Scottish Care CEO Dr Donald Macaskill at Scottish Parliament

 

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Scottish Care CEO Dr Donald Macaskill joined a panel of the Economy, Jobs and Fair Work Committee at the Scottish Parliament this morning to discuss the economic impact of leaving the European Union and the impact on the care sector in Scotland.

You can watch a recorded video stream here from the panel:

www.scottishparliament.tv/20161122__economy

Dr Macaskill speaks (from 0:51:01) on the both potential economic impact of Brexit as well as the value of nursing and care talent and expertise from the European Union and beyond.

Responding to discussion on potential effects of Brexit on the nursing workforce Dr Macaskill said : “We need to attract as wide a pool of talent as possible to the sector. That pool is enriched by the talent and expertise of those from out-with Scotland, not just from Europe but from further afield.”

Dr Macaskill also said: ” We need to create an economy of care which values the contribution of its workers.”

 

 

 

Event : Discussion on Audit Scotland Report – A Watershed for Social work in Scotland?

A Watershed for Social work in Scotland?

November 30th @ 12:30 pm – 5:00 pm

In response to Audit Scotland’s report on  ‘ Scottish Care alongside partners including Alliance ScotlandIriss and the SSSC are holding an event to discuss findings and next steps from Audit Scotland’s report on  ‘.

If you would like to find out more about the findings of the report as well as to contribute towards the debate on the future of Social Work in Scotland Scottish Care invite you to join us at an event in Glasgow on Wednesday 30th November to take part.

Audit Scotland recently concluded that social work in Scotland is at a ‘watershed’, with vital decisions needing to be taken on the provision of services in the future.

Audit Scotland also stressed that the public and people who access the range of social work services provided across Scotland must be more involved in shaping future provision, with a debate required “on the level, the nature and affordability of services.”

 

Dr Donald Macaskill, Scottish Care CEO said:

“Scottish Care is delighted to support this event. The Audit Scotland report raises important challenges and issues which need to be addressed by all partners to endure we continue to adequately support our most vulnerable citizens.”

Scottish Care, The ALLIANCE, Audit Scotland and partners are holding an event in Glasgow on the afternoon of Wednesday 30 November. The session will bring together a wide range of stakeholders to consider the issues raised in the report, stimulate discussion and gather views on the future direction of social work.

The event is open to:

  • People who use support and services
  • unpaid carers
  • scrutiny bodies
  • representatives of third sector organisations
  • social workers
  • providers of health and social care
  • Scottish Government officials, councillors and other politicians.

To secure your free place or for more information please contact
Rhona Millar on 0141 404 0231 or you can email at [email protected]

Social Services Workforce – Making it Easier to Access Knowledge Online

Making it Easier to Access Knowledge Online

 The Office of the Chief Social Work Adviser at Scottish Government is seeking contributions from the social services workforce to a survey on how they access information and knowledge online.

The survey is available at

www.response.questback.com/isa/qbv.dll/ShowQuest?QuestID=4883318&sid=jLJJQrFpJY

The plan is to understand:

  • where the workforce is going for information; what websites they currently use
  • what they find helpful online
  • what the enablers and barriers are to accessing material online
  • what content and features would help going forward, to make it as easy as possible for people to access relevant knowledge for their work

All contributions are encouraged, valued and much appreciated. The survey will take approximately 15 minutes to complete. Please note that the survey closes on 2 December 2016.

If you have any questions about this survey, please contact [email protected]

Faith in Older People and Methodist Homes Joint Conference

FAITH IN OLDER PEOPLE AND METHODIST HOMES JOINT CONFERENCE CULTURAL DIVERSITY, FAITH AND DEMENTIA

A critical examination of the place of religious faith in supporting the well-being of people with dementia

 

Wednesday, 23rd November 2016:  Roxburghe Hotel, Charlotte Square, Edinburgh
Registration fee £95 includes coffees/lunch
This UK wide conference provides the opportunity to consider the issues around ageing, cultures and faith from different religious and non-faith based perspectives.   The conference, jointly organised by Faith in Older People (FiOP) and Methodist Homes, builds on the work of both organisations and others to highlight the needs of older people who are experiencing dementia and those who care for them.

FiOP is working collaboratively to develop guidance for Dementia Friendly Faith Communities and will be highlighting this development at the Conference with an opportunity to discuss and share the ways in which it could be implemented and further developed.

