DEPARTMENT FOR WORK
AND PENSIONS News Release (Reference DRC- 030) issued by The
Government News Network on 10 May 2007
Savings to health
care and social care budgets could be made by investing in housing
adaptations, and investment in independent living benefits
individuals and wider society, according to research published
today by the Office for Disability Issues (ODI).
The research was commissioned by the ODI as part of its
Independent Living Review to identify imaginative and practical
solutions to support independent living for disabled people.
'Better outcomes, lower costs' summarises existing
evidence relating to savings to health and social care budgets as
a result of investment in housing adaptations and housing
improvements. Key findings are:
* falls leading to hip fracture cost the UK £726 million in 2000.
Housing adaptations, including better lighting, reduce the number
of falls;
* housing adaptations can also reduce depression, which in turn
may both reduce the number of falls and improve mental health;
* providing adaptations and equipment can speed hospital
discharge or prevent hospital admission by preventing accident and
illness. Estimated savings from the Welsh Care and Repair
Agencies' Rapid Response programme are between £4 million and
£40 million;
* adaptations support carers, preventing back injuries and
reducing both carers' stress and health service costs.
Supporting carers may enable an individual to remain at home
rather than being admitted to more costly residential care;
* good housing adaptations can enable seriously disabled people
to move out of residential care, with estimated potential savings
of £10 million a year on residential care costs in England;
* home modifications can prevent or delay residential care for
disabled older people. One year's delay will save £26,000
per person, less the cost of the adaptation (average £6,000);
* the right adaptations can reduce high levels of home care. An
hour's home care per day costs £5,000 a year - the potential
savings per year would be millions of pounds.
The evidence in the report supports the Audit Commission's
recommendations for greater investment in adaptations and
equipment to secure better value for money, reduce waste and
deliver better quality of life.
'The costs and benefits of independent living'
summarises existing evidence about investment in independent
living. The key findings are:
* there is substantial qualitative evidence that independent
living provides significantly more benefits for individuals than
more traditional service responses;
* there is some evidence that enabling independent living costs
less to deliver. A change in delivery model would require
additional resources but over time these would be recouped in savings;
* there is evidence of significant costs for the Exchequer in not
addressing barriers faced by disabled people;
* however, a more systematic cost benefit analysis of the impacts
at individual, service delivery and macro-economic levels needs to
be conducted.
Notes for editors
1. The ODI's Independent Living Review was launched in July
2006. See http://www.dwp.gov.uk/mediacentre/pressreleases/2006/jul/fmc078.asp
2. The Prime Minister's Strategy Unit report,
'Improving the Life Chances of Disabled People',
published in January 2005, set out the Government's strategy
for disabled people. It included some sixty recommendations for
improving disabled people's lives, focusing on four key
themes: early years, the transition from childhood into adulthood,
employment and independent living. The Office for Disability
Issues (ODI) was launched in December 2005 to drive this strategy
forward and report publicly on the progress being made.
3. 'Better outcomes, lower costs', by Frances Heywood
and Lynn Turner at the University of Bristol, is available on the
ODI website at: http://www.officefordisability.gov.uk/publications.
Hard copies can be obtained from
office-for-disability-issues@dwp.gsi.gov.uk. Alternate formats can
also be ordered from here.
4. 'The costs and benefits of independent living', by
consultants SQW, can be found on the ODI website at: http://www.officefordisability.gov.uk/publications.
Hard copies can be obtained from
office-for-disability-issues@dwp.gsi.gov.uk. Alternate formats can
also be ordered from here.
Textphone: 020 3267 5145
Website: http://www.officefordisability.gov.uk