Free personal and nursing care, Scotland, 2014-15

This Statistics Release presents the latest client and expenditure figures (financial year 2014-15) for Free Personal and Nursing Care (FPNC), which was introduced in Scotland in 2002. This release presents information from a variety of sources to give a picture of: the number of people that benefit from Free Personal Care and Free Nursing Care in Scotland; and the amount that Local Authorities spend on personal care services.


4. Background information

4.1 Data Sources

A variety of different data sources were used to compile this Statistics Release, as detailed below:

Community Care Monthly key monitoring return

Between 2002 and 2005 the Scottish Executive collected monthly information from local authorities regarding the number of residents supported in Care Homes.

From 2006, this information was collected quarterly in the Community Care Quarterly key monitoring return.

Community Care Quarterly key monitoring return

Since July 2002, the Scottish Executive - followed by the Scottish Government - has collected quarterly information on the number of people receiving personal care services at home and the number of self-funders receiving Free Personal Care and Free Nursing Care payments. The numbers represent only those people receiving FPC and FNC under the Community Care and Health (Scotland) Act 2002.

For Care Homes, this provides a count of those people who are self-funders and are assessed as requiring Free Personal Care and / or Free Nursing Care.

For Home Care, the figures show all people receiving personal care services at home. Many of these people would have received their personal care for free prior to the introduction of the Community Care and Health (Scotland) Act 2002, but prior to July 2002 this was dependent on local policy and the client's financial status. It is estimated that local authorities spent at least £64.5 million in 2001-02 on providing personal care services. Full details are available from:

http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Statistics/Browse/Health/Data/FPNC

The results of the quarterly survey are available at:

http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Statistics/Browse/Health/Data/QuarterlySurvey

A copy of the survey form and notes for guidance is available at:

http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Statistics/Browse/Health/DataSupplier

Free Personal and Nursing Care expenditure survey

The Scottish Executive carried out a separate survey asking about expenditure on Free Personal and Nursing Care for 2002-03 and 2003-04. From 2004-05 onwards this data has been collected through the Local Financial Return (LFR03):

http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Statistics/Browse/Local-Government-Finance

For Care Homes, the numbers represent spend on self-funding Care Home residents who receive FPC and FNC under the Community Care and Health (Scotland) Act 2002. It should be noted that Care Home residents who are supported under the National Assistance regulations also receive personal and nursing care for free but these costs are not considered here.

For Home Care, the numbers represent all spend on personal care services provided to people in their own homes.

Copies of all Social Care Surveys are available from the website at:

http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Statistics/Browse/Health/DataSupplier

Home Care Census / Social Care Survey

Information on Home Care services has been collected since the 1980s by means of an annual census. The census covers all Home Care services provided or purchased by Scottish local authorities.

An aggregated table return for the Home Care statistical collection was introduced in 1998, called the H1. Local authorities were asked to provide details of all Home Care services provided by their own staff, services bought in from other local authorities and also private / voluntary organisations. Information on client age, for level and type of service was introduced to the collection in 2005.

The information collected in the Home Care census was reviewed by the Home Care review group. A revised Home Care statistical collection was introduced in March 2010 which collected information on an individual basis for each Home Care client receiving home help services, meals services and community alarm / telecare services. From March 2013, this was merged with the Self-Directed Support / Direct Payments publication into the Social Care Survey. Further information is available from: http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Statistics/Browse/Health/Data/HomeCare

Local Financial Return (LFR03)

The Local Financial Return collects expenditure statistics for each local authority in Scotland. The LFR03 collects all expenditure and income relating to social work services. From 2004-05, questions relating to expenditure on Free Personal Care were added to the LFR03 return. Further information is available from:

http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Statistics/Browse/Local-Government-Finance

Each year, data validation work is conducted on each of these sources before the official publication of the Free Personal and Nursing Care statistics. As part of the 2014-15 validation process, each local authority was sent a spreadsheet summarising their statistics for the latest year. 29 out of 32 local authorities provided a response - no response was received from Dumfries & Galloway, Renfrewshire and West Dunbartonshire.

http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Statistics/Browse/Health/FPNC

4.2 Understanding the Statistics in this Report

All information in this Statistics Release is presented for the financial year 1st April to 31st March. Information is reported for a rolling ten-year period, in this case from the year 2005-06 to 2014-15.

Care Homes

In general, care should be taken when comparing the data on 'numbers' of people receiving Free Personal Care and 'expenditure' on Free Personal Care. The number of people receiving FPC and FNC payments is collected at the end of the financial year and therefore represents the number of people receiving payments at the end of March each year.

Due to the large number of admissions and discharges throughout the year, this does not necessarily represent the number of people receiving FPC for the full 52 weeks of the year. In the year to March 2015, there were 13,200 long-stay admissions to Care Homes for older people in Scotland (ISD Care Home Census). This represents over 250 long-stay admissions every week. It should be noted that these figures only provide a snapshot of the number of people receiving payments at the end of the year rather than a precise count of throughput.

