. 5 You know about the Mum Test – that vital question I want our inspectors to ask. Is this a service I would be happy for anyone I love and care for to use? And you know what we ask to make that judgement – is the service safe, effective, caring, responsive to people’s needs and is it well led? You’ve met my Mum – well seen her picture at least. I have used it so often I bet some of you can even tell me when it was taken. For those not in the know – it was my wedding day and she’s looking happy because it too me nearly 17 years to persuade David to marry me and she was pretty chuffed when I pulled it off. What more could there be? Mum test - notes for slide 4
  • 6. 6 Well fortunately CQC and NCAS have been an exemplar of collaboration and coordinated working and have made sure this conference is happening after the publication of our State of Care report in October. The State of Care is our annual report to Parliament and this year’s was a pretty important one for CQC and I think for the adult social care sector in particular. It is our second report since we started our new approach of monitoring, inspecting and rating services in 2014 and is drawn from the most comprehensive evidence base about the quality of care we have ever assembled. I think it is a compelling, fascinating read. I know I am biased but I hope you will find out for yourselves if you have not already done so. From the many mentions the report has had this week, it certainly sounds like a lot of you already have. What I would like to do today is to share the good news, the worrying trends and then focus on the most important question – what can we all do about it? State of Care - notes for slide 5
  • 7. 7 Our latest ratings for adult social care show over 70% of services are providing good or outstanding care – a positive increase on last year – and three quarters of those services originally rated as inadequate were better when we re-inspected. That is positive news and I am pleased the vast majority of people, their families and carers, are experiencing services that do indeed meet the Mum Test. There are particular services that consistently perform well – 84% of community social care locations, including 92% for Shared Lives services, were rated as Good or Outstanding overall. So now you know the answer to the badges Shared Lives Plus has been handing out this week – what does 92% look like? It looks like a Good or Outstanding Shared Lives service! The good news - notes for slide 6
  • 8. 8 A striking finding is that 90% of services are rated as Good and 2% as Outstanding when we ask whether the service is Caring. Take a look at these quotes from some of our recent reports – when we get it right in social care we can really make a difference to people’s lives. The strong performance in this area has been a feature of our new approach and is due to the amazing dedication and commitment of the many staff working in adult social care. They are our unsung heroes but I am sure you agree their contribution deserves to be recognised, appreciated and valued. Great care - notes for slide 7
  • 9. 9 So today, I would like to pay my own tribute and say thank you. Thank you - notes for slide 8
  • 10. 10 But despite the good and outstanding services we see, State of Care also highlights the stark reality that great care is not everybody’s experience, with over a quarter of adult social care services not consistently providing safe, high quality and compassionate care. Ratings for safety and leadership remain our greatest concern. 3% of services have been rated as Inadequate in both these areas with a further 26% requiring improvement for leadership and 29% for safety. We are seeing too many services struggle to improve. Nearly a quarter of inadequate services had not improved when they were re- inspected – while others closed before we got back to them. Half of services rated Requires Improvement did not improve on re-inspection and 8% deteriorated so much we rated them as Inadequate. The worrying news - notes for slide 9
  • 11. 11 Let’s just remember these services provide care and support for people either in their own homes or they are a 24 hour seven day a week experience for people living in a residential setting. Poor care like this can have a devastating impact on the lives of people who depend upon them – it is not acceptable and in 2016 we cannot and should not tolerate it. None of us would want services like this for the people we love. Poor care - notes for slide 10
  • 12. 12 An interesting analysis we carried out this year was to look at the comparison of ratings for services provided for people with a learning disability and those for older people. As you can see, services for older people fare worse than those for people with a learning disability, another worrying trend. There is so much more that I could draw out from our analysis but I hope I have given you enough of a flavour to inspire you to take a look at the whole document. Older people’s services - notes for slide 11
  • 13. 13 I said this year’s State of Care was a pretty important one for our sector and I think the headlines proved that. Unusually, it was adult social care that dominated the newspaper print and the airwaves. That strong evidence base I mentioned meant we could give our clearest warning yet about our concerns for the sustainability of quality in adult social care. These themes have dominated our conversation this week. After a long internal debate about what was the right thing to say we declared that we felt adult social care was approaching a tipping point. It is eye-catching language and we needed to be on sure ground to say something like that. So why did we? Headline news - notes for slide 12
  • 14. 14 First, let’s consider the context of an extremely challenging environment for health and social care. People are living longer with individual needs for people of all ages becoming more complex leading to a greater demand for adult social care. If adult social care isn't there or isn't good enough, it has a direct impact on people’s lives and their well-being and the pressure shifts to other parts of the health and care system. And we are undoubtedly seeing problems in the health service – for example, increases in A&E attendances, emergency admissions and delayed discharges; while two thirds of NHS providers recorded a deficit last year. Though, I should say this is not just about social care causing all the problems – we have GP vacancies and reductions in district nursing too. Challenging environment - notes for slide 13
  • 15. 15 But why approaching a tipping point now? Our view is based on the evidence from our inspections, CQC’s market oversight function, and a variety of external data. In 2015, Age UK estimated that more than a million older people in England were living with unmet social care needs; a rise from 800,000 in 2010. This evidence echoes analysis from ADASS itself, The King’s Fund, the Nuffield Trust and so many other commentators. The number of older people receiving local authority-funded social care fell 26% from more than 1.1 million in 2009 to around 850,000 in 2013/14. And 81% of local authorities have reduced their real-term spending on social care for older people over the last five years. Tipping point? - notes for slide 14
