Monday 8 March 2021

Why have so many disabled people died of Covid-19?

 


Between January and November 2020, disabled people accounted for a shocking 60% of all deaths recorded from Covid-19.  We might think that this was because of the age profile or co-morbidities amongst this population group but Office for National Statistics analysis indicates that, even after adjusting for these factors the mortality rate was higher than for non-disabled people, and particularly so for disabled women and those with learning disabilities. 


Other factors placed disabled people at risk, regardless of their age or health condition. For disabled people in general, measures of deprivation were the biggest factor accounting for some of the increased risk of catching and dying from the virus while for people with learning disabilities place of residence was the biggest risk factor, “suggesting that living in a care home or other communal establishment was a major factor in the increased exposure of people with learning disabilities to COVID-19”.  


The risk posed by communal settings was also apparent amongst those deaths examined by the Learning Disabilities Mortality Review which found that:

 

A third (35%) of those who died from COVID-19 lived in residential care homes, rising to almost half of those with Down’s syndrome. A quarter (25%) lived in supported living settings. Priority must be given to supporting measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in these settings. 


These are circumstances in which, generally, people do not have sufficient choice and control in their lives.  Care homes and supported living services (group homes) in general have accounted for a disproportionate number of deaths during the pandemic, not only because people were discharged from hospitals without proper testing or isolation but also because of the movement of staff from home to home and the general difficulties of infection control in communal settings (especially when protective personal equipment was in short supply). 


The fact that socio-economic factors accounted for some of the higher death rate amongst disabled people in general is evidence of significant structural inequality. Since 2010, changes to the benefits system - particularly those introduced in 2016 - have had the impact of making disabled people poorer, increased food bank use and driven up debt levels. This inequality and its impact on the death rate amongst disabled people during the pandemic is therefore a direct result of government policy.


Nevertheless, according to the ONS data when all risk factors were taken into account, “a statistically significantly raised risk of death remained unexplained for more-disabled and less-disabled women (1.4 and 1.2 times respectively) and more-disabled men (1.1 times) but not for less-disabled men”.


This raises the question: Are disabled people at greater risk because of unequal access to treatment and healthcare once they become ill?


On March 21st 2020, the National Institute for Clinical Excellence issued a new guideline on who should be admitted to critical care during the pandemic, based on the 1-10 Critical Frailty Scale. The guideline suggested that those scoring seven (severely frail, completely dependent on personal care “from whatever cause, physical or cognitive”) and above would be “unlikely to survive even with medical intervention” and that only those ranked 1-5 should receive critical care.  A focus on what people can’t do for themselves was at the heart of determining whether someone should get access to critical care. So, if a person needed help with all daily living activities, then they were considered too ‘frail’ to benefit from a higher level of care (such as artificial ventilation). The Chief Executive of NICE defended the issuing of this guideline, saying that - although the guideline was developed in only 6 days - an equality impact assessment had been carried out, and:


Despite doing it so quickly, we had a comprehensive set of comments and they were supporting the use of the clinical frailty scale. It was something already in use across the system at that point. We did not hear any concerns about it being discriminatory in relation to disability at that point.


However, an outcry from a number of individuals and organisations and an Early Day Motion laid in the House of Commons resulted in NICE issuing a revised Critical Frailty Scale, which currently states that it should only be used for people “aged over 65, without stable long-term disabilities (for example, cerebral palsy), learning disabilities or autism”.  Anyone, of any age, who had a “stable, long-term” condition, or “learning disabilities or autism” should receive “an individualised assessment of frailty” and the CFS score should not be used. 


This, of course, still raises the question about why the need for personal care because of conditions related to old age should determine access to critical care. For disabled people of any age, it also begs the question: What is meant by ‘stable, long-term condition’? Many people live with progressive conditions for years and previously ‘stable’ conditions are often associated with increasing need for support as people get older.


I am puzzled as to why needing support in your daily life (at any age and for any reason) is evidence per se that you would be unlikely to benefit from being admitted to critical care.  This is the antithesis of what we mean by independent living: the need for support does not mean that you cannot have self-determination or a good quality of life, instead it is having choice and control over the support you need which delivers such things. Neither should the need for support undermine your right to life.  


Yet it would appear that, not only might the need for support determine access to critical care, but it may have influenced whether some people got access to any hospital treatment during the pandemic.


In the early months of the pandemic, there were press reports of DNR notices and advanced care plans being applied across whole groups of people in residential settings.  These included care homes catering for older people as well as group homes catering for people with learning disabilities and/or autism. Reviews of the deaths of people with learning disabilities noted several instances where “frailty or ‘learning disabilities’ were given as rationales for a Do Not Attempt Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (DNACPR) decision for people who had died from COVID-19, yet this was not the case for people who had died from other causes”. The report concluded that “Further reminders that ‘learning disabilities’ or a clinical frailty score are not appropriate reasons for a DNACPR decision in people with learning disabilities may be required.” 