This is just the beginning and there is much to do to make a reality of the ideas to ensure the inclusion of older people with dementia so that they can continue to sustain a faith which has been a cornerstone of their lives and which will contribute to their resilience.

www.faithinolderpeople.org.uk

www.mha.org.uk

Conference thanks

A warm thanks to everyone who attended our Conference on Friday at the Hilton Hotel in Glasgow, it was a hugely positive day and we hope you all enjoyed it. The wealth of experience of the speakers, willingness to share and network as well as the enthusiasm of our delegates all made it a hugely memorable experience. We are making plans for next year’s Conference already and will keep you updated on this in due course.

We will release a full report on Conference very soon.

The Scottish Care team,

Scottish Care Awards Winners & Nominees 2016

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                                                                 CARE HOME AWARDS 2016

 

Ancillary & Support Staff Award

Nominees:

  • Stephen McGrath
  • Alex Ross
  • Ella Douglas

Winner – Stephen McGrath

 

 

Nutrition & Eating Well Award

Nominees:

  •  Mosswood Care Home
  • Rubislaw Park Care Home
  • Annan Court Care Home

Winner – Mosswood Care Home

 

 

Meaningful Activity Award

Nominees:

  • Mandy Kennedy
  • Jackie Ross
  • Callum O’Donnell and Kari Hartmann

Winner – Callum O’Donnell and Kari Hartmann from Camilla House

 

 

Training and Staff Development Award

Nominees:

  • Balhousie Care Group
  • Wendy Adams St Modans
  • Southview Care Home

Winner – Wendy Adams, St Modans Care Home

 

 

Innovative Practice Award

Nominees:

  • Wheatlands Care Home
  • Carlingwark House
  • Southview Care Home

Winner – the Quality Improvement Project Team from Southview Care Home

 

 

Volunteer Award

Nominees:

  • Tom Miller,Morningside Care Home
  • Elaine Till, Birdston Care Home
  • Mary MacMillan, Bankview Care Home

Winner – Tom Miller, Morningside Care Home

 

 

Resident Achievement Award

Nominees:

  • Peter Smyth, Three Towns Care Home,
  • Patrick McGonnigal, Greencross Care Home
  • Jim Duffy, Fullarton Service Loretto Care

Winner – Jim Duffy, Loretto Fullarton Service

 

 

Nurse of the Year Award

Nominees:

  • Angela Baird – Forth Bay Care Home, Caring Homes
  • Agata Czerwonka – Rosepark Care Home, Balmer Care Homes,
  • Martin Masterson – Fleming House, Darnley Court Care Home, BUPA
  • Freda Clark – Northlands Care Home

Winner – Freda Clark, Northlands Care Home

 

 

Carer of the Year Award

Nominees:

  • Jennifer Marshall, Marchmont Care Home
  • Mary-Jane Ross, Northlands Care Home
  • Sarah Taylor, Rubislaw Park Care Home
  • Gemma Schiller, Annan Court

Winner – Sarah Taylor, Rubislaw Park Care Home

 

 

Specialist Service / Unit of The Year Award

Nominees:

  • Marchglen Care Home – Caring Homes
  • Interim Unit, Darnley Court – BUPA
  • Murdoch Unit – Silverburn Care

Winner – Murdoch Unit, Silverburn Care

 

 

Care Home Service of the Year Award

Nominees:

  • Northlands Care Home
  • Auchtermairnie Care Home – Fairfield Care Scotland
  • Deeside Care Home

Winner – Auchtermairnie Care Home

 

 

Management & Leadership Award

Nominees:

  • Marshall Mcdowell, Fullarton Service, Loretto Care
  • Shirley McTeir, Carlingwark House, Community  Integrated Care
  • Angela Martin, Whitefield Lodge Care Home, Four Seasons Healthcare

Winner – Marshall McDowall, Loretto Fullarton Service

 

 

Significant Contribution Award – Linda Short – Bandrum Nursing Home

Watch a new film, commissioned by Scottish Care, showcasing this year’s Care Home Awards Nurse of the Year finalists.

 

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Celebrating nurses in the independent care home sector

Watch a new film, commissioned by Scottish Care, showcasing this year’s Care Home Awards Nurse of the Year finalists.

 

Scottish Care is proud to have hosted the 12th Annual Care Home Awards on Friday 18 November. The Awards are a fantastic opportunity to recognise and celebrate the achievements, commitment and dedication of everyone involved in delivering services which have a direct and positive impact for the individuals and families we support in care homes, often with increasingly complex needs.

The staff in our care homes are real heroes, making an enormous difference to the lives of those they look after, and it is a privilege to be able to reward and recognise their contributions.

We congratulate all the 2016 award nominees and the finalists.

As a new part of the Scottish Care Awards, each year Scottish Care will profile a particular award category to provide some more information about the finalists and the role they do.  The chosen category for 2016 is Nurse of the Year.