  • 16. 16 A word of caution here – so much of our policy planning for social care in the future seems to rely upon a loving family being available, capable and willing to provide care. But with one in five people over 50, including me, ageing without children, that may not be the case and strong social care provision at home and in residential care will be an ongoing necessity. CQC data shows that a five-year period of steady increase in the number of nursing home beds – going from 205,000 beds in 2009 to 224,000 beds in March 2015 – has now stalled, with numbers remaining static since that time. We have seen examples of providers starting to hand back contracts that they think they are undeliverable; and I know local authorities are warning of more to come. And we all know about the continuing recruitment and retention challenges across the sector, but especially in nursing. Tipping point? - notes continued for slide 14
  • 17. 17 In many ways the system as a whole is failing the Mum Test - with too many people facing a situation we would not want anyone we love to experience. One of the clearest ways we can see that is the analysis of reasons why people’s transfer of care is delayed from hospitals to the place that is best for them. This graph shows the dominant trend in the last four years is for delays to be increasingly caused awaiting a package of care in someone’s own home, with placements or availability of nursing and residential homes also rising. The situation in home care is particularly worrying. The late, great Harold Bodmer whose tragic absence at this conference has been so keenly felt, spoke for many of us in his Presidential address at the ADASS Spring Seminar when he said: “Sustainability of home care is certainly what keeps me awake at night.” These figures give one indication why. Harold urged us to “up the level of debate on this and increase the volume” and cautioned against the focus on “time and task”. He was right then and he would have been right now if he had been able to say that again. System failing the Mum test - notes for slide 15
  • 18. 18 I hope you will agree with me that Ray James did a fantastic job on Wednesday speaking on Harold’s behalf. You did him proud Ray. So before I thoroughly depress you with further facts and figures, we can safely say yes, it is encouraging that despite all these challenges, there are still so many services providing good and outstanding care but our analysis of the pressures and the fragility of the adult social care sector does indeed give cause for concern for the future. System failing Mum test - notes continued for slide 15
  • 19. 19 As I said earlier, CQC is here to encourage improvement and we will work hard to try and move the curve on this graph to the right. But I fear that nearly everything else is pushing the curve to the left. Can we be confident that the good quality care we see now can be sustained and the improvements necessary delivered? Certainly, I am not as confident as I would like to be or indeed need to be. I can assure you that under these circumstances, CQC will not compromise on our assessment of quality – we owe it to the people using services, their families and carers to stay true to our purpose. That’s why this week we have published information for the public and providers that reinforces the rights of people living in care homes to have families and friends to visit; and they and their visitors should not be penalised when they raise concerns. We will not hesitate to use our powers to enforce these standards if providers fail to respond appropriately when concerns are raised. Encouraging improvement - notes for slide 16
  • 20. 20 The message from State of Care is clear. Unless the system finds a better way of working together then we are likely to see more poor care, less improvement – and a damaging impact on people who use services if providers are tempted to cut corners when it comes to quality. This is not just about money – more resources are important but what also matters is what we do with those resources – another theme of discussion at this conference. That’s why we need a collective effort for quality. Currently there is not a coherent and commonly agreed quality strategy for adult social care. This undermines our collective efforts to make improvements and is a cause for concern for everyone involved. A quality strategy that listens to and acts upon the voice of people using services, their families and carers and galvanises the sector as a whole to make improvements strategically and practically, would go a long way to making high- quality care a reality for everyone all the time. Collective effort for quality - notes for slide 17
  • 21. 21 This was something the previous Care Minister Alistair Burt recognised and in early summer, he challenged the sector to listen to the uncomfortable voices raising concerns and consider what we could all do to make a difference. The purpose of a strategy would be to articulate what Adult Social Care can do. It will be important to complement the quality strategy for the NHS led by the National Quality Board. People’s experience of care and support is not isolated within silos but integrated across many different health and social care services. Our aim to achieve person-centred co-ordinated care needs to recognise and respond to this reality. A quality strategy for adult social care needs to speak to the concerns of the public, people who use services, their carers and families; engage with staff, providers and commissioners so they can take action; and be supported by the regulator and national bodies to enable implementation to happen. It should have influence nationally and be implemented at a local level. We need to use this strategy for action not reflection. A shared view of quality - notes for slide 18
  • 22. 22 This is work in progress and much more needs to be done to reach agreement about what we can do and how we can do it. CQC needs to play its role by working across the national system of health and social care and using our independent voice to provide leadership & support. In line with our strategy published earlier this year we will encourage improvement, innovation and sustainability in care and promote a single shared view of quality to reduce duplication. Over the next year we will build on our first round of comprehensive inspections to learn from what’s worked, align our assessment frameworks across health and social care and improve our ways of working. Strategic aims like these are important to guide us but people want to see real action and real progress so we will also collaborate on practical initiatives to improve people’s experiences. CQC contribution - notes for slide 19
  • 23. 23 But CQC cannot do this alone. In fact it would be quite wrong of me or anyone else to think that regulation by itself will improve quality in social care. The analysis in State of Care that I have shared today sets the challenge – I am committed to playing my part, improving what CQC does – what will you do? What will you do? - notes for slide 20
  • 24. 24 We all have a responsibility to make social care the priority it deserves to be. My Mum, your loved one, the people who depend upon good quality social care now and into the future, need us all to take that responsibility seriously. Why? - notes for slide 21