HMN 2026: how safety is delivered in NHS virtual wards

New study examines how safety is delivered in NHS virtual wards
Credit: University of Manchester

Virtual wards, also known as hospital at home, are increasingly being used across the NHS to support people who would otherwise need hospital care to receive treatment and monitoring at home. A new study led by University of Manchester researchers explored how safe care is delivered in virtual wards, highlighting the often unseen work carried out by patients and caregivers as they undertake key elements of risk-work previously held by clinicians.

The findings show that virtual wards can provide a safe alternative to hospital care for some patients, allowing people to recover at home while still receiving clinical oversight. However, patients and caregivers often take on more practical and emotional responsibility than may be recognized as they assume duties that would normally be carried out by clinicians in hospital settings. This includes monitoring symptoms, managing equipment and responding to signs of deterioration, especially overnight or outside normal working hours.

The study is published in the journal BMJ Quality & Safety.

Using qualitative methods, including observation work and interviews with patients and caregivers, the researchers evaluated virtual wards services across four sites in North-West England. Their findings show that safety in virtual wards does not rely on technology alone, but is strongly shaped by the relational and emotional support provided to patients, caregivers and clinicians.

Dr. Kelly Howells, research fellow at The University of Manchester and the NIHR GM PSRC, said, “Virtual wards can help people receive acute care safely at home, but our study shows safe care depends on more than technology.

“Patients, caregivers and clinicians all play a role in managing risk, with patients and caregivers often taking on important practical and emotional responsibilities, particularly outside normal working hours. Health services need to recognize and better support this work.”

The researchers suggest that hospital at home services that combine technology with in-person home visits could help make care safer, more flexible, and accessible for a wider range of patients. Recognizing and supporting the work undertaken by patients and caregivers is essential to ensure virtual wards are safely delivered.

As virtual wards expand as a key component of NHS policy to shift acute care from hospital to community settings, practice must ensure there is space for relational and training support for clinicians, patients, and caregivers so that remote acute care can be safely implemented across health systems.

Publication details

Kelly Howells et al, Shifting boundaries of risk-work in virtual wards in North-West England: a multisite qualitative evaluation, BMJ Quality & Safety (2026). DOI: 10.1136/bmjqs-2025-020002

Journal information:
BMJ Quality & Safety


Key medical concepts

acute care

Clinical categories

Hospital medicineFamily medicine

The content is provided for information purposes only.