Westminster Hall is an alternative Chamber for MPs to hold debates, named after the adjoining Westminster Hall.
Each debate is chaired by an MP from the Panel of Chairs, rather than the Speaker or Deputy Speaker. A Government Minister will give the final speech, and no votes may be called on the debate topic.
This information is provided by Parallel Parliament and does not comprise part of the offical record
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship for the first time, Dr McCrea.
I congratulate the hon. Member for Wrexham (Ian Lucas) on securing this debate and on his persistence in pursuing the matter. I have noted what he said about his frustration in securing meetings with a couple of Ministers. At least we have had the chance this afternoon, albeit interrupted, to debate this important issue, and I am more than happy to talk to him if there are issues arising from this debate that he wants to pursue further.
The hon. Gentleman makes the point that how care is administered is incredibly important to the individual, and he also mentioned the profound impact that spinal injury has on the whole family and everyone involved. He talks about the emergence of a postcode lottery, but if we are honest with ourselves, the postcode lottery has always existed to some extent. The interpretation of rules has always varied somewhat across the country. Indeed, the Coughlan case was brought because of a failure to apply rules properly. I will return to that in due course, but it is essential that all areas of the country apply the rules properly, according to the guidelines, and apply the precedent that has been set.
I also pay tribute to the important work of the all-party group on spinal cord injury, which has had a major impact on issues affecting the estimated 40,000 people with spinal cord injury in the United Kingdom and Ireland alone. Every eight hours, a new person is told that they will never walk again, which is a stark reminder of the scale of spinal cord injury.
Thankfully, research is making important strides in developing new techniques to help spinal cord injury patients regain as much function and independence as possible. In 2011-12, the Medical Research Council spent £900,000 on research directly related to spinal cord injury. The Government also fund a wide range of research relating to spinal injury, and through the National Institute for Health Research, the Department of Health is funding research on spinal cord injury in biomedical research centres in Cambridge and London.
There is an increasing range of guidance available to provide advice on the causes, treatment and management of spinal cord injuries. Stakeholders such as the Spinal Injuries Association and Aspire provide information and support services for patients and their families following spinal injury, and we should pay tribute to the work of those organisations. In February 2008, the Royal College of Physicians published a guideline for GPs and other health professionals involved in the management of adults with spinal cord injury in the acute hospital setting. I am confident that that range of guidance will be useful for educating people and, critically, professionals on spinal injuries and how to manage them.
More work is taking place to develop guidance for the treatment of those with spinal injuries. The Department has asked the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence to produce guidance on the assessment and imaging of patients at high risk of spinal injury. NICE is developing five pieces of guidance relating to trauma, with expected publication dates in June and October 2015. Each piece of guidance will focus on a different aspect of trauma care. The guidance on spinal injury assessment will form one part of the wider work and is expected to be published in May 2015.
The hon. Gentleman appropriately raised NHS continuing health care for individuals with spinal cord injuries. NHS continuing health care is a package of health and social care that is arranged and funded solely by the NHS for individuals outside the hospital setting who have complex, ongoing health care needs. It is important to say that eligibility for NHS continuing health care is dependent not on an individual’s condition or diagnosis—it is important to maintain this point—but on the individual’s specific care needs. That must be appropriate, so that what is assessed is what the individual needs.
The assessment for NHS continuing health care is complex and involves a multidisciplinary team co-ordinated by the relevant clinical commissioning group looking at an individual’s needs across 12 care domains and assessing how those needs interact. The process determines whether individuals have what is called a primary health need. If they do so, they will be entitled to continuing health care.
The hon. Gentleman specifically referred to concerns about specialist involvement in continuing health care assessments. The national framework, which underpins the assessment and decision making for NHS continuing health care, makes it clear that someone with specialist knowledge is involved in the process, with other highly skilled professionals, such as doctors, nurses, social care staff and therapists. If that is not happening in an area, that is a failure to follow the national framework and should be challenged. I am interested to hear about cases in which that is not happening, because corners cannot be cut—things should be done properly. He made an important point.
The family or representative may also be involved, to ensure that a holistic picture of the individual’s needs is properly identified. After all, the family probably knows best about what the impact really is.
