The project pioneers a holistic approach that will offer formal guidelines for optimising hospital beds.
Every year, the NHS experiences more than 2 million unplanned admissions of people over 65, accounting for 68 per cent of emergency-bed days. Policymakers see the high cost of this acute care as central to the NHS funding crisis. They fear that it jeopardises resources for community-based alternatives and for rehabilitation.
However, this NIHR-funded research from the University of Birmingham suggests that, at present, the extent to which unplanned admissions are actually inappropriate is unclear. It argues that, as yet, there are no standard definitions or agreed procedures. More significantly, the knowledge of patients has not been taken into account.
Professor Jon Glasby, who leads the project, says: “We need to recognise that the patient is an expert. It is likely that they are the only ones with a long-term perspective on their condition. They know how their health has changed over time and when preventative measures might have been taken to avoid hospitalisation. Such knowledge is critical to understanding how to reduce inappropriate admissions.”