The Care Quality Commission has found that some people living in care homes died potentially avoidable deaths because of inappropriate decisions about treatment.  Some were subjected to blanket decisions ruling out attempts at cardiopulmonary resuscitation, and “providers sometimes conflated decisions about DNACPR with decisions about whether to admit people to hospital or provide covid-19 treatment”.  An Amnesty International report specifically focussing on older people found considerable evidence of inappropriate or unlawful use of DNR notices by GPs, clinical commissioning groups, hospitals, and care homes.


Surely a clinically based decision is an experienced doctor’s judgement as to whether the treatment will improve your chances of survival to a quality of life that you find reasonable, combined with your views as to whether you want to go through the experience of whatever the treatment is itself. And in most cases I suspect that is what happens except that, in the case of disabled (and older) people, pre-existing prejudices about the quality, or indeed value, of someone’s life can get in the way - a particularly dangerous situation when someone has difficulty communicating their wishes, or is not even asked what they are. 


In addition, a failure to enable disabled people to benefit from treatment even once they are admitted to hospital may also help to explain the disproportionate number of deaths.  Jo Whiley, in bringing public attention to the need to prioritise people with learning disabilities for vaccinations also provided a graphic description on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme of the kind of support her sister needed (and initially lacked) when she was admitted to hospital with Covid-19.  She described how her sister’s communication and cognitive impairment meant she was terrified and reacted by trying to escape from staff trying to treat her.  It was only when her parents were allowed into the hospital and were able to reassure and calm her that it was possible to provide her with the treatment that enabled her recovery and discharge from hospital.  


But in how many other cases was there not such a response and happy outcome? Reviews of deaths amongst people with learning disabilities found, “The most frequently reported required reasonable adjustments that were NOT made for people who died from COVID-19 were: the provision of specialist learning disability services in hospital; tailoring care provision to meet individual needs; and ensuring the person was supported in unfamiliar settings by those who knew them.”


This is despite BMA ethical guidelines which state “Doctors should bear in mind that, as public servants, it may be appropriate to make reasonable adjustments for those with disabilities. That could mean permitting a learning disabled patient to be accompanied by a carer even if that is generally prohibited under infection control rules”.


For many many years, disabled people have been campaigning for choice and control in our lives, for the right to self-determination, to have a say in how we are supported, where we live and who with, and for the right to make the most basic daily living choices that most non-disabled people take for granted. We made progress but this was always limited, primarily because of the constraints inherent in the existing systems of delivering support and housing. 


Since 2010 the government has made disabled people poorer, failed to reform and improve social care, and neglected to develop the kind of housing and support services which would have delivered a better quality of life. All in all they have exacerbated structural inequalities and the mantra of ‘work is the best route out of poverty’ remains an insult to those who are not able to work and/or face direct and indirect discrimination.  


At the same time, we have been labelled ‘vulnerable’ with little or no recognition of the factors - which have nothing to do with our impairment or illness - which create socio-economic deprivation, unequal access to healthcare and, in this pandemic, a greater risk of dying.  In the run up to the Independent Living Fund being abolished in 2015, I wrote two blogposts entitled “What’s your plan for people whose lives we apparently can’t afford?” The lack of any plan has had its stark consequences during this pandemic. 

Wednesday 13 January 2021

Using the law to challenge charges for social care

 A few weeks ago I was reminded that - while we are all focussed on how to survive through the current difficulties - there are yet other struggles that disabled people and their allies are engaged in which have been going on for years and which continue.  The reminder came because of a rare victory against the impact of the failure to properly fund social care. 


The stark facts of the funding crisis facing social care are that some councils “could run out of cash”  and it would require £2.1bn to keep provision at the current levels (allowing for increase in demand) by 2023/4 and £10bn to restore provision to what was available in 2010/11.  


There are many ways in which this situation is impacting on older and/or disabled people and their families.  One is that local authorities are taking more of people’s benefit income to pay for the (often reduced) social care that they have been deemed eligible to need.


This is what happened in Norfolk, resulting in a fight-back from those affected and culminating in a Judicial Review of the local authority’s proposed increases in social care charges.


As Disability News Service reported, the High Court found that Norfolk County Council’s proposed new charging policy discriminated against people with high support needs because they would be charged proportionately more than those with lower support needs.


This court case came about as a result of many months of grassroots campaigning by an informal network which, organised via a Facebook group, grew to over 500 people. Growing such a network is important as the more people involved the more likely it is that someone will come forward who both qualifies for legal aid and who feels strong enough to go through what is usually a long drawn-out and emotionally draining process. 


During the course of campaigning, the group issued Freedom of Information requests to both government and other local authorities.  They discovered that the Department of Health and Social Care has little or no information on how local authorities are using the Guidance and Regulations relating to charging; and that other local authorities are also seeking to raise more money from charges, including by adopting the same changes as Norfolk. This confirms research carried out in 2018 which concluded that charges are a ‘tax on the need for support’. 


