Learning Disability Statistics Scotland 2015 report

Screen Shot 2016-08-11 at 13.24.15

 

 

 

The Learning Disability Statistics Scotland 2015 report has now been published by the Scottish Commission for Learning Disability (SCLD).

This is the report of statistics about adults with learning disabilities who Scottish local authorities knew about in 2015.

You can download the full report and accompanying annexes by following the link below.

www.scld.org.uk/evidence-and-research/2015-report

If you’d like to find out more about LDSS or have a question about the report, please contact Chris Maguire at SCLD on 0141 248 3733 or email at [email protected] or you can contact Claire Stuart at [email protected]

 

Write to SCLD at  5th Floor, Suite 5.2, Stock Exchange Court, 77 Nelson Mandela Place, Glasgow, G2 1QY

 

Attending to care: a summer reflection

Earlier in the year Scottish Care published Voices from the Front Line which was the gathering together of personal stories of nearly 40 front line care staff working in the care home, care at home and housing support sector across Scotland. They were the stories of individuals who spoke of their hopes, aspirations, frustrations and exasperations with that most challenging of roles – caring for and supporting others. I was privileged to be one of those who conducted the interviews and many sentences and phrases have remained with me. One in particular continues to resonate in my mind as I tour the country talking to front line staff and providers alike. One participant said to me:

“The problem is, I don’t think we are paid to give time to people. We give care, we do the task, we have conversations as we are working … but we no longer have time, just to be with someone, just to be social. We’ve lost the time to really see what’s happening in someone’s life.”

 

Maybe that’s something you can recognise. The pressure of activity pushing out quiet space; time running away from us like sand in an hourglass, disappearing into the lostness of memory. Even at this time of year when we are supposed to be ‘re-charging the batteries’, resting and refreshing ourselves in the summer sun, there is still a pressure on time. Our traditional two weeks off never seem quite enough and so many folks talk about coming back as tired as they were when they finished up and within minutes of opening the laptop or starting the shift, being in need of the next holiday. Care can become a busy occupation rather than being an activity which allows reflection, validates the art of chat, and accentuates a space for being.

 

The scientist Alexandra Horowitz has written a brilliant study on how so preoccupied by busyness we can sometimes miss what’s in front of our eyes, how seeing isn’t an action but an art. A couple of years ago she published On Looking: Eleven Walks with Expert Eyes – the tale of a walk around a city block with eleven different “experts,” from an artist to a geologist, a toddler to a dog, and how she emerged with fresh eyes on what she witnessed.

 

Horowitz begins by pointing out the incompleteness of our experience of what we conveniently call “reality”:

Right now, you are missing the vast majority of what is happening around you. You are missing the events unfolding in your body, in the distance, and right in front of you.

 

By marshaling your attention to these words, helpfully framed in a distinct border of white, you are ignoring an unthinkably large amount of information that continues to bombard all of your senses: the hum of the fluorescent lights, the ambient noise in a large room, the places your chair presses against your legs or back, your tongue touching the roof of your mouth, the tension you are holding in your shoulders or jaw, the map of the cool and warm places on your body, the constant hum of traffic or a distant lawn-mower, the blurred view of your own shoulders and torso in your peripheral vision, a chirp of a bug or whine of a kitchen appliance.

 

She says that this ‘adaptive ignorance’ is there for a reason — we call it ‘concentration’ and it stops us from sensory overload and helps us focus on what is important for our sense experience at that particular time.

 

So we need such attention’ to survive but when it comes to relationships, to the art of caring, do we filter out things that we need and which are necessary?

 

Horowitz has said that her book is not, “about how to bring more focus to your reading of Tolstoy or how to listen more carefully to your spouse.” Rather, it is an invitation to the art of observation – we are invited to become:

Investigators of the ordinary, Sherlock characters in the midst of busyness.

 

The book is richly layered with hidden depths but what I want to focus on is a consideration of what is at the heart of the art of caring. I think there is a danger that when we commission and contract care we are oriented around the delivery of tasks thatcan be calculated, monitored, budgeted and thus remunerated. But what about that which falls beyond calculation and observation? I sometimes feel we have stripped the ‘social’ out of care on the basis of cost but in doing so, have  we stripped out the ability of carers to effectively care and support?

