Mental Health Inpatient Census 2022 Parts 1 and 2

Results of the sixth Mental Health & Learning Disability Inpatient Census and Outwith NHS Scotland Placements Census, 2022.


Methodology and further information

Time period and scope

The Inpatient Census was carried out by the Scottish Government and all NHS Boards, as at 23:59, 11th April 2022. This is the sixth time the Census has been undertaken.

The Census was conducted in 3 parts and covered:

  • every patient occupying a Psychiatric, Addiction, or Learning Disability inpatient bed in an NHS Scotland facility on the Census date (Part 1).
  • every mental health, addiction or learning disability patient whose care is funded by NHS Scotland, but is being treated in a facility that is out with NHS Scotland (e.g. in a Local Authority care home, in a private hospital, in a NHS England facility), on the Census date (Part 2).
  • every patient who was in receipt of Hospital Based Complex Clinical Care (HBCCC) in general acute inpatient beds on the Census date (Part 3).

The Census guidance notes are available on request.

This report contains analysis from Parts 1 and 2 of the Census.

A separate report has also been published covering all Hospital Based Complex Clinical Care patients from Parts 1, 2 and 3.

Data completeness

NHS Scotland facilities (Part 1)

All 12 NHS Scotland territorial boards which have Psychiatric, Addiction, or Learning Disability inpatient beds provided a return.

The State Hospital (Special NHS Board) provided a return.

Data completeness for individual Census questions varied. Where there was missing data, this has been footnoted against the corresponding table or displayed in the chart. Although most health boards had some missing data, for 143 of their patients (47%) NHS Tayside could only provide minimal data, including admission dates, age and diagnoses.

Patients treated outwith NHS Scotland (Part 2)

All NHS Scotland territorial boards which have mental health, addiction or learning disability patients whose care is funded by NHS Scotland, but are being treated in a facility that is outwith NHS Scotland provided a return.

Data completeness for individual Census questions varied.

Hospital based complex clinical care (Part 3)

Data completeness for the Hospital Based Complex Clinical Care Census is reported separately in the Hospital Based Complex Clinical Care Census.

Data collection

The Scottish Government’s EAS Unit provide data collection and validation support for a number of statistical returns across Education, Health, Social Care, Social Work, Transport, Housing, Communities, Finance, Justice, Environment and some 3rd Sector. The EAS Unit provided secure data collection software (procxed.net) and first stage data validation checks. Further information about the data collection software can be found in the Data Privacy Impact Assessment which can be obtained on request from MHIC@gov.scot  

Health & Social Care Analysis Division undertook 2nd stage validation checks.

The data collection, analysis and report has been overseen and produced by statisticians. All statisticians in the Scottish Government are part of the Government Statistical Service (GSS) which comprises the statistics divisions of all major departments in the UK Government, and the devolved Governments of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland plus the Office for National Statistics, which has a coordinating role for the GSS.

Revisions to 2022 report and archiving of pre-2022 publications.

As a result of a 2024 project to improve the internal coding used in the analysis of the MHIC, some errors were discovered in the process used to collate the data needed to build the MHIC dataset.

The errors meant that a small amount of data relating to the number of inpatient beds was missing across the years 2014 (Forth Valley), 2016 (Fife and Lothian), 2017 (Grampian and Lothian), 2019 (Tayside) and 2022 (Lanarkshire and Lothian). The MHIC in 2018 was unaffected. The majority of health boards (8) were unaffected by any errors across the timespan of the MHIC.

The missing number of beds and the health boards affected across the years are described and tabulated in the tables below:

Table 20: Inpatient beds missing from Mental Health Inpatient Census Part 1 at the time of publication, by health board.

Mental health, learning disability and addiction beds, NHS Scotland, 2014-2019 census.

Year

Geography

Beds missing

Beds - published

Beds - revised

Percentage missing

2014

Scotland

16

4532

4548

0.4%

 

NHS Forth Valley

16

240

256

6.3%

2016

Scotland

98

4254

4352

2.3%

 

NHS Fife

54

252

306

17.6%

 

NHS Lothian

44

645

689

6.4%

2017

Scotland

32

4205

4237

0.8%

 

NHS Grampian

10

353

363

2.8%

 

NHS Lothian

22

649

671

3.3%

2019

Scotland

10

3922

3932

0.3%

 

NHS Tayside

10

357

367

2.7%

Table 21: Inpatient beds missing from Mental Health Inpatient Census Part 1 at the time of publication, by ward type.

Mental health, learning disability and addiction beds, NHS Scotland, 2014-2019 census.

Year

Ward type

Beds missing

Beds - published

Beds - revised

Percentage missing

2014

All

16

4532

4548

0.4%

 

Dementia care
& treatment

16

*

*

*

2016

All

98

4254

4352

2.3%

 

Acute

30

*

*

*

 

Addiction

24

*

*

*

 

Young people's
unit

32

*

*

*

 

IPCU

12

*

*

*

2017

All

32

4205

4237

0.8%

 

Continuing care / long stay /
 recovery (non dementia)

14

500

514

2.7%

 

Young people's
unit

18

54

72

25.0%

2019

All

10

3922

3932

0.3%

 

Addiction

10

72

82

12.2%

*data not published for census years 2014 and 2016.

The key messages are:

  • The missing data for beds is not impactful at a Scotland level and does not affect all health boards.
  • None of the key messages, trends or conclusions at a national level from previous publications are affected.
  • Some health board-level data and tables will be affected in previous publications, although broadly, the impact is limited.
  • Whilst the amount of missing data is small, it permeates through a range of tables and commentary which makes a complete overhaul of all previous years publications prohibitively, and disproportionately, costly in terms of the analyst time required to re-run and republish all of the data.

