West Wales has responded to growing pressure on NHS and social care services with new tech-enabled community support for older people and those with care or health needs at home.
Launched two weeks ahead of the first UK-wide lockdown in March 2020; it is the first project of its kind in the UK, connecting over 1,800 vulnerable people to preventative care, and with more than 18,500 pro-active wellbeing calls made in just three months of the first lockdown, and many more since.
Inspired by a technique used in Spain – a global leader in telecare – the CONNECT project is run by Carmarthenshire County Council’s Delta Wellbeing team who are working with technology-enabled care specialist, Tunstall Healthcare, to identify potential health and wellbeing issues at the earliest opportunity and provide care and support where, and when, it is needed most.
People have become more isolated through the pandemic and have really benefitted from having a call from someone, just checking in to see how things are
Supporting technology includes easy-to-use video calling, Lifeline emergency alarm systems, fall detectors, GPS tracking, and 24/7 access to the appropriate community response service.
This is helping to reduce social isolation and avoiding hundreds of ambulance callouts during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.
Running across Carmarthenshire, Ceredigion and Pembrokeshire, since its launch it has:
- Assessed the needs of over 1,800 people living in the community thorough the CONNECT service to develop a personalised support package, helping them to live independently at home
- Supported more than 8,500 people shielding during national lockdown – ensuring they had access to food, virtual social contact, and emergency assistance
- Responded to 1,646 callouts, with fewer than 100 of these (6%) needing escalation to emergency services
- Sent rapid response community teams to help 529 people who had a fall at home – with 97% of all calls attended to within 60 minutes. Without the service, they would have had to wait for an ambulance
Crucially, it is easing pressure on the NHS by identifying patients who could stay in their own homes.
And, by working with clinicians, it can also speed up a patient’s discharge from hospital by ensuring the right support package is in place, freeing up valuable bed spaces for acute cases and reducing the risk of hospital-acquired infection.
Service user, 94-year-old Nancy Featherstone, has been using the Lifeline pendant for a few years to enable her to safely live in her own home. But, in April 2020, at the start of the COVID-19 lockdown, her daughter-in-law, Catherine, jumped at the chance to access more services from Delta CONNECT to help her stay in touch with her family.
Catherine said: “The service really has been a Godsend for three generations of our family.
“When Delta provided a tablet, my mother-in-law was apprehensive and unsure as to how she’d get on with it – but it didn’t take long. It's been so positive for her, and for us.”
Eighty-two-year-old, Rex Greenwood Jones, adds: “I’d been in hospital for four months and was really down in the dumps. It really helped when I spoke to Louise, the community wellbeing officer. She brought me back from the depths of despair.
“I can’t speak highly enough of CONNECT. Knowing that there was someone at the end of the phone for me was a lifeline and was so reassuring for my family as well.”
The project has been supported by the Welsh Government’s Transformation Fund through the West Wales Care Partnership Board - bringing together Carmarthenshire, Ceredigion and Pembrokeshire County Council’s, Hywel Dda University Health Board, and representatives of the third and independent sectors.
This preventative, community-focused approach has been well received across the region – and helped to ease pressure on NHS and social care services at a critical time
Councillor Jane Tremlett, Delta Wellbeing governance board chairman, said: “People have become more isolated through the pandemic and have really benefitted from having a call from someone, just checking in to see how things are.
“This preventative, community-focused approach has been well received across the region – and helped to ease pressure on NHS and social care services at a critical time.“This type of pro-active tech-supported care has never been fully established at scale in the UK.
“The model of care that works so well in Spain, and specifically Barcelona, couldn’t be replicated here exactly as our health and social care systems are very different – so we learnt from their experience and invested time and research to adapt their proven approach so that it could work well for or our communities.”
Gavin Bashar, managing director of Tunstall Healthcare – adds: “The way technology is used to support health and social services is changing – it’s playing a much-more-preventative role, helping to avoid emergencies and supporting health and wellbeing.
Global studies have found that this approach to technology-supported care can play a significant role in helping people to stay independent in their own homes for longer.”
There are now plans to use the approach in other areas of Wales.