 

Caring and support is at a fundamental level about relationship. The effective carer sees beyond the observable; spots the subtle changes in behaviour which speak a tale no words can express; they read a story unfolding in the person before them; they can become the detector of life change which enables intervention and support. This becomes especially important where front line staff are increasingly having to have conversations about anticipatory care and end of life issues.

 

As we seek to re-consider and reform the way we structure care and support in Scotland will we leave room for such attention? Will we give space to our workers to have ‘time’ to be with rather than simply to do?

 

They want to – if we (and that’s a society ‘we’!) allow them. Systems which record visits from staff and time them to the minute might fit in a world of contracts but what place have they in arrangements which should be premised on the priority of building effective relationships, ones that make a difference to the lives of people?

 

One of the ‘experts’ who allows Horowitz to see differently, to develop her ability to ‘attend’ to the moment is a toddler. She says that part of toddlers’ extraordinary capacity for noticing has to do with their hard-wired neophilia – ‘the allure of the new and unfamiliar, which for them includes just about everything that we, old and jaded, have deemed familiar and thus uninteresting.’ (except as Horowitz says when we go on holiday – when we give space and time to the new – what she calls the holiday paradox).

 

I can well attest to the inquisitiveness and excitement of new discovery which a toddler enthuses into life. Perhaps then we need in Horowitz’s terms to spend more time ‘on holiday’, to see the world through a toddler’s love of the new, to move beyond our concentration on the familiar?

 

Think of what a difference we could make – what preventative excellence could be achieved if we commission and pay care workers to simply be, to sit, to see, to ‘attend’ rather than always to do, to record and to thus be monitored. Or is all that summertime dream? 

 

 

Dr Donald Macaskill

 

@DrDMacaskill

Dr Donald Macaskill

Scottish Care

www.scottishcare.org

07545 847382

Improve dementia care through training and design

The Dementia Services Development Centre (DSDC) have a number of training and design events taking place throughout 2016.

 

Their Best Practice in Dementia Care training will run in Stirling, London and Bristol over the next few months.

Dementia friendly design can go a long way to support people with dementia to enjoy a better quality of life.  This design school will be running in both Stirling and London.

To help fit your organisation needs, DSDC offers in-house training using their associates and partners working across the UK and internationally. This means DSDC can work quickly and flexibly to deliver training to you.

Limited funding is available for charitable Housing Associations in Scotland and for other care services in Scotland.

For details please contact Lynsey Manson on [email protected].

Take part in Scottish Care nursing research

Recruitment and retention difficulties have reached a critical point within the nursing home and the social care nursing sector.  Why do nurses come into the sector and what makes them stay?

Throughout August and September, Scottish Care would like to speak to front line nurses about both their experiences and perceptions of the nursing home/social care nursing sector.

 

We want to explore in more detail the qualities and skills front line nurses need and what we can do to improve the profile of this difficult, demanding and rewarding job.   We also want to find out what motivates them in their day-to-day activities.

The intention is to create a resource of stories that can be used to help organisations shape their approach in areas such as recruitment and retention or workforce engagement.

Scottish Care will use the findings of this work to explore how we can attract more nurses to work in nursing homes and social care nursing – and how we can encourage them to stay.

 

We have therefore contacted ALL members of Scottish Care, and especially those who have been engaged recently through the Front Line Support Worker Strategy Forum and the Scottish Care Workforce Development Strategy Group to let you know about our latest initiative designed to help address the pressing issues around recruitment and retention of nurses in our sector.

Scottish Care would like to carry out interviews for roughly half an hour (by phone or in person) with people working in front line nursing posts in a variety of care home, care at home or housing support settings. We are keen to establish a national picture and take into account small and large providers including all volunteers but this depends on how many come forward. If you are not selected the research will, of course, still be available to you.

The study will take place between now and the end of September, with findings presented at the Scottish Care Annual Care Home and Conference Awards event on Friday 18th November 2016  at the Hilton Hotel, Glasgow.