The actions we have taken are:

  • Changes to the data collection procedures and new validation checks have been implemented to prevent a re-occurrence in the future.
  • The publication and data for 2022 has been revised and re-published alongside the latest 2023 publication.
  • The latest publication (2023) uses all of the revised data from 2022.
  • Tables and graphs in the revised 2022 and latest 2023 publication have been clearly marked for users to indicate that direct comparisons (for some health boards) are not possible across the entire time series.
  • Publications prior to 2022 have not been revised and have instead been archived in a separate part of the HSC website with clear messages for users about the missing data.
  • The decision to archive pre-2022 publications was taken after a consideration of the resource required to rebuild and re-run all of the analysis and republish all of the time series from 2014 onwards. The conclusion was that this work would have incurred a disproportionate cost, given the relatively small impact of the missing data. The best solution was therefore to archive the data and publications, still making them available to users but with clear signposting about the approximate nature of the results.

Data confidentiality

A Data Protection Impact Assessment was undertaken prior to the Census which outlines how patient confidentiality is maintained. The Data Protection Impact Assessment can be obtained on request from MHIC@gov.scot  

In addition, statistical disclosure control has been applied to the analysis. Statistical Disclosure Control (SDC) covers a range of ways of changing data which are used to control the risk of an intruder finding out confidential information about a person or unit (such as a household or business). This publication has used the following methods where there are under 5 patients in a particular category:

  • Suppression of possibly disclosive cells (e.g. where the value is small) which means that the value for that cell in the table is not given and secondary suppression of cells which means at least one other value in the row or column is also not given to ensure that disclosive cells cannot be deduced through subtraction
  • Table redesign and recoding, where cells are grouped together to protect small value cells.

Further information about Statistical Disclosure Control is available here:

Statistical disclosure control - Office for National Statistics (ons.gov.uk)

Health Conditions

The International Classification of Diseases (10th Revision) has been used in the analysis for specific health conditions. The health condition and relevant ICD-10 code can be found in the following table:

Selected health conditions

ICD-10 Codes

Dementia

F00 – F03

Alcohol misuse

F10

Drug misuse

F11 – F19

Schizophrenia

F20

Schizotypal and delusional disorders

F21 – F25, F28 – F29

Manic episode

F30

Bipolar affective disorder

F31

Depression

F32 – F33

Persistent mood (affective) disorders

F34

Other mood (affective) disorders

F38 – F39

Neurotic, stress-related and somatoform

F40 – F45, F48

Behavioural syndromes

F50 – F55, F59

Personality Disorders

F60 – F66 and F68 – F69

Learning Disabilities

F70 – F73 and F78 – F79

Behavioural and emotional disorders with onset usually occurring in childhood and adolescence

F90 – F95 and F98

Autism

For the purpose of this report, the autism cohort is defined by the patient meeting at least one of the following criteria:

Diagnosis of Autism

ICD-10 Code F84.0 or F84.1

NHS Boards answered Yes to the following health condition question:

Autistic Spectrum Disorder

1 - Yes

0 - No

Alcohol misuse cohort

For the purpose of this report, the alcohol misuse cohort is defined by the patient meeting at least one of the following criteria:

Diagnosis of Alcohol Misuse

ICD-10 Code F10

NHS Boards answered either 1 or 3 to the following question:

 

Was there a history of alcohol dependence or substance abuse in the four weeks prior to admission to hospital/care home?

 

1 - Yes – alcohol dependence or harmful use of alcohol only

2 - Yes – substance abuse (excluding alcohol)

3 - Yes – both alcohol dependence and other substance abuse

The above definition is applicable for patients treated within NHS Scotland facilities only.

Drugs misuse cohort

For the purpose of this report, the drug misuse cohort is defined by the patient meeting at least one of the following criteria:

Diagnosis of Drug Misuse

ICD-10 Code F11 – F19

NHS Boards answered either ‘2’ or ‘3’ to the following question:

 

Was there a history of alcohol dependence or substance abuse in the four weeks prior to admission to hospital/care home?

 

1 - Yes – alcohol dependence or harmful use of alcohol only

2 - Yes – substance abuse (excluding alcohol)

3 - Yes – both alcohol dependence and other substance abuse

The above definition is applicable for patients treated within NHS Scotland facilities only.

A question on non-prescribed drug use during hospital stay in the 2016 Census that contributed to the drug misuse count was not asked in 2017 so that questions on physical health checks to be included. However, only a small number of patients using non-prescribed drugs during hospital stay had no prior substance use in the 4 weeks before admission. Therefore, its exclusion had minimal impact on totals.

Forensic patients

Forensic patients were identified if NHS Boards indicated ‘yes’ to the following Census question: is the patient being managed primarily by forensic services?

Access to the data for further research

To enable further research and statistical analysis, extracts of the Inpatient Census data may be made available for approved researchers.

Academic researchers must initially apply to the ‘Statistics Public Benefit and Privacy Panel’ or the ‘Public Benefit and Privacy Panel for Health and Social Care Information Governance (scot.nhs.uk) to gain access to the Inpatient Census data. If the ‘Statistics Public Benefit and Privacy Panel’ or the Public Benefit and Privacy Panel for Health and Social Care’ approve an application then a copy of the original application form and a copy of the approval letter should be emailed to the following address MHIC@gov.scot for approval by the Scottish Government (Health & Social Care Analysis Division and the Principal Medical Officer for Mental Health).

NHS Boards will have a version of the Inpatient Census dataset which contains information about patients for whom they are responsible for providing treatment for, or are responsible for funding. NHS boards will have their own arrangements in place for researchers to access health data. All Boards have a Caldicott Guardian who is responsible for assuring confidentiality and enabling appropriate data sharing, and a director responsible for research and development.

Contact

mhic@gov.scot

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