£100m Funding to Improve Patient Flow
£100 million funding in the 2025-26 Budget to tackle delayed discharge will make Hospital at Home the ‘biggest hospital in the country’, if approved by Parliament
The service, which offers a safe alternative to admission to an acute hospital, will grow to 2,000 beds by December 2026, alleviating pressure on health and social care settings.
The money will also ensure all A&E departments in Scotland have frailty units directly linked to community care settings, with an increased focus on collaborative working to identify ways to improve patient experience.
It is part of an overall £200 million package to clear the majority of new outpatient and treatment time patient waits and renew the NHS.
£100 million funding in the 2025-26 Budget to tackle delayed discharge will make Hospital at Home the ‘biggest hospital in the country’, if approved by Parliament.
— Scot Gov Health (@scotgovhealth) December 13, 2024
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Background
- As part of a record £21 billion investment in health and social care, the draft Scottish Budget for 2025-26, includes more than £2 billion for social care and integration, exceeding our target to increase funding by 25% by over £350 million
- Hospital at Home it was the equivalent eighth largest hospital for older people emergency inpatients, according to recent figures from Health Improvement Scotland.
- The Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Glasgow is currently the biggest hospital for bed capacity in Scotland, with Public Health Scotland data in November showing it had, on average, 1,581 staffed beds from April to June 2024.
- Discharge to Assess forms part of the best practice approaches that we want all local areas to adopt. The British Red Cross-run Discharge to Assess initiative in Fife an innovative example of how partnership working can alleviate pressures on acute settings.