Continuing responsibility for care
The care offered by a hospital should not end merely because the patient has surrendered a bed – it should never be acceptable for patients to be discharged in the middle of the night, still less so at any time without absolute assurance that a patient in need of care will receive it on arrival at the planned destination. Discharge areas in hospital need to be properly staffed and provide continued care to the patient.
- NICE published NG27 "Transition between inpatient hospital settings and community or care home settings for adults with social care needs" in December 2015, recommending that from admission, hospital and community-based multidisciplinary teams should work together to identify factors that could prevent safe, timely transfer of care (NICE NG27, December 2015).
- The Hospital Discharge and Community Support Guidance (updated 2022) established four discharge pathways: Pathway 0 (home, no additional support), Pathway 1 (home with additional health/social care), Pathway 2 (24-hour bedded care for further recovery), and Pathway 3 (permanent new admission to 24-hour care). Assessment should occur within two hours of arriving home, with rapid access to care and support (Hospital Discharge and Community Support Guidance, DHSC, 2022).
- The Health and Care Act 2022 revoked Schedule 3 to the Care Act 2014, which had required long-term health and care needs assessments before discharge. From 1 April 2022, NHS bodies and local authorities should adopt "Discharge to Assess, Home First" models, ensuring patients are not held in hospital unnecessarily while awaiting assessments.
- NHS England's "Home First" approach encourages supported discharge with community-based assessment, addressing Francis's concern that care should not end when a patient surrenders a bed. CQC inspects discharge planning as part of its responsive key question.
How was this evidence gathered?
Response
Accepted
Response
AcceptedThe government published "Hard Truths: the Journey to Putting Patients First" (Cm 8777) on 19 November 2013, responding to all 290 recommendations of the Francis Report. This followed an initial response "Patients First and Foremost" in March 2013. Key reforms included a new Chief Inspector of Hospitals, strengthened Care Quality Commission inspection regime, a statutory duty of candour, and the fit and proper person test for NHS directors. Volume 2 (Cm 8754) contains the government's detailed responses to each of the 290 recommendations. See: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a7cd486ed915d63cc65d167/34658_Cm_8777_Vol_1_accessible.pdf
Published Evidence
Published assessments of progress from inspectorates, select committees, official progress reports, and other sources. Source type badge indicates whether each assessment is independent or government self-reported.
Research published 2023 marking ten years since the Francis Report found mixed results. Structural and legislative changes largely delivered (duty of candour, FPPR, CQC overhaul, revalidation, Freedom to Speak Up Guardians). However, cultural change not fully embedded; understaffing, fear of speaking up, and poor complaint handling persist in parts of the NHS.
Government published "Culture Change in the NHS" (Cm 9009) reporting progress on all 290 recommendations. Key achievements: 19 hospitals placed in special measures; those trusts recruited 109 additional doctors and 1,805 additional nurses; 129 board-level changes made; excess avoidable deaths fell by 450 in less than a year.
Government published "Hard Truths: The Journey to Putting Patients First" (Cm 8777) in two volumes. Vol 1 set out new actions; Vol 2 provided detailed response to each of the 290 recommendations. Approximately 204 of 290 recommendations were fully accepted.