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Publication, Part of

Adult Social Care Activity and Finance Report, England, 2021-22

National statistics, Official statistics, Accredited official statistics

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ASC-FR RO3 reconciliation exercise with DLUHC

A piece of work was conducted in partnership with DLUHC to reconcile the difference between ASC-FR and RO3 net current expenditure.  Local authorities were contacted and asked to provide comments on why net current expenditure differed in the two returns. The comments have been categorised in the Data Quality Summary excel tables.

23 January 2023 11:15 AM

2016-17 update to cash and real term NCE and GCE figures

Table 4 of the Net Current Expenditure and Gross Current Expenditure Tables the cash and real term figures for 2016-17 have been corrected. The correction has also taken place in the chart - Figure 3 Cash vs Real term

16 February 2024 14:40 PM

Carers

Local authorities report information relating to unpaid carers in both the activity and finance returns. This information includes the number of carers being supported, and the costs associated with providing this support, as well as those that have been assessed or reviewed by the local authority but received no support in the year. Data on carers relates to unpaid carers of all ages who provide care on a regular basis for someone aged 18 or over.

Please Note: Local authorities noted a variety of data quality issues relating to their carer data. For example, some local authorities have difficulties obtaining data from third parties, or some case management systems can only record carers and cared-for clients on a one to one basis. Full details of the data quality issues can be found in the accompanying excel Data Quality Summary Tables. It should also be noted that a number of local authorities advised us of continued data cleansing and as such year-on-year trends may be a result of this rather than service provision. This should be considered when examining the data relating to this area, and particularly when considering local trends.


In 2021-22 380,725 carers were either supported or assessed/reviewed by the local authorities during the year, down 2.1% or 8,005 carers since 2020-21. This measure often fluctuates year on year however some local authorities advised us that there was increased demand during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, with the role of unpaid carers increasing due to lockdowns and shielding in 2020-21.

Gross current expenditure on social support: support to carers was £176 million in 2021-22, a 12.4% increase from £156 million in 2020-21. Previously, local authorities advised that expenditure related to carers could sometimes be captured within a different category in ASC-FR and so this expenditure should not be directly compared with the activity data.

Whilst over half (54.3%) of local authority supported carers are aged 18-64, 7,275 or 1.9% are aged under 18, and 8.5% (32,410) are aged 85 and over.

The West Midlands region has the highest proportion of supported carers under 18 at 5.7% (1,680 carers) and also the highest proportion of those aged 18-25 at 8.3%. 59.9% of supported carers in London are aged 26 to 64, and over half (50.1%) of the supported carers in the South West are aged 65 and over.


Support Received

Figure 27: Overview of support provided to carers in the year, 2021-22

Source: SALT Collection, 2021-22, NHS Digital - See Table 47 in Data Tables.

 

Of the total 380,725 carers supported or assessed/reviewed in 2021-22, 82.4% (313,575) received Direct Support, which includes Direct Payments, Part Direct Payments, Local Authority Managed Personal Budgets, Local Authority Commissioned Support and the provision of Information Advice and other Universal Services or Signposting. This is a slight decrease from the previous year where 87.0% of carers received Direct Support.

The most common support for carers consisted of Information, Advice and other Universal Services or Signposting, with 211,650 carers receiving this during the year (A hierarchy is used to avoid double counting. Those carers who received Direct Payments, Part direct payments, LA managed personal budgets or LA commissioned support may also have received Information advice and other universal services or signposting). This accounted for 55.6% of carers receiving support in 2021-22, down from 59.1% last year.

In addition, 33,300 (8.7%) carers received respite or other forms of carer support delivered to the cared-for person in 2021-22 (an increase from the 2020-21 proportion of 8.5%). A common example of respite is care arranged by the local authority which might involve the client being placed in a residential setting in order to give the carer a break from their caring responsibilities.



Last edited: 16 February 2024 2:41 pm