If you are:

  • A qualified nurse interested in taking part in the study and can provide an appropriate management contact in your organisation

  • An employer/manager wishing to get your organisation involved and think you have nurses willing to be interviewed.

    Then please contact  Katharine Ross noting your interest before Friday 19th August 2016 at the email address below or by phone.

 

If you would like further information please don’t hesitate to contact:

Katharine Ross – Workforce Lead, Scottish Care

07427 615880

[email protected]

 

We look forward to hearing from you!

Be somebody who makes everybody feel like a somebody

Tracy Viljoen:

I came into this role hoping to help to make a difference to others.  My Twitter profile states that you should “be somebody who makes everybody feel like a somebody”; something I genuinely believe in.

I’m sure anyone who knows me would say that “Tracy loves anything to do with leadership, she loves all that fluffy stuff” and they would be absolutely right. But, I’m glad to say that more and more people out there quite like the taste, the need and the success of ‘fluffy’.

North Lanarkshire is saturated with many wonderful stories of success, the problem is that staff however are not always great at blowing their own trumpet; they typically say “But that’s just what we do” or “it’s my job”. One care home had a resident with mental health issues and challenging behavior, he was quite unstable and sadly unhappy. He had always talked about owning a pet and so the care home manager and staff decided to take a SAFE RISK and arrange for ‘Gordy’; a bearded dragon to come and live with the resident.  Self-harming incidents have significantly reduced for this man and the staff can work with him in a far more manageable way.

A local frontline worker who was on nightshift when a resident took ill managed to stop a hospital admission being arranged by the GP – the lady had an anticipatory care plan (ACP) in place which stated very clearly she wished to remain at home, to die around loved ones and staff who knew her and how she liked to live. The worker used her AUTONOMY and SELF LEADERSHIP to achieve the desired outcome. I could go on and on, there are literally no shortage of examples of amazing things and great practice happening here in North Lanarkshire.

Last year I went to a workshop run by the amazing IRISS which was called ‘THE BIG IDEA’ and oh my word that’s exactly what it has turned into. They wanted a local partnership to work with, on any chosen project, in the new integrated world. Obviously I wanted this to be North Lanarkshire and 10 months later we are slap bang in the middle of an experience based co-design programme or as we call it EBCD. Developed by Bate and Robert it’s a methodology for working with groups of people who access support or care and the staff who provide this to improve services.

We have partners from all sectors, NHS Local Authority and social work involved in a project that is looking at the experience of going to Monklands A&E Department if you are a frequent attender who arrives in DISTRESS but not needing clinical attention. Such a worthwhile project and even today I met another provider who wants to be involved at the co-design stage.

There are so many examples of great projects locally which show innovation and great passion.

North Lanarkshire frontline staff in the independent care sector are creative and innovative and I have no doubt will continue to go from strength to strength if this work continues at both local and national level. These are exciting times for the sector!

 

Tracy Viljoen, Development Officer for North Lanarkshire

 [email protected]

Mob: 07446843547

Arts in Care resource launched for care homes

Screen Shot 2016-07-28 at 14.23.56

 

Scottish Care, in partnership with the Care Inspectorate and Luminate was involved in the development of brand new resource to support older people in care homes across the country to enjoy and participate in the creative arts.

The project was developed by partners including the Care Inspectorate, Creative Scotland and Luminate - Scotland's Creative Ageing Festival.

Scottish Care contributed towards the development of the project as part of a national working group including the Scottish Poetry Library, NHS – Perth and Kinross and professional artists from around the country.

Launched on the 26th July the pack ensures the provision of new resources including educational tools, a DVD and guidance for every care home in Scotland to support and encourage their residents involvement in the arts.

The resource aims to "motivate and enable care staff to support those they care for to participate in the creative arts, either in a care home, or in their local community."

 

Karen Reid, the Care Inspectorate’s Chief Executive said: “The arts can be really important in maintaining and improving people’s health and wellbeing. Being creative can have a very positive impact on ageing and living well. 
""We hope the new resource will help older people reignite a passion or experience something creative that they have always wanted to do. Older people should be able to access high quality arts and creative activities whatever their abilities, circumstances and wherever they live, if that is what they wish."