The solicitors for the claimant have issued a statement which describes the case and what was challenged. Inclusion London also hosted a webinar with the barrister who argued the case.  However, I thought it might be useful to summarise key details of the judgement in the hope that it might encourage people in other local authority areas to consider whether their Council’s charging policy might also be challenged. 


The case concerned a young woman who had previously paid a charge of £16.88 per week as her means-tested contribution towards the support she needed but who, when the changes were fully implemented, would be charged £50.53 per week.  This would have resulted in an almost 20% reduction in her income which was entirely from benefits.


This increase in charges resulted from two changes proposed by the Council.  The first was to reduce (in three stages) the amount that a person’s income should not fall below (the Minimum Income Guarantee); the second to take into account all of the daily living component of Personal Independence Payment.

Her lawyers argued that “The Charging Policy discriminates against severely disabled people, contrary to Article 14 read with Article 1 of Protocol 1 and/or Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights”.


The European Convention on Human Rights was brought into UK legislation by Section 6 of the Human Rights Act 1998, which makes it "unlawful for a public authority to act in a way which is incompatible with a Convention right”.


Article 1 of Protocol 1 of the Convention says that each person “is entitled to the peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. No one shall be deprived of his possessions except in the public interest and subject to the conditions provided for by law…” It has been long established that financial support a person receives from the government, including welfare benefits, falls within this article.


And Article 14 says that “The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any ground such as sex, race, colour, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, association with a national minority, property, birth or other status.”


There were four questions that the Judge in this case had to consider:


  1. Do the circumstances "fall within the ambit" of one or more of the Convention rights?

Both sides agreed that it did.


2. Has there been a difference of treatment on the ground of one of the characteristics listed or "other status"?


Lawyers for the claimant argued that the difference of treatment related to being severely disabled, which they said was covered by the term “other status”.  The judge agreed that being severely disabled was “exactly the sort of ‘personal characteristic’ which has always been recognised as protected from unjustified discrimination under Article 14”.


Norfolk County Council argued that ‘severely disabled’ was not precise enough a term in order to be covered by Article 14. The judge ruled that, on the contrary, this had been clearly assessed and determined to be the case by the fact that the claimant had been placed in the Support Group of ESA and received the enhanced daily living component of PIP.


3. Have two people who are in a similar position been treated differently?

Lawyers for the claimant argued that the charging policy meant that a higher proportion of her income was taken in charges than was the case for someone who was less severely disabled.


This argument rested on two points. The young woman could not work and was therefore entirely reliant on benefits, unlike someone with lower support needs who might be able to work and whose earned income (according to the Regulations) cannot be taken into account when assessing how much they should be charged. In addition, her assessable income was higher because she qualified for the enhanced rate of PIP daily living allowance. 


The Council argued that the charging policy was not discriminatory as it applied to everyone.  The judge said that it was because the impact was different for people who were severely disabled. “The way the Charging Policy is constructed means that, because her needs as a severely disabled person are higher than the needs of a less severely disabled person, the assessable proportion of her income is higher than theirs”.


4. Is there an objective justification for the different treatment?

Norfolk County Council put forward four objectives for its charging policy.  Its main argument was that it was facing a funding shortfall of £39m over three years. It also highlighted an aim of increasing employment amongst people with learning disabilities and pledged to provide £1m of the projected £5m savings into helping to achieve this. 


The judge quoted a previous case which ruled that "Saving public expenditure can be a legitimate aim but will not of itself provide justification for differential treatment unless there is, in the case in hand, a reasonable relationship of proportionality between the aim sought to be achieved, and the means chosen to pursue it (i.e. the measure under challenge)”.


The judge found that the Council did not recognise - in any of its documents or discussions - the bigger impact of the policy on severely disabled people compared with less disabled people. Neither had the Council considered an alternative approach suggested in the Guidance, namely that a percentage of income above the Minimum Income Guarantee could be taken rather than all of it. 


He also said that the impact of the policy on the claimant would restrict her independence which contradicts one of the Council’s stated aims of changing the charging regime.


The judge concluded that “The objectives identified are not sufficiently important to justify discriminating against the most severely disabled as compared with the less severely disabled in order to advance it”.


There were a number of other points which were argued during this case but I’ve identified what seem to be the main ones in the hope that this will help other disabled people, their allies and organisations to identify possible similar challenges to what other local authorities are doing or planning to do with their charging policies.


Some useful links:

Inclusion London’s Disability Justice Project aims to help disabled people use the law to fight for their rights. See, in particular:

https://www.disabilityjustice.org.uk/financial-assessment/ for information about how councils should carry out financial assessments in order to charge for social care.


How to find legal advice https://www.disabilityjustice.org.uk/where-to-find-legal-advice/


How to find out if you might qualify for legal aid:

https://www.gov.uk/check-legal-aid