Dementia and Covid -19: Medication Support

The government have contracted the Care Inspectorate to look at the prescribing, use and review of psychoactive medication in care homes during the pandemic.    This work will commence in a few months and will involve only a sample of care homes.

As your Transforming Workforce Lead, I am keen this work will inform future supports that are needed for people in the sector, including staff.

Dr David Marshall, Senior Improvement Adviser (Pharmacy) at the Care Inspectorate said “I am delighted that Dr Jane Douglas [Scottish Care Transforming Workforce Lead (Nursing)] has agreed to represent the sector at the report writings stage of this project”.

We are all aware of the impact on the sector caused by recent national investigations into operations during Covid-19. We also recognise the potential for stress with any such medication work. However, I am assured that the thrust of this work is about looking at the legitimate appropriate use of psychoactive medicines, and that the methodology used will keep operational impact to a minimum.

The beginning of Covid-19 presented particular challenges for all working in the care sector, including the necessary suspension of many of the normal services and supports that we receive and that we can offer.  Understanding the relationship between the COVID-19 virus and the impact it had on care services and on those with dementia, especially during the first wave, is crucial.

Following engagement with people with dementia and their carers, the government produced their Dementia and Covid-19 – National Action Plan.  More information on that can be found at the link below.

https://www.gov.scot/publications/dementia-covid-19-national-action-plan-continue-support-recovery-people-dementia-carers/

 

Dr Jane Douglas

Transforming Workforce Lead for Nursing

 

 

 

Day Care Services Surgery – 1 June 2022

Over the past 2 years of the pandemic we have been very aware of the impact that Covid has had upon Care Homes and Home Care services.

One area that may have been overlooked and forgotten about are Day Services which are buildings based.  We at Scottish Care would like to meet with members of Scottish Care to discuss the issues and challenges you have faced over the past 2 years and also the resultant outcomes such as reduced funding and client referrals etc.

We have arranged a one off special surgery webinar session with ALL building based day services (including non-members) and it will take place on:

Wednesday 1st June at 2-3pm.

Please register in advance for this meeting:
https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZUqdOqoqzIoHNMW_jwTBd26SA3FjxQ_0kEH 

After registering, you should receive an email from Zoom with details to join this session.

We would be grateful if you would consider attending this important surgery session. Your host for this session is the Scottish Care CEO Donald Macaskill.

If you are unable to attend please send your comments to Stefanie Callaghan: [email protected]

Looking forward to seeing you on the day.

Value based recruitment toolkit

The SSSC created a values based recruitment toolkit a few years ago, that might be of interest to members.

The ‘Right values, right people’ resource was created in response to a request from employers during the exploration with stakeholders about the induction passport that was being muted at that time. Employers told SSSC that they wanted recruitment tools in one place and were particularly looking for help from this resource to improve retention.

You can access the toolkit on: https://learn.sssc.uk.com/rvrp/

Care at Home & Housing Support Awards 2022 – Winners

Scottish Care’s National Care at Home & Housing Support Awards 2022 took place on the evening of Friday 13 May 2022 at the Radisson Blu Hotel in Glasgow, hosted by Pop Idol Winner, Michelle McManus and Scottish Care CEO, Dr Donald Macaskill.

This was first in-person homecare awards ceremony that we have hosted in 3years, since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic! It was an amazing yet emotional night for everyone there.

Huge congratulations to all of our deserving finalists and winners, and thank you to all the Awards Sponsors.

Find out more about our finalists here on our Awards Programme.

#celebratecare #careawards22

Out of the shadows: reimagining home as a place of care

This week’s blog post is the text which formed part of the address I gave yesterday at the 2022 Care at Home & Housing Support Conference. This event titled ‘Home is best: the critical role of homecare and housing support’ is the first homecare conference that Scottish Care has held in-person in 3 years.


The last three years have been some of the most trying and challenging that many of us have lived through and that is perhaps even more the case for the care at home and housing support sector and its workforce.

