Part of 3. 2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health, Well-being and Sport – in the Senedd at 2:44 pm on 25 January 2017.
Perhaps the Minister should be trying to find out why those adaptations have been declining and why the equipment has not been going out at rates at which it has in the past because that all has an effect and a knock-on further down the line within our health and social care system.
Let me draw your attention to another service that is vastly underappreciated—that of unpaid carers. Last year, Carers UK found that 55 per cent of carers in Wales found that their own physical health had suffered because of their caring duties. That’s the highest percentage anywhere in the UK. The amount of respite care provided in Wales—the number of nights of care provided in Wales—has dropped a staggering 24 per cent since 2011. This has happened at the same time as this and the previous Government presided over a programme, of course, of closing community hospitals, with an overall decline in the number of NHS beds available in Wales of 7 per cent. These community hospital beds, I need not point out, could have provided a smooth transition for patients back to the community, tackling delayed transfers of care, as well, of course, as providing desperately needed respite care for the army of unpaid carers that keeps our system afloat. So, will the Minister now admit that the drive to close community hospitals has been a big mistake and that, in the main, and for the sake of strengthening our social care system, it’s time to start reversing that programme?