Anne Gallacher, Director of Luminate, said: "I am delighted that Luminate has worked with the Care Inspectorate on this new pack, which will help care home staff to provide arts opportunities for older people across Scotland.

 It showcases some exciting examples of creative activities in Scottish care homes, and highlights the huge benefits of these activities to participants. Creativity has no age, and this resource will help enable our oldest citizens to remain involved in the arts, to rediscover skills they may not have used for some time, or to try their hand at something new."

 

Becca Gatherum, Policy and Research Manager for Scottish Care, said : "Scottish Care is delighted to have been involved in the development of this valuable resource for care homes. We know many care homes are already undertaking fantastic work in ensuring residents have access to high quality creative opportunities, but that with competing pressures it can sometimes be difficult for care staff to know how to put the arts at the heart of what they do. This resource not only looks great but will support both experienced staff and those with less involvement in the arts to undertake a wide range of creative projects with residents and professional artists. We highly commend this resource to all care homes and care staff, and hope they will make good use of it and share their feedback."

 

The opportunity for care staff to learn about and share good practice and good news stories is seen as vitally important. This pack will enable them to share ideas about what works with other homes.

The resource is available here:

http://cinsp.in/arts-in-care

www.careinspectorate.com

www.luminatescotland.org

Shining the light on SDS

The worst secrets are truths not shared.

It’s amazing how sometimes folks who you think should know about things, which seem second nature to you, catch you inside out. I had two such conversations recently. The first was from a care home provider who acted with shock when I said that someone assessed as requiring residential care has the right to a personal budget and to exercise choice and control over their care and support. The second conversation was from a daughter who reacted with equal befuddlement when someone asked her had she thought about the various options for controlling her mother’s budget whilst she was in a care home.

Now maybe I am being a bit disingenuous but as someone who has campaigned for and worked to raise awareness of self-directed support for nearly 20 years I am still astonished that two and a bit years after its inception so many folks do not know about the Social Care (Self Directed Support) (Scotland) Act 2013. Okay, I am not expecting folks to be experts in the minutiae of legislation but I would have hoped and imagined that this distance down the road that the basic rights and entitlements of older citizens were being advanced and promoted across Scotland. They are clearly not in every place.

The Act – and therefore that in practice means it is now a legal requirement – states that any individual assessed as requiring care and support and meeting the eligibility criteria of a local authority has the right to be offered four options as to how the budget allocated to meet their assessed and agreed outcomes should be spent. The so–called four options exist for all our citizens and many individuals have already had and are having lives transformed by being more involved in designing the support they require around their outcomes rather than having to fit into a pre-designed service or system. So choice and control has and is making a real difference to the learning disabled, to those with physical and mental health challenges, but what of the tens of thousands of older citizens?

That picture is not so clear. Undoubtedly many hundreds who live in communities are being supported to exercise choice through self-directed support and projects like our own Getting it Right For Older People are embedding their human rights at the heart of their care and support.

For those in residential care the story is less positive. Legally many of those individuals have the right to be offered control over their budget through three options, although not direct payments (option one). We have two test sites exploring the way in which all four options can be exercised. In both of these there is really interesting work going on - in East Renfrewshire and Moray - involving the local integration partnerships, providers and citizens themselves.

But what about the rest of the country? On the one hand, I hear a lot of platitudinal statements around older people and self-directed support. Folks will say – older people do not want the hassle that controlling budgets and all that that might bring. What presumptive discrimination! Who are we to limit the exercising of rights because it conflicts with our status quo systems and existing ways of working?
On the other hand, one of the challenges is the way we commission and purchase residential and nursing care home provision. Our present system is not designed to focus around the particularities of the individual – it is a one size fits all model. The reform process now underway has a real opportunity to personalise residential care commissioning and assessment. It will not be easy but it is I think necessary.

