Developing a resource to support localities address user and family understanding of, and engagement with, reablement: a development and implementation study
Bryony Beresford Completed 2024
Bryony Beresford Completed 2024
Reablement is a core strand of the UK government’s intermediate care strategy. The purpose of reablement is to prevent or reduce demand for social care (including moving to residential care) by enabling people to live as independently as possible in their own homes. Unlike traditional homecare, which does things for individuals, reablement aims to help people resume activities of daily living (e.g. self-care, housework, social activities). This may involve regaining prior skills and confidence, or helping individuals find new ways to do things, sometimes with the provision of equipment. Its approach is intensive, but time-limited. Specially trained reablement practitioners work with individuals to achieve daily living goals identified through an holistic assessment process. It is provided by local authorities (or integrated health and social care localities), free of charge, for up to six weeks.
Increasing frailty or discharge from hospital are key reasons for referring an older person for reablement.
A key barrier to someone benefitting from reablement is a poor understanding of it and what it is trying to achieve. Families’ understanding and/or support for reablement may also affect progress, and whether achievements are maintained after discharge.
This study aims to develop a Resource to support localities, led by strategic social care leads and senior reablement managers, to: ‘diagnose’ risk points/windows of opportunity for user or family member understanding of, and engagement with, reablement; and select and implement evidence-informed interventions with respect to these risk points/windows of opportunity. The research team will do this by:
Once the Resource has been developed, they will:
There are four stages:
The Social Care Institute for Excellence will host the Resource on their website and publicise it widely.