Near-£500k saving with removal of face-to-face care at night

Councillors will be asked to agree a full consultation on the plan with service users and members of the public when they meet next Thursday.Councillors will be asked to agree a full consultation on the plan with service users and members of the public when they meet next Thursday.
Councillors will be asked to agree a full consultation on the plan with service users and members of the public when they meet next Thursday.
A ‘repositioning’ of through the night care provided by Scottish Borders Council will net a saving of almost £500k, according to a new report.

The Night Support Service, operating from 10pm to 7.30am, currently provides planned care and support through the night and may include safety checks, assistance to bed and assistance to the toilet.

Now plans have been revealed to replace that service where appropriate with the introduction of alarms, bed sensors and door activation monitors and by a change in shift patterns to 8pm to midnight and 6am to 10am to negate the need for overnight continence support.

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A recent Pathfinder trial of this approach proved successful in Peebles and now it is proposed to roll it out across the region.

When Scottish Borders Council meets on Thursday, December 15, members will be asked to agree a full consultation on the plan with service users and members of the public.

Five Adult Social Care staff currently provide night support to approximately 70 Home Care Services users across the Borders, at the cost to the council of £594,295 per annum, making this a very expensive service, costing approximately £8,489 per service user.

A report to next week’s full council, from Julie Glen, the local authority’s Adult Social Care operations director, says: “The Pathfinder has shown that in many cases a physical visit is not actually required, or that care could be provided by a twilight shift. There was no increase of risk or accidents due to the removal of the physical visit.

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“Service users have reported that they benefit from no staff disturbance through the night. Families were supportive of the change with no complaints or concerns during the Pathfinder.

“Although there was no physical staff during Pathfinder, as the staff were on standby, the Pathfinder has shown that the team could be removed if a small Rapid Response Team was in place.”

The report says that if the Peebles approach was duplicated across the Borders the saving would be in the region of £451,642.

In addition there would be an approximate £7,000 saving on fuel and a reduction in staff mileage of 13,000 miles.

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The report adds: “Many council areas such as Midlothian and East Lothian have replaced face-to-face night support with the use of Assistive Technology/Technology Enabled Care (TEC) solutions.

“TEC has the ability to provide essential support using a person-centred approach; it gives increased choice and a sense of control to service users; improves service user safety by providing constant monitoring rather than a time-limited face-to-face visit and allows for an immediate response in the event there is a serious concern with a service user in need of urgent assistance.”