I watched it and agree about the inaccuracies. The portrayal of hard worked NHS staff I found particularly offensive.
The idea that team meetings are held only when a patient is about to be discharged is completely wrong they meet when the patient has been assessed explain treatment ask questions and set gaols, and they are usually held in tiny rooms, corners of wards, or the day room, as staff take time from attending other patients to attend them. I went to a few this year with my mother.
That any nurse would sit by while a patient with a drip screamed and became distressed is doubtful as well. They are liable to pull out the drip and cause harm.
A team is sent out to measure and assess the patient's home for suitability for adaptation.
As for a care home costing £700 a week. Even the most basic is more than this. The 'ideal' home presented would have been over £1000 and the front door would still have been locked (as it was in all the homes I visited)
Finally the crisis in care is not in funding (which all the staff do their best to help with) but with staffing and places. There simply aren't enough carers to enable people who could go home to do so, and there aren't enough care homes offering medical support ,so people are stuck in hospital beds waiting for care packages, as social workers struggle to find help for them.