Over 5,000 nurses work in independent sector social care services across Scotland Each day, they dedicate themselves to the care and support of some of our most vulnerable citizens, who often have complex clinical, physical and emotional needs.  Nursing is hard, emotional and costly work, just as much as it is rewarding, renewing and inspiring.

At present, we are experiencing a severe shortage of nurses working in the independent care sector and we know that part of the reason for this is a lack of awareness of what working in a care home as a nurse is really like.

We have therefore produced a short film, which celebrates the amazing achievements of this year’s four Nurse finalists and also highlights the many opportunities that nursing in a care home can provide.

You can watch the film here:

We will be providing more information about each finalist and releasing more films in the coming weeks, so keep an eye out for these and feel free to share and tweet them!

Let’s celebrate the fantastic work of staff in our care services.

 

With thanks to Michael Rea, film maker – www.michaelrea.co.uk

 

Scottish Care has launched two new reports on nursing at our National Care Home Conference 2016

 

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Scottish Care launches reports on care home nursing

Scottish Care has launched two new reports on nursing at our National Care Home Conference 2016

Today (18 November 2016), Scottish Care has published two new reports on the picture of nursing in the independent social care sector.  Both reports were launched by CEO Dr Donald Macaskill at Scottish Care’s annual Care Home Conference 2016, in Glasgow.

The reports, entitled Voices from the Nursing Front Line and Independent Sector Nursing Data 2016, depict both the highlights and challenges of nursing in care homes in Scotland and illustrate the nurse recruitment and retention crisis currently being faced.

Speaking ahead of the reports’ launch, Dr Macaskill said:

“We’re facing an immediate challenge in relation to the shortage of nurses working in our care homes.  In the medium term, we need to attract more people to work in the social care sector and articulate the many benefits of doing so.  However, short term measures are also needed, and require us to work with Scottish Government and other partners, including colleges, universities and health and social care partnerships to find solutions to this challenge.

“We need to work with a range of people and organisations to make social care an attractive career path, and also to make sure they understand how brilliant our care homes can be to live and work in”

Independent Sector Nursing Data 2016 is based on survey data from 50 care organisations, representing 269 individual services and approximately 2,500 nurses from the sector.  It provides some headline facts and figures about the sector in relation to the recruitment and retention of nurses.

Voices from the Nursing Front Line is based on interviews with 28 nurses working in the independent sector, and shares their joys, frustrations and aspirations in their roles through their own voices.  It sets out 10 recommendations which Scottish Care hopes to progress in partnership with other organisations.

Both reports can be accessed here:

Voices from the Nursing Front Line 

Independent Sector Nursing Data 2016

 

The reports will be discussed in further detail at a Nursing Seminar, hosted by Scottish Care and taking place on 6 December 2016 in Edinburgh.

More information can be found on the Events section of the website or by contacting [email protected]

Press Release from Scottish Care National Care Home Conference

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National Care Home Conference

Hilton Hotel Glasgow

Friday 18 November 2016

Care Homes at the Heart”

 

 

CARE HOME SECTOR WARNS OF INTOLERABLE NURSING SHORTAGES, WITH 28 PER CENT OF POSTS VACANT

Care home operators say more needs to be done to promote the positive image of care homes, as they face serious staffing challenges due to an “intolerable” shortage of nurses.

And unless immediate action is taken the sector has warned there may be insufficient capacity to cope with increased demand as winter sets in.

The message will be delivered at a conference in Glasgow today (FRI NOV 18) by Dr Donald Macaskill, chief executive of Scottish Care, the representative body for the country’s independent social care services.

Unveiling two new detailed reports on nursing in the care home sector –  ‘Independent Sector Nursing Data Report 2016’ and  ‘Voices from the Nursing Front Line’ – Dr Macaskill said more than a quarter of nursing posts are vacant, forcing operators to increasingly rely on agencies to fill their nursing rotas at an average cost of £343-per-shift although some charge up to £800-per-shift.

He said:

“This is clearly an unsustainable model, and one that needs addressed as a matter of urgency.  We need to work with Local Authorities, the NHS and other partners to attract more people to work in the care sector, as it can be a hugely rewarding career path which offers a range of skills and experiences to nurses.”

Detailing the scale of the problem facing Scottish Care members, Dr Macaskill will tell the sector’s National Care Home Conference – which is sponsored by the Clydesdale Bank and will be addressed by Health Secretary Shona Robison:

“The findings of our report – Independent Sector Nursing Data Report 2016 –  indicates this is a period of real criticality

“Last year we identified a  developing crisis over the recruitment and retention of nursing staff and 12 months on, there are growing concerns around the worsening of the issue.”