Individuals receiving NHS continuing health care will have their case reviewed three months after the initial decision and annually thereafter. It is important to remember that the focus of the review is not only whether the individual remains eligible, but whether their needs are being properly met and the package of care remains appropriate. Let me be clear, however, that an individual must be kept fully informed about the process and any proposed change to the care arrangement.
The hon. Gentleman expressed concerns about refusals of NHS continuing health care or the package being drawn too narrowly, suggesting that the Coughlan judgment was not being followed and that cases more serious than the Coughlan one were being refused—I think I have put that correctly, from what he said. I again make the point that if any areas are failing to follow the national framework, that must be challenged. I appreciate that families may not always understand or know how to go about challenging, or what they are entitled to, but we all have responsibility to disseminate that message and to encourage people to challenge decisions that cannot be justified.
The Minister is being very constructive in his response. Is there any process for monitoring the decisions? Organisations such as the Spinal Injuries Association can bring individual cases forward, but there needs to be some sort of system to ensure that the rules, which I am grateful that the Minister is stressing today, are being enforced as a matter of course.
The hon. Gentleman makes a fair point. I was about to say that I will ask NHS England to provide me with an assessment of how the work of CCGs complies with the guidelines. The very fact of that request for information will help focus minds and ensure that things are being done properly.
I am aware that there are some concerns about how autonomic dysreflexia is reflected in NHS continuing health care assessments. It is unique to spinal cord injuries and should always be treated as a medical emergency. The needs of individuals experiencing autonomic dysreflexia are to manage both the risk of episodes occurring and the risks involved if and when such episodes occur. Such risks, and therefore the needs, vary from one individual to another. It would be relevant to establish whether the individual has signs and symptoms of an advancing episode or whether the episodes are random and unpredictable.
It has been suggested that more people with spinal injuries are being placed in nursing home settings, rather than being offered a care package in their own home. The national framework is clear that NHS continuing health care packages should be as far as possible personalised—designed to meet that individual’s needs—and that the individual’s wishes should be taken into account. It is our hope that personal health budgets—a concept developed under the previous Labour Government, but strongly pursued under this Government—will give people more personal control over their care.
We recognise that it is more efficient for people with long-term conditions such as spinal cord injuries to have control over their own budget for health and social care, because they are less likely to duplicate services or to choose ones that are not right for them. Beyond being efficient, however, it is simply what we should be doing: we should be putting the individuals in charge and allowing them to determine their priorities. On that basis, CCGs are already able to offer personal health budgets to people on a voluntary basis, if they consider that it is cost-effective and will improve the individual’s quality of life.
We have also brought in legislation that will allow CCGs to offer direct cash payments as a way of managing personal health budgets. However, to make personal health budgets more of a reality for people, we have put measures in place to ensure that CCGs go further than offering them only on a voluntary basis. As of April 2014, those receiving NHS continuing health care will have the right to ask for a personal health budget, including a direct payment. Using a personalised care planning process, personal health budgets help people choose how to meet their health needs in ways that work for them.
I have just set out how the process for NHS continuing health care is intended to work. Let us not pretend, however, that it works perfectly in every case—it clearly does not. I am delighted that the Spinal Injuries Association continues to have a strong presence on the NHS national continuing health care stakeholder group. It is important that its voice and that of the people it represents are heard.
Eligibility for NHS continuing health care depends on a needs-based assessment. Therefore, some individuals will not be eligible, but they must still receive the appropriate level of care and support. Disjointed care is a source of complete frustration for patients and staff alike. To stay relevant to changing needs, different parts of the NHS and other organisations such as social services have to work more effectively together to drive joined-up care.
The first NHS mandate sets out a requirement to provide
“care which feels more joined-up to the users of services”,
and which
“ensures people experience smooth transitions between care settings and organisations”.
That is vital, and there is a total focus in Government on integrating and joining up care around the needs of the individual patient. On that basis, we have asked NHS England to make huge efforts to focus on delivering integrated care and support to improve outcomes for patients and for people who use those services.
I thank the hon. Gentleman for securing the debate. The issues that we have discussed this afternoon are important, because of their impact on people who have sustained a spinal injury which in itself is completely life changing. We must ensure that the care and support systems work to meet their needs and to enable the best possible quality of life and outcomes for those individuals.
Question put and agreed to.