Home Care

As with the Care Homes data, the quarterly data for FPC at home provides a snapshot at the end of the financial year. This will not compare directly with the expenditure data which takes into account fluctuations within each quarter. From 2009-10 onwards the Home Care Census (and from 2012-13 the Social Care Survey) has been used to provide the number of Home Care clients at the end of March each year.

4.3 Limitations of the Data

The CIPFA Best Value Accounting Code of Practice (BVACOP), requires the inclusion of overheads within expenditure. Since 2006-07 the LFR03 has required local authorities to include overheads in line with the BVACOP. It has been identified, however, that overheads were not being included consistently within expenditure figures by local authorities. In 2011, a revised time series for expenditure on FPNC payments from 2003-04 to 2008-09 was published, after extensive work to ensure that all figures included overheads.

Since the 2009-10 validation exercise, local authorities have been asked to confirm if their expenditure figures firstly contained overhead figures and then to either detail the amount included or to provide an estimate of that amount. Several local authorities are unable to calculate the specific cost of overheads attributed to the FPNC payments. Consequently, they are given the option of either providing their own estimates or having the Scottish Government provide an estimate for the latest year. In 2014-15, 20 local authorities provided their own estimates for overheads, and the rest were calculated by applying the rates of previous years (the average across local authorities is approximately 8% of total expenditure on FPNC payments). To take this into account, the expenditure figures presented in this report have been rounded to the nearest £10,000.

For some local authorities it appears that gross expenditure on personal care services at home is higher than overall net expenditure on Home Care services for certain years. This can happen for a number of reasons: a) where resource transfer from Health Boards has been included as income against Home Care services for older people; b) where supporting people grant has been included as income against Home Care services for older people; and c) where the personal care expenditure includes overheads but the Home Care expenditure returned in the LFR03 did not include an allocation of overheads.

Many local authorities have seen a rise in personal care at home costs from 2006-07. In addition to increased demand this is related to: a) a shift in the balance of care, away from Care Homes towards more care at home; b) the introduction of equal pay provision resulting in higher wage costs; and c) the provision of refunds to clients for meal preparation where this was previously charged for.

4.4 Support Services

From 2012-13 there were several changes to the format of the Local Government Finance return (LFR03) that local authorities submitted to the Scottish Government. Most notable was the introduction of a separate 'Support Services' row, which includes expenditure on Finance, Legal, Human Resources, IT, Internal Audit, Procurement and Asset Management. This figure would previously have been spread across other rows representing specific service types.

In order to make the figures presented here as comparable as possible with previous years, Net Expenditure in Care Homes and Net Expenditure on Home Care have been adjusted to account for the change in Support Services recording. This involves apportioning a fraction of the total Net Support Services expenditure for Older People to the Net Care Home / Home Care expenditure. The fraction to be applied is calculated using Gross Expenditure, in order to avoid negative values. The expenditure figures for Free Personal and / or Nursing Care have been validated by each local authority to include overheads in line with previous years, therefore these figures have not been adjusted to include Support Services.

4.5 Changes in Local Authorities

Highland

From 2013-14, the LFR03 return for Highland has been submitted in two parts: one by NHS Highland and the other by Highland Council (previously it was only Highland Council who submitted). For this publication we have aggregated the NHS and Council returns together to get a comparable figure to last year.

Renfrewshire

From 2013-14, the figure for Net expenditure on Care Home Services for older people includes cleaning cost allocation from other council services that was not included in previous years, which has resulted in a slight increase.

4.6 Changes to the data

During the data validation process, some local authorities identified errors within data returns that has resulted in previously published figures being revised for some tables. This also means that figures will differ slightly from those within source publications. It should be noted that the revisions made at local authority level have had a comparatively small effect on the Scotland figures.

4.7 Data estimation

In 2014-15, expenditure on Free Personal Care provided to people in their own home was estimated for Angus and Scottish Borders. Both local authorities recorded all Home Care expenditure in the 'Other' category in the LFR03 return.

To estimate expenditure, the hourly rate (£16.59) for Free Personal Care provided at home across Scotland in 2013-14 was estimated and multiplied by the total number of Free Personal Care at home hours in each local authority in 2014-15.

The number of residents in Care Homes in 2014-15, furthermore, was estimated for Perth & Kinross due to a discrepancy observed between the number of self-funders and the total number of long-stay residents. To do this, the change in expenditure in Perth & Kinross on Free Personal & Nursing Care in Care Homes between 2013-14 and 2014-15 was applied to the number of residents in Care Homes in 2013-14.

4.8 Cost of respondent burden

Based on information provided by local authorities in recent years, such as the time taken in hours to extract the requested information and complete the survey form, the estimated cost of responding to this survey has been estimated at £400.

Formula

4.9 Further information

This statistics release was published on 26th April 2016. Further details and analysis are available on request from the following address:

Steven Gillespie
Basement Rear
St Andrews House
Edinburgh
EH1 3DG

Tel: 0131 244 3777
E-mail: SWStat@gov.scot

This Statistics Release is also available via the Scottish Government website:
http://www.gov.scot/Topics/Statistics/Browse/Health/Publications

Contact

Email: Steven Gillespie

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