The council faces several challenges in responding to the scale of forecast demand.
Systemic pressures and demands
The COVID-19 pandemic has placed enormous pressures on an already stretched health and social care system, and care homes have undoubtedly been hit hard. However, the pandemic has also highlighted care homes’ key role in helping the wider system, including our acute and community hospitals, to function throughout the crisis.
We therefore need to develop our ability to respond quickly and proactively to systemic pressures and demands, with better market intelligence, over-sight and more efficient brokerage processes, including e-brokerage.
Developing alternatives to permanent care home placements
Key to achieving our aim of helping older people to remain at home for longer, is the need to develop realistic, robust and appealing options for housing with care in later life. This includes the provision of flexible and holistic options to support people at home, as well as alternative housing options such as Extra Care Housing.
Substantial, coordinated efforts and investment will be needed to shape and deliver the range of later life housing options that will be needed to enable people to stay at home for longer.
Using reablement as a first choice of care and support will be another key factor in keeping people in their own homes for longer so reducing the need for care home placements.
Focus of the Dorset care homes market
Dorset has a large and growing population of older people, 83.5% of whom own their own home. The Dorset care homes market is predominantly geared towards more affluent, asset-rich individuals who fund their own care. Collectively, it is private or self-funders who have the market power in Dorset. Our current reliance on one-off ‘spot’ purchasing further dilutes our ability to negotiate good long-term access to residential care at reasonable rates.
However, people who pay for their own care and support often lack the comprehensive information required to make an informed choice about how their care needs will be met. Self-funders’ purchasing decisions have a major impact on Dorset Council’s ability to access suitable, affordable, quality care for the people whose care it funds.
Care homes that predominantly target people who pay for their own care are less likely to cater for the type and level of care need that the council brings to the market, to have the capabilities needed to do so or to be able to offer an affordable price.
Additionally, people who choose to go into permanent residential care may do so at a far earlier stage than would be typical for someone whose care is funded by a local authority. In 2020/21 the council spent £2.3m on the care fees of 64 individuals who had run out of their own funds.
Gaps in service provision
Despite needing to source, on a daily basis, care home placements for older people with dementia and complex care or nursing needs, the council struggles to do so, leading to delays in sourcing appropriate care for individuals including those ready to leave hospital.
We need to work with the market and our healthcare partners to develop both capacity and capabilities within the care home market to meet the needs of people with dementia, complex care and support needs, including behaviours that challenge, nursing care needs, along with greater demand for short term services that will help older people to remain independent for longer.
Budget pressures
The financial climate facing the public sector is difficult and unlikely to improve in the foreseeable future. In all of our commissioning arrangements, value for money, quality and the sustainability of services, need to be taken into account.