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Not enough councils are using available technology within social care to keep people safe, happy and healthy at home, according to the final report of a commission exploring the issue.

In the report, directors of adult social care are called on to make their services more proactive and preventative by collaborating with service providers and manufacturers so health and care data from apps and devices can be used by the social care workforce to identify people with needs and put solutions in place before they reach a crisis.

This could represent a good opportunity for TEC suppliers to work more closely with local authorities to improve outcomes for end-users.

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Led by the Association of Directors of Adult Social Services (ADASS) and the TEC Services Association (TSA), the commission found pockets of best practice but concluded that projects are rarely joined up and turned into intelligence to prevent people reaching a crisis.

Over the past five months, members of the commission have heard evidence from nearly 60 people, including individuals and their relatives who access social care support, frontline care professionals, directors of adult social care, housing and health leaders and technology suppliers.

The commission is now calling on the UK Government to fund a two-year programme of 10 social care innovation projects to begin the process of normalising the use of digital within social care.

Best practice from the proposed ‘Personalised Care Innovation Programme’ will then be rolled out to all 151 local authority adult social care services in England to create a national, digitally-enabled social care system. The commission recommends that multi-year funding from central government is needed for this countrywide deployment.

Alyson Scurfield, CEO of TSA, commented: “Technology is vital to the future sustainability of care. For people to be more confident and less reliant on adult social care and health services, we need to empower them through digital solutions.

“Devices and apps can enable people to self-manage their wellbeing and health, giving them choice and control, and technology also helps families and communities to develop strong connections. We hope the Commission’s findings indicate how a digitally-enabled social care system can become a reality.”

The commission is also urging government to urgently invest £450 million to replace current care and housing technology infrastructure, much of which is outdated and reliant on analogue phonelines.

It recommends that council commissioners involve people, their families and carers much more in the design and co-production of digital social care services and it urges suppliers to work more closely with individuals when designing support apps and devices.

The commission also calls on the government to work in partnership to develop a Digital Inclusion Plan by 2022, ensuring no-one is excluded from digital social care because of low confidence around technology or a lack of access to equipment or a stable internet connection.

Iain MacBeath, Strategic Director of Health and Wellbeing at City of Bradford Metropolitan District Council and ADASS Honorary Treasurer, said: “Truly integrating technology with adult social care has eluded most parts of the country. There are some shining examples, but it’s rarely connected or proactive.

“This Commission has sought to understand why this is and how we can change it.

“We are recommending that new, digital skills should be brought into councils, different tender specifications must be used, and that the Government future-proofs technology infrastructure through proper investment.”

In addition, the commission recommends that the new NHS structure of integrated care systems (ICSs) considers digital social care provision as well as digital health provision.

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