NHS P 2025 Case Study Bundle RGB PDF for Website

OUTCOMES

The HomeFirst programme has seen many positive outcomes, from seasonal pressures on the acute hospital being relieved, to a reduction of the system’s reliance on long-term care. Most importantly, residents of Leeds are receiving highly effective services and are supported in achieving significantly improved outcomes. As of September 2024, the programme is having the following impact on outcomes across intermediate care in Leeds: ƒ 169 more people able to go home after their time in intermediate care rather than a long- term bedded setting each year ƒ 8.2 day reduction in the average length of stay in short-term beds ƒ 421 more people going directly home after their stay in hospital each year ƒ 786 fewer adults admitted to hospital each year ƒ 31% reduction in length of stay for complex patients with no current reason to reside ƒ 522 additional people benefitting from reablement each year ƒ The effectiveness of the home-based reablement offer has increased by 8% (in terms of long-term home care hours following the service), with a 19% increase in the proportion of people leaving the service fully independent ƒ 33% decrease in readmission rates after receiving home-based reablement ƒ This performance translates to £23.7m per annum of equivalent financial benefit to the system. These benefits are spread across system partners and are a combination of cost- out, future cost avoidance, or investment in quality. Embedding and sustaining the changes is an important component of the work allowing for long term change that can be maintained by teams. There is more to do to deliver the full vision of the programme and ensure that Leeds Health and Care Partnership is able to support the changing needs of the population in years to come, but the impact and approach of HomeFirst delivers a strong foundation to build from. The beauty of HomeFirst is that it has brought people together through a partnership and TeamLeeds approach to look at all the key transitional points where people move from the community to hospital, from hospital to home, and from hospital to community care beds. It feels so much more joined-up now because we have had so much commitment to doing this as a system rather than individual organisations.” Sam Prince, Executive Director of Operations, Leeds Community Healthcare NHS Trust

Made with FlippingBook - Online catalogs