When I started to think of the last three years since we met in conference my reflections were inevitably dominated by the Covid pandemic and how the sector responded – but also more recently about how the sector is facing and enduring some of the most significant workforce and survival concerns any of us have ever experienced

In thinking of all that and what has happened the image that came to mind – is of a sector in the shadows – most of the time ,a shadow existence not of our own making but created by the actions of others – because care at home and housing support has been a sector that has been frequently marginalised and forgotten, bounded by the presumption and ignorance of those who thought they knew what they were talking about but simply failed to ask those who really did know better. It has been the tale of a sector and workforce which was largely ignored and not included. So, it has felt and still feels as if homecare is a sector put into the shadows.

Well, it is very much time to come out of those shadows and into the daylight.

It is certainly time for us to stop talking about the potential of homecare and to start putting our aspirations into practice through determined action and focus and to create a future that must be different. It is long since past time for us all to really live out the practical and realistic hopes we have for the sector and which we have articulated for so long. It is time to come out from the shadows and to start to shape that tomorrow with our own hands because no one else is going to do it for us.

But before you know where you are going – it is often wise to reflect on where you have been and what you have experienced.

And the last two years have been a time of shadows, not ones of our own making but an existence created by the actions and the response of others.

There has been the shadow of frontline workers not being noticed.

In May 2020 I wrote a blog entitled the ‘forgotten frontline’ in which I described the way in which the pandemic response had to that time largely ignored the vital and valuable role of the homecare workforce.

These are the women and men who we saw in our streets as regular as clockwork despite all the fears and challenges of an unknown virus. It is they who got out of bed in the morning and walked out of the secure place of their own home and into a community silent with the absence of normality. It is they who worried about taking the virus home to their families yet still in discipline and professional dedication used their energies to overcome fear, their commitment to the care of others to supplant anxiety, and who rolled up their sleeves and did the job which is no ordinary one but one of compassion and dignity.

These are the truly unsung heroes of the pandemic whose pattern of work was interrupted by rule and regulation, who drove in separate cars so as not to spread the virus by sharing, who walked miles because the buses were not running, who put on their PPE despite time not being allocated for the task, and who knocked the doors of clients and brought life, love, connection and company to the tens of thousands of women and men whose independence and wellbeing is dependent upon the work of homecare.

They were the forgotten frontline. The devastating impact of the virus on residential and nursing homes and the acute loss of life rightly gained public, political and media attention and focus. But we so easily forgot the impact of the virus on the lives of those who were supported in their own homes and on those who cared for and supported them.We certainly forgot them when we started to clap for carers, and we went on forgetting them every time a frontline homecare worker was turned away from a priority queue in a supermarket or denied access because they did not have the right badge – because they were not from the NHS. Memories of such limitation and rejection fade slowly from recall.

Our frontline homecare staff were put into the shadows.

So too were the thousands of women and men who had their packages of care support limited and removed, some with the minimum amount of notice and many without real explanation. Family and friend, neighbour and acquaintance stepped up to the plate as individuals and communities really did care and support in those early pandemic days.

But it is to our shame that as a society we thought it both desirable and a priority to diminish the little contact, remove the essential care and support on which so many individuals depended. They were the out of sight ones whose invisibility became even more pronounced and detached from our perception. They were the users of services which evaporated as the demand to protect the NHS overrode all other strategy or approach. It was they who living with dementia and its confusion received out of the blue phone calls about DNACPR forms, who found it impossible to get primary care services, whose loved ones were exhausted in the task of caring- and who was there? With the regularity of commitment?  frontline homecare staff at least where their contracts had not been cancelled.

I do not think we will ever know the psychological and physical impact on those who receive care at home and housing support, brought about by the removal of care packages, the loss of contact and company, the disappearance of homecare staff in some instances virtually overnight.