Personalisation is not just about ensuring that the services and supports that an individual care home resident receives are built around that person’s outcomes and needs. Personalisation, in the Scottish context, is about the principles of informed choice, collaboration, involvement and control. That practically means that individuals need to be individually assessed, their outcomes (unique to them) identified and then they need to be allocated a personal budget. Clearly this suggests a systemic change in the way we offer and deliver residential care. It is a task and a challenge for commissioners and for providers together. It is a process, a change, a journey that we need to work at together and with those who use services now and who will require supports. It is a journey we have delayed for too long.

The worst secrets are indeed those truths we do not speak of and tell. It is time for all of us to start talking about the rights of residents having access to the full extent and breadth of the law around self-directed support and by extension to their full human rights. It’s too important to keep it a secret.

Dr Donald Macaskill

Report on the 2016 Scottish Care at Home Awards

es_305

The Scottish Care at Home Awards are a significant date in the calendar as they represent a much needed and worthy cause of celebrating those who do so much for others, tirelessly devoted to the wellbeing of others and proving a credit to themselves and the Independent Care sector.

Taking place at the Marriot Hotel in Glasgow on Thursday 23rd June, following the Care at Home Conference the Care Awards saw a number of awards bestowed on hugely deserving individuals who make a big difference to others.

We are hugely proud to celebrate care and caring in Scotland and would like to congratulate all our winners and nominees.

The Scottish Care Lifetime Achievement Award was presented to Stephen Pennington, a deserved winner who has been Scottish Care Chair for Highland Care at Home since 2009. Stephen has spent the last 35 years working in the Social Care field assisting the vulnerable and marginalised in our society.

After awards pic (2)

Winners - Carer at Home (3)

Care at Home Services Carer of the Year - Sponsor: Carewatch Care Services
Winner: Kerrieanne George, Maxine Dewart, Teresa Dyer & Caroline Murray, Aspire Housing & Personal Development Services
Finalists:
Paul Mcconnachie, Voyage Care Fiona O’Driscoll, SCRT
Pictured: Winner & Finalists with Michelle McManus & Tracy Steel from Carewatch

 

Winners Support Services (8)

Housing Support Services Carer of the Year - Sponsor: Clyde Healthcare
Winner: Tenancy Support Service, Loretto Care
Finalists:
Laura McConnachie, Aspire Housing & Personal Development Services
Carol Graham, Loretto Care
Pictured: Winner & Finalists with Michelle McManus & Kathy McBride, Director, Clyde Healthcare

 

Nominess Management & Leadership (3)

Management & Leadership Award Sponsor: Towergate Insurance
Winner: Karen Johnson, NG Homes
Finalists:
Sharon Fleming, Loretto Care
Joeanne Hamilton, Community Care Choices
Pictured: Winner & Finalists with Michelle McManus &
Richard Webb, Caring Professions Trading Director, Towergate Insurance

 

es_618

Learning & Development Champion/Trainer -
Sponsor: Aspire Housing & Peronal Development Services

Winner: Christopher Hogsden, Blackwood Care
Finalists:
David Roxburgh, Loretto Care
Pictured:
Winner & Finalists with Michelle McManus &
Debbie Elrick, HR Manager, Aspire Housing & Personal Development Services

 

Nominees (6)

Care Services Co-ordinator/Administrator of the Year - Sponsor: Loretto Care
Winner: Amanda Allan, Home Instead Senior Care Glasgow North
Finalists:
Angela Gilles, Loretto CarePictured: Karen McDerment, ILS/Mears Group
Winner & Finalists with Michelle McManus & James Muir, Chair, Loretto Care

 

Nominees Personalisation & Partnership (1)

Personalisation & Partnership Award - Sponsor: Healthcare Improvement Scotland
Winner: Bluebird Care & Partners
Finalists:
Luise McGlone, Colin Hamilton & Paul Copeland, Aspire Highland Care at Home Development Group Pictured: Winner & Finalists with Michelle McManus &
Dame Denise Coia DBE, Chair, Healthcare Improvement Scotland

 

Individual Achievement winner (10)

Individual Achievement Award - Sponsor: Kippen Care Services
Joint Winners:
Angusina Morrison, SCRT
Eoghan Cowan, Cairllum Care Emma McAuley, Aspire
Mandy McKenzie, Blackwood Care
Pictured: Michelle McManus, Winners and Marie Farquharson, Manager, Kippen Care Services

