The week after the publication of the National Dementia Strategy 1 a brief report in the British Medical Journal quoted Health Secretary Alan Johnson as saying that it was a landmark document: ‘It will transform the quality of dementia care’. Reference Eaton2 Dementia care is without doubt an important and only partially met need. However, on calculating the resources committed to fulfilling this need, based on figures in the strategy (Box 1), the new money amounts to 0.5% of total dementia expenditure, less than the rate of inflation. Calculating it another way, it is approximately £130 per person with dementia in England per year. How Alan Johnson sees this as having the ability to transform the quality of care is unclear. Certainly, these are dire times for the economy but that is no excuse for claiming to do much more than is actually realistic.
Health policies in the UK: the background
Implementation of health policy in the UK has often been optional rather than mandatory. In addition, the more conflicts of interest there are, the longer it takes to establish change. This dilemma extends as far back as the Public Health Act 1848, introduced to improve urban sanitation. With that Act, optional recommendations were almost entirely ignored. The conflict of interest then was that the wealthy - voters, landlords and employers - would have to pay for the interventions to improve the living conditions of the poor. Significant progress was only made when proposals became mandatory under the 1872 Act. Similarly, in 1950 it was recognised that smoking was harmful to health, Reference Doll and Hill3 yet banning smoking in workplaces and enclosed public places in England only became mandatory in 2007. Again, conflicts of interest arose between tax gleaned by the government, the interests of the tobacco industry and the health of the population.
Box 1 Cost of dementia care
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• Total cost of dementia in the UK: £17 billion per year 1
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• England has approximately 84% of the UK population, therefore the cost of dementia in England is approximately £14.3 billion
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• Money offered is £150 million in 2 years, which averages out at £75 million per year 1
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• As a percentage of total cost for dementia in England this new money is 0.52%
Mental health services provision for older people
When we explore the needs of older people, negative stereotypes remain influential: that older people do not contribute to society, that they are a financial burden in a tsunami of increasing longevity and growing population, they cannot benefit from clinical intervention, etc. Such opinions are an inappropriate exaggeration but they have consistently influenced healthcare policy for older people, especially in mental health. What is the point, governments have constantly argued, in funding care for the elderly mentally ill, when other groups of society could benefit more? This idea had already become entrenched in the foundation of the welfare state and the National Health Service (NHS) in the UK with the publication of the Beveridge report in 1942. Reference Beveridge4 It stated: ‘It is dangerous to be in any way lavish to old age, until adequate provision has been assured for all other vital needs’. It is only when service changes are defined as compulsory, such as the maximum of a 4-hour wait in accident and emergency departments, that they attract resources.
Planning for chronic degenerative disorders should be possible. But the apparent discovery by successive governments that the population of older people is increasing rapidly is repeatedly regarded with surprise. Such demographic changes are, of course, predictable. For older people, ideas which cost nothing abound, while financial commitment fades into obscurity.
Evidence for lack of financial commitment
Following the establishment of the NHS in 1948, the first innovative directive from the Ministry of Health to improve the well-being of mentally ill older people appeared in 1950. 5 It proposed psychogeriatric assessment units and accessible long-stay facilities. But it had a convenient opt-out clause: ‘It is recognised that the present conditions of financial stringency limit opportunities for action at this time’. A new policy in 1970 largely reiterated the 1950 directive. 6 The government's apathy towards improving older people's care in those intervening 20 years has been well documented. Reference Welshman7 Real progress came not from government, but from the enthusiasts around the country who pushed things forward.
In the 1980s, The Rising Tide was compiled by the Health Advisory Service in conjunction with clinicians. Reference Dick8 The government then offered an inadequate sum of money, not renewable, for the development of demonstration districts for old age psychiatry. The proposals for demonstration districts in 1982 very much parallel the terminology of the current national dementia strategy for demonstrator sites. As Arie & Jolley commented in 1983, in response to The Rising Tide, ‘What we need is “development,” and the fudging of the distinction between “development” and “demonstration” mars this important initiative.’ Reference Arie and Jolley9 The same could be said today about the creative terminology of demonstrator sites. The 2009 dementia strategy has followed a model of good ideas with time-limited, insufficient financial commitment, as in 1982. Alison Norman commented in 1982 that people with dementia were ‘commonly seen as a bottomless pit, swallowing up resources’. Reference Norman10 Using another metaphor, John Wattis wrote in 1987: ‘This country can afford to spend more on healthcare; mentally ill old people need a larger slice of a larger cake not the crumbs left under the table after the other areas of medicine have fought over the dry crusts of present funding’. Reference Wattis11 The same fears and concerns are voiced today.
The absence of funding for mental health provision in the National Service Framework for Older People 12 contrasts with significant funding attached to the National Service Framework for Mental Health, mainly for younger people. Reference Philp and Appleby13 Further new funding for improving access to psychological therapies has so far largely been targeted at getting people of working age back into employment, 14 rather than the ethically more acceptable approach of offering treatment on the basis of ability to benefit regardless of employment status or chronological age.
A laissez-faire approach
Mental healthcare for older people has made huge strides forwards, despite limited resources. However, older people's services lack components that are largely regarded as integral to the care of younger mentally ill people. These include crisis response and assertive outreach teams, acute hospital liaison 15 and psychiatric intensive care units. Not infrequently, these new developments specifically exclude older people. 16 In addition, it is quoted that for general adult mental health services ‘The [World Health Organization] has said that England has the best services in Europe’. Reference Appleby17 This contrasts with the provision of services for dementia as stated in the National Dementia Strategy: ‘International comparisons suggest that the UK is in the bottom third of European performance in terms of diagnosis and treatment, with less than half the activity of France, Sweden, Ireland and Spain’. 1 It is discriminatory to have such contrasts between services provided for mainly older people and those for mainly younger people.
With further demographic changes and increased longevity, the costs of dementia are predicted to treble in the next 30 years. 1 The government, however, appears to have little belief in investing in a secure infrastructure for dementia in the light of this predicted service demand.
We are left with a strategy strong in ideas, although many of those can be dated back two decades or more, Reference Norman10 and like its predecessors, implementation is neither obligatory nor adequately funded, taking a laissez-faire stance. This attitude is summarised in the strategy itself: ‘the pace of implementation will inevitably vary, depending on local circumstances and the level and development of services within each NHS and local authority area. Decisions on funding for subsequent years will only be made once we have had the opportunity to consider the results from the initial demonstrator sites and evaluation work. There is no expectation therefore that all areas will necessarily be able to implement the Strategy within five years.’ This statement is unlikely to provoke ardent determination within commissioning bodies to achieve proposed goals.
One must also question the government's motivations when they offer only 2 years funding for a 5-year development plan, with funding dependent on the outcome of the progress made in the first 2 years. Experience suggests that the time required for most new projects to pass through the various mandatory commissioner-provider committees and then to recruit to new posts, 2 years will be too soon to evaluate the impact on care for a chronic disorder, especially where the individuals may be unable to contribute their own opinions.
Conclusions
I would like to be proved wrong, but the National Dementia Strategy is modelled on other failed strategies. It is neither mandatory nor sufficiently funded. Ideals of providing adequate, person-centred, humane care and support for people with dementia and their carers, and developing best quality services for the future (indeed, our future) will once more fail.
Acknowledgements
I thank Professor Tom Arie, Mrs Jean Gaffin, Dr Michael Hilton and Professor Dave Jolley for their comments.
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