FutureScot
Health & Social Care

Hospital at Home £85 million expansion will be ‘game-changer’ for frail patients, says Scottish NHS innovation partner

Photograph: Robert Kneschke/Shutterstock.com

An £85 million expansion of the national Hospital at Home service will be a ‘game-changer’ for frail patients, according to a Scottish NHS innovation partner.

Under recently announced plans, the commitment to 2,000 virtual beds across Scotland by 2026 will significantly improve lives and reduce the strain on frontline acute services.

The expansion comes in tandem with the national rollout of specialist frailty services across all 30 of Scotland’s A&E departments by the end of this summer, a move aimed at reducing waiting lists and the duration of hospital stays.

Robert Rea, head of innovation at InnoScot Health, said: “Thanks to personalised, remote, real-time technology, the Hospital at Home service provides high-quality, patient-centred care for frail people living in their own homes, avoids unnecessary hospital stays, and frees up capacity.

“With some 35 per cent of the population over 65 identified as mildly frail, 15 per cent moderately frail, and five per cent severely frail, the need for acceleration of dedicated, targeted innovation is clear.”

He added: “Now, thanks to this timely further investment, I believe we are increasingly turning the tide in Scotland’s efforts to deliver innovation-driven improvements in better managing and coordinating care in the community and striking the right balance with social care and hospitals.”

Injuries caused by falls are thought to be a leading cause of hospital admissions for those over 75 – with the number of people in that category projected to grow by 340,000 over the next 25 years – but Hospital at Home tech means that many of those falls can be avoided.

Announcing the additional investment during a visit to NHS Forth Valley’s Hospital at Home service, First Minister John Swinney said it would help to “ensure many patients can receive first class NHS care in the comfort of their own homes and not have to travel to a hospital where it isn’t required”.

He insisted that the expansion would also be aimed at “improving the flow of patients throughout the NHS and generating greater capacity for staff”.

Amongst frailty-targeting homegrown tech is the Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS). The judgement-based tool helps assess illnesses, function, thinking and understanding to generate a frailty score for further assessment.

CFS is available on the Right Decision Service – a ‘Once for Scotland’ source of digital tools enabling people to make quick and safe decisions based on validated evidence.

InnoScot Health initially worked in partnership with the Digital Health & Care Innovation Centre (DHI) to help develop the Right Decision Service, which was then launched by Healthcare Improvement Scotland (HIS).

The organisation has legal manufacturer responsibility for calculators, software, and decision support tools that are integrated into the Right Decision Service.

Related posts

Red Star: Streamlining heart failure treatment with cutting-edge AI 

Andrew Conkie
September 18, 2024

Musculoskeletal platform founded by ex-Premier League physiotherapist aims for wider rollout after Highlands success

Kevin O'Sullivan
March 14, 2025

Research highlights advantages of digital blood pressure system

Staff Writer
June 26, 2020
Exit mobile version