 

Nominess for P&P Award (11)

Housing Support Provider of the Year Sponsor: Clyde Healthcare
Winner: NG Homes HSS
Finalists:
Aspire Housing & Personal Development Services South Lanarkshire Young Persons Intensive & Carlisle Road Outreach, Loretto Care
Pictured: Winner & Finalists with Michelle McManus
and Theresa Cull, Regional Director - Scotland & Northern Ireland. ILS Mears Group

 

Nominess care at home (8)

Care at Home Provider of the Year - Sponsor: Citation
Winner: Baillieston Community Care Finalists:
Home Instead Senior Care Glasgow North
Prestige Nursing & Care Edinburgh
Pictured: Winner & Finalists with Michelle McManus and Nigel Lea, National Partnerships Manager Citation

Innovation at the heart

Legislation to implement Health and Social Care Integration came into force on 1 April this year. This brought NHS and local council care services together under one partnership arrangement for each area. In total, 31 Health and Social Care partnerships (HSCP’s) have been set up across Scotland.

At its heart, Integration aims to ensure that those who use services get the right care and support whatever their needs, at any point in their care journey. This brings a greater emphasis on enabling people to stay in their homes, or another homely setting, where possible, sharing their lives with their family and friends, doing the things that give life meaning and value.

The independent sector, being the biggest provider of social care in Scotland has a significant role to play in this programme. Though the largest provider of health and social care, our sector is not always associated with service excellence or seen as a true and valuable partner.

In order to change this I have recently set up The Learning and Innovation Group within Scottish Care. This will take the lead on sharing good practice, promoting the range of services provided by our sector and to support learning, improvement and innovation. I am joined by seven Local Integration Leads, all of whom are directly involved in innovative tests of change in their areas, by Becca Gatherum and by Jamie McGeechan. Jamie is our newly appointed Communications and Events Officer.

Those of us close to the sector see, on a daily basis, the commitment of our workforce, the high levels of skills and expertise within our teams, innovative practice, strong leadership and an absolute commitment to service excellence. This is a sector I am very proud to be part of.

The Learning and Innovation Group met for the second time yesterday and as anticipated, there was a really positive energy in the room. Given the significant challenges facing our sector just now, it was heartening to focus on the success stories and to remind ourselves why we do what we do.

Over the coming months we will share the learning from tests of change and innovative approaches to the delivery of health and social care. A variety of platforms and approaches will be used in order to reach as wide an audience as possible. These will include digital stories, publications and reports, presenting at conferences and events, videos, formal research, the development of a resource library and social media.  Jamie’s skills in communication will be evident to all! We plan to develop a section dedicated to innovation on the Scottish care website which will hopefully become a first stop for those interested in developing services. Whether looking at small tests of change, a major development or have an experience to share, we are interested in hearing from you.

I have many hopes in life, one being that the independent sector will get the respect and response that we deserve from our partners, the media and the public. We all have a role to play in this, I hope that my part in sharing the good news will help towards this.

 

Margaret McKeith

13 July 2016

Identifying skills issues for the social service workforce

Help the SSSC understand the current and future skills issues for the social service workforce by taking part in a short survey.

Your views will help the workforce regulatory body examine skills supply and demand in Scottish social services and contribute to their Workforce Skills Report. It will also help the SSSC to understand the skills needed to deliver new services.

Do you know…

  • what the causes of skills shortages are in the social service sector?
  • what the causes of skills gaps are in the social service sector?
  • if your organisation has a plan in place to address skills gaps and skills shortages for care staff?

Tell them…

  • how difficult it is to recruit people with the right capabilities and skills
  • if there is there a gap between the skills your workforce has and the skills they need to carry out the role
  • what your workplace is doing to tackle skills issues.

 

The SSSC want to hear from anyone working in social services including frontline workers, managers and training managers.

Take the survey here

The results will be published in 2017-18 and will be shared with key stakeholders including Scottish Government, employers and learning providers.

The closing date for responses is 29 July 2016.