“The nurse vacancy level is 28 per cent up from 18 per cent last year, a very concerning trend, which demonstrates the average service is forced to operate with more than a quarter of its stable nurse workforce missing.

“In 2015, 66 per cent of organisations were struggling to fill posts. Now it’s 98 per cent.

“Recruitment and retention difficulties have detrimental implications for continuity of care and requires high cost solutions such as nurse agency use to meet safe staffing levels.”

The biggest problem identified in the report is an insufficient supply of nurses.

Dr Macaskill said: “This raises questions about whether current student nurse intake levels are sufficient.”

He added: “More nurses are being recruited from the EU by service providers – with 35 per cent of organisations doing so this year compared to 14 per cent last year. Brexit is likely to have significant implications and present even more difficulties in filling nurse posts in the future.

“In addition, 17 per cent of providers hire nurses from outwith the EU – up from five per cent in the previous survey.”

Dr Macaskill continued:

“We’re facing an immediate challenge in relation to the shortage of nurses working in our care homes.  Whilst the general shortage of nurses is a serious issue, we also need to look at why many people, nurses and other professions, are not choosing to work in care homes.  We need to attract more people to work in the social care sector and articulate the many benefits of doing so.  These measures require us to work with Scottish Government and other partners, including colleges, universities and health and social care partnerships to find solutions to this challenge.

“We need to work with a range of people and organisations to make social care an attractive career path, and also to make sure they understand how brilliant our care homes can be to live and work in.  We need to stop talking down care homes and start celebrating them.  They are about extraordinary  people living ordinary lives, and they present a vast range of opportunities for personal and professional development for those working in the sector.”

“As part of addressing these challenges, we are delighted that we will be announcing the launch of Care Home Week 2017 at the conference – a new initiative to raise awareness of care homes, celebrate the people that live and work in them, bust the myths that exist around care homes and to tell their many good news stories.  The week will take place from 12-18 June 2017 and will incorporate Care Home Open Day on Friday 16 June.

“What’s more, Scottish Care has the privilege of screening ‘Directed by North Merchiston’ at the Care Home Conference – a series of films commissioned by Luminate (Scotland’s creative ageing festival) and Scottish Care celebrating care home residents.  The series of 5 short films depict BAFTA award winning documentary filmmaker Duncan Cowles working with residents in North Merchiston Care Home in Edinburgh to make films about subjects of the residents’ choice, with amusing and extremely touching results. They depict the reality of the stories, relationships, love and laughter that our care homes are centred around.”

  • Scottish Care has entered into a partnership agreement with the Clydesdale Bank for a period of 3 years. The agreement will see the organisations work together for the benefit of the independent care sector in Scotland with the  bank supporting a number of Scottish Care events and initiatives. Scottish Care Chief Executive, Dr Donald Macaskill said, “I am delighted to welcome Clydesdale  Bank into a partnership agreement with Scottish Care. Our membership covers the length and breadth of Scotland and we are pleased to enter into a new relationship, which goes beyond our sponsor supporting our annual, Care Home Conference and Awards.  We look forward to the next three years when we will work with colleagues in Clydesdale to ensure that at a time of significant change and flux in the care sector we are both able to support our distinctive pieces of work.  We hope this will be seen in our joint working including through seminars and workshops which will run throughout the country.”

‘Directed by North Merchiston’ – five extraordinary films with care home residents

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‘Directed by North Merchiston’ – five extraordinary films with care home residents

Scottish Care is privileged to have been involved in this innovative project with Luminate and film maker Duncan Cowles

Scottish Care is delighted to have hosted the first public premiere of ‘Directed by North Merchiston’: a series of short films by Duncan Cowles in conjunction with residents of Four Seasons’ North Merchiston care home in Edinburgh.
The films were shown at Scottish Care’s annual Care Home Conference in Glasgow on 18 November, in front of over 450 delegates from across the health and social care sector.

The project was the brainchild of Duncan Cowles, a BAFTA Scotland Award winning documentary filmmaker. He said:
“One of the biggest issues for older generations today is loneliness. I wanted to give the residents of North Merchiston Care Home a voice. So, instead of me coming in with my camera and making films about the people living there, I wanted the residents to think of themselves as the filmmakers and develop the stories they’d personally like to tell.”

The project was commissioned by Luminate, Scotland’s creative ageing festival, and was supported by Scottish Care. It had its first screening in front of North Merchiston residents, families, staff and project partners as part of the Luminate festival in October.

Teasers for each film can be accessed below:

Edith

John

Margaret

Charles

May

The full films will be available in early 2017 for public viewing.

For more information about the films, contact Duncan Cowles –

www.duncancowles.com 

[email protected]