Read the summary of highlights from day one.
You’re the ‘pivotal’ profession in the community rehab space, Jenny Keane tells delegates
In Thursday's Opening Plenary session, focused on enhancing community-based rehabilitation, Jenny Keane, National Director Intermediate Care and Rehabilitation at NHS England, told occupational therapists that they have the ‘unique skills set’ needed to deliver on this agenda.
Jenny delved into the intermediate care review and how the occupational therapy community’s expertise and influencing has shaped NHS England’s thinking around community rehabilitation and how in her role she’s using the levers available to make sure that rehabilitation is increasing in profile.
She also said she is working to ensure NHS England and other government departments are ‘listening to and hearing that message’.
A key message was that to be able to support system flow and look after people well requires the joining up of all parts of the system. And that, as much focus as there has been to date on the in-house hospital processes, ‘none of it will really lever any change’ until the issue of community capacity and rehabilitation is fully addressed.
The crux of the matter, Jenny said is that she believes ‘we don’t have a discharge problem, we actually have a problem with is having the right capacity and capability within our community services to be able to recover people’.
Calling for the language around community rehab to be simplified – especially when it comes to conversations with the executive team and government colleagues – she shared that she has started to use the description: ‘…ensuring we have the services that can support people to “walk, talk, eat, drink, sleep and engage with activities of normal living”.’
Pointing out that, tonight in England, over 1,000 people with spend the night in acute hospital instead of a more appropriate place, like their home or in the community, Jenny went on to talk about how the transformation of out-of-services is a key element of the NHS’s recovery, in which intermediate care will play a key role.
There are a number of areas for action, she said, when it comes to scaling up the intermediate care ambition, including: increasing capacity; growing the workforce; improving discharge; joining up with social care through the Better Care Fund; and working with Frontrunners, local authorities and voluntary and community partners.
By the Autumn of this year, NHS England will develop a new intermediate care framework and national standard for rapid discharge into intermediate care, based on the learning from the Intermediate Care pilot sites, she promised.
The main objectives will be to reduce length of stay and beds lost, decrease long-term care costs and increase the number of people receiving rehab after an acute hospital admission, thus improving people’s outcomes and function.
She said: ‘I really do hope… that there will be more opportunity for system influencing and strategic leadership roles [for occupational therapists] to emerge as we start to role this intermediate care plan out across England.
‘It will be absolutely pivotal to the success of the work that there are occupational therapists – particularly OTs with a local authority background – that step into that space.
‘I have to do a lot of influencing at government level to explain that there isn’t just one profession involved in rehab; that the bit that we need for community rehab and reablement is occupational therapy…
‘So, it’s a bit of an ask from [the occupational therapy community]. There’s nobody else that can do this work. There is nobody else that has the experience across health and local authority doing that ‘bridge’ and integration piece.
‘You’re the profession that can do that – others can too – but you have a unique skills set in this space that I think we will need to see flourish.