Mental health patients with nowhere to go costs NHS £71m

Site Admin • 7 August 2025
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source : The Guardian

originally published : 11 February 2025


A lack of supported housing was the biggest reason for delayed discharges from mental health hospitals in England last year, costing the NHS about £71m, according to a report.


Analysis from the National Housing Federation (NHF) found that in 2023-24 there were 109,029 days of delayed discharge because mental health patients were waiting for supported housing, and the number of people stuck in hospital as a result of housing-related issues had more than tripled since 2021.


In September 2024, waiting for supported housing was the single biggest reason mental health patients, fit for discharge, were unable to leave, accounting for 17% of all delays. This lack led to a strain on NHS capacity and a rise in patients being sent out of area for hospital admission, the report found.

Rhys Moore, director of public impact at the NHF, said: “Not only are tens of thousands of people, who deserve the opportunity to live a healthy, happy and independent life, being failed, but the shortage of these homes is increasing pressure on public services, increasing homelessness, and costing the NHS and ultimately the taxpayer more in the long run.”

There are about half a million supported homes across England, but numbers are falling, and an NHF survey found that one in three (32%) supported housing providers in England have had to close schemes in the past year owing to financial pressures.


Chris Hampson, chief executive of Look Ahead, which provides specialist supported accommodation in London and the south-east, said the industry was facing a “perfect storm.


“Never in our 50-year history have we known challenges like it. We and others are having to withdraw from contracts and close services where we have been left with no alternative but to run them at a loss,” he said. “In the last few years, it has got ridiculously tough – you’ve got inflation, recruitment costs, local government budget cuts.


Read the full article >

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