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COVID-19 mortality and long-term care: a UK comparison

David Bell (University of Stirling), Adelina Comas-Herrera (Care Policy and Evaluation Centre, London School of Economics and Political Science) , David Henderson (Edinburgh Napier University, Scottish Centre for Administrative Data Research), Siôn Jones (LE Wales and London Economics) Elizabeth Lemmon (University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh Health Economics), Mirko Moro (University of Stirling), Siobhán Murphy (Centre for Public Health, Queens University Belfast), Dermot O’Reilly (Centre for Public Health, Queens University Belfast), Pietro Patrignani (LE Wales and London Economics)

The full report is available here:

Summary

The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the oldest old, especially those within care home settings, has been devastating in many countries. The UK was no exception.  This article reviews the path of the COVID-19 pandemic across the UK long-term care (LTC) sector, indicating how it evolved in each of the four home nations.  It prefaces this with a description of LTC across the UK, its history and the difficulties encountered in establishing a satisfactory policy for the care of frail older people across the home nations. 

The paper makes several contributions. First, it provides an up to date estimate of the size of the adult care home sector across the UK – previous work has been bedevilled by inaccurate estimates of the number of care home places available.  It also assembles the limited information that is available on delayed transfers of care and testing of care home residents, both of which played a role in the evolution and consequences of the pandemic.  Its most important contributions are estimates of the number and share (the P-Score) of “excess deaths” in care homes in each of the home nations.  The P-Scores provide measures that allow comparisons across care home populations of different size.  Not only do we discuss the number of individuals affected, we also compare the proportions of care homes in each of the home nations that experienced a COVID-19 infection.  The paper also discusses deaths of care home residents outside care homes, largely in hospitals.  It reviews the sparse information on deaths at home of people who were receiving social care. 

Throughout our narrative, it will become clear that there have been major deficiencies in both the amount and the consistency of data available to clinicians, care sector staff and researchers trying to understand and to alleviate what has happened in care homes.  Thus, the final section makes some recommendations about the scope and timeliness of relevant data.  Collection of such data would seem to be a necessary condition to inform best practice and thus avoid a repeat of the troubling effects of the pandemic on people who use formal care between March and June 2020.

Main findings:

Size of the UK care home sector

To correct widespread misreporting of the size of the UK care home sector, we collected information from each of the four home nation care regulators. This gave us estimates of the number of care homes and allowed us to estimate the number of care home residents.

UK COVID-19 related deaths of care home residents

Across the UK, COVID-19 mortality data are broadly comparable. All four nations use the emergency ICD-10 codes for recording COVID-19 related deaths and publish these data weekly on their respective statistical authority websites.  Some, but not all, of these reports provide a breakdown of deaths by location of death (care home, hospital and other), both current and historic.  Nevertheless, we were able to assemble comparable data on deaths in care homes for each of the home nations and on the number and share of care homes where an infection took place. We also collected some limited data on deaths of care home residents outside care homes. 

Excess deaths during the pandemic period

Excess deaths are those deaths in excess of some measure of average or normal deaths over some comparable historic period. For deaths in care homes, we used average weekly deaths during the previous 5-year period. The absolute numbers of excess deaths were transformed to P-Scores by expressing excess deaths as the percentage increase over average historic deaths. This allows meaningful comparison between areas that differ substantially by size of population and record COVID-19 related deaths in different ways. 

Relative impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the care home population

As the share of adults living in care homes varies between the four nations, comparing the number of deaths of care home residents registered as involving COVID-19 and of excess deaths to the numbers of people living in care homes can show the relative impact of the COVID-19 pandemic among the care home population in the four nations.

Testing strategy in UK care homes

The testing strategy has been characterised by dramatic changes and has followed a similar pattern across all the four nations. Initially, testing was limited to a few residents with symptoms. The focus moved towards testing people discharged from hospitals to care homes and symptomatic staff in mid-April. More recently testing guidelines have been recognising the role played by asymptomatic transmission by both residents and staff. The four nations are all currently committed to regular testing and retesting collected on site. Doubts remain about the implementation of this ambitious strategy, given reports of limited testing capacity and data gaps across the four nations. Alternative approaches based on the rate of infection in the local area and adoption of innovative strategies such as pool testing and saliva-based testing kits should be considered.

Mortality among people using care at home

England is the only UK nation that has released COVID-19 mortality data on those receiving care at home. That data show that throughout the pandemic period there were a large number of excess deaths in the domiciliary setting. The majority of which were not recorded as being COVID-19 related. Overall, the English data demonstrate that, compared to care homes, the overall proportional increase in deaths was greater in the domiciliary setting[2].

Data limitations

Several data gaps limit our ability to offer a full account of the impact of COVID-19 within the LTC system. Most notable are the gaps surrounding care at home including data on unpaid carers and individuals’ choices over purchasing care; accurate and timely data on transfers of patients from hospital and into care homes; reliable data on testing of residents and staff and infection rates in the care home local area; care home level COVID-19 related mortality data.

Going forward, the urgency of the need to invest more resources into the collection of social care data and statistics has never been more apparent. Acting on the key messages and recommendations set out by the Office for Statistical Regulation (OSR) in their reports into adult social care statistics provides a starting point to prepare and ensure the devastating impact of COVID-19 in the care sector is not repeated.

About this report:

We attempt to present comparable data and statistics on the effect of COVID-19 within long-term care (LTC) settings in the UK, with a particular focus on care homes. We begin in Section 1 by providing a background to LTC policy and provision in the UK. In Section 2 we outline the ways each of the UK nations records COVID-19 mortality and the data sources for each. Further, we highlight the additional sources of mortality data on care home residents that are comparable across the four nations. These data sources inform our analysis in the subsequent sections. In Section 3, we describe the path of the pandemic throughout the UK, presenting data on COVID-19 mortality and the impact of COVID-19 within care homes. In Section 4, we present data on excess mortality – as one of the key metrics to assess the mortality impact of the pandemic and to make robust comparisons between countries – across the UK and by location of death. Section 5 highlights the testing regimes and their evolution. Section 6 comments on the impact of COVID-19 within the care at home setting. Finally, Section 7 discusses the findings and concludes.

The code for the figures in the report is available here


[1] See Table 1 for sources.

[2] Hodgson et al, 2020. Briefing: Adult social care and COVID-19 Assessing the impact on social care users and staff in England so far. Available here.

Please cite as:

Bell D, Comas-Herrera A, Henderson D, Jones S, Lemmon E, Moro M, Murphy S, O’Reilly D and Patrignani P (2020)  COVID-19 mortality and long term care: a UK comparison. Article in LTCcovid.org, International Long-Term Care Policy Network, CPEC-LSE, August 2020