But what we do know are the statistics which show the huge increase in the number of deaths in our communities; we know the profound strain and stress, breakdown and fatigue faced by family and unpaid carers; and we know now that there needs to be a serious assessment of the decisions to remove care in a manner which has had such a profound impact on so many.

And so those who used homecare support were put into a place of shadow by a lack of priority, importance, and value.

But the placing of the sector into a place of shadow went on – maybe this was especially seen in the conflicting and confusing guidance which failed to appear for such a long time, that is the guidance we wanted and asked for – not adaptations, not edits – but a guidance that spoke directly to the practical needs of homecare services.

I am recalling times when we had to try to educate decision makers about the reality of a workforce going in and out of folks’ homes, of the need to have clear guidance on mask wearing in houses, of making sure that there was an adequacy of supply of PPE (for a shift maybe involving as many as a dozen separate homes) and the right PPE.

And then came the battles over testing – the arguments about how important it was that we made it easier for frontline homecare staff to be tested – that they should be seen as a priority workforce – and we should never have needed to voice that sentiment – that at times and in places of high community transmission the dangers to them and those they supported were huge.

The ignorance at strategic level about the nature of homecare was stark – and in some instances remains so.

And the shadow kept getting darker – and the vaccination roll out came – the life saver and the turner of the tide – it was right that vaccinations were prioritised for care home and hospital staff, for residents and patients – and for those over a certain age and with vulnerabilities in their own home. But the serious lack of focus on the critical importance of vaccinating homecare staff beyond the first vaccination should be reckoned as an error and a mistake. Access far from being made easy became a struggle and countless hours were wasted by organisations and staff trying and failing to get appointments or having to queue for ages along with the general public – when they should have been a targeted priority much earlier.

And the shadows went on and on well into and beyond our initial first and second waves. The prioritisation of the NHS and especially the obsessive focus on the issue of delayed discharge singularly failed to address the systemic crisis facing a legion of homecare providers.

A ‘lets throw money’ at the problem response devoid of systemic understanding and an awareness of the critical role of homecare as both a preventative and rehabilitative service has only served to exacerbate the decline and departure of so many organisations from the homecare sector in the last few months.

The lack of real fiscal understanding of the realities of the sector has made the shadow even worse. We applauded the increase in frontline salaries for care staff – but why was it handled and managed in such a cack-handed manner? – why did it take months for commissioners and funders to get the mid-year uplift right and even today dozens of providers across Scotland are still unaware of the contract levels they will receive to enable payment to a critical frontline workforce?

The fiscal response of Government to the homecare sector has lacked maturity and depth and has perversely caused destabilisation rather than embedded stability. There is little point in saying to a frontline worker you are now going to get paid £10.50 an hour if the actions taken by local and national government elsewhere – or to be more precise the inaction taken – results in your employer going out of business.

And still the shadows deepen – we have had a disease of more and more care packages being cut or streamlined, pushing people to the point of despair; we have witnessed an obscene increase in the number of 15-minute visits – visits which fragment dignity into time and task slots thus demeaning our humanity and which embed a damaging transactional approach.

Then throughout there has been the shadow of presuming that providers could just switch on provision – all in an attempt to address the Holy Cow of delayed discharge and the threats of the winter just past – but all without any real understanding of the sector – almost as if they thought that there was a standby workforce waiting in the wings to step up to the plate.  Come on!

And all the time the dedicated frontline workforce has become more and more exhausted, stretched beyond breaking point, covering shifts for colleagues swept away by Omicron, trying to keep services going in the face of unparalleled staff absence and sickness.

And all the time the shadow of staff leaving to go to other sectors where they are not judged and regulated, where they receive value and welcome – continues – and no glitzy TV campaign is going to address the fundamental lack of value we have failed to bestow on frontline staff and the homecare organisations who employ them.

And then in recent weeks we have had the shadow of fuel costs spiralling out of control so that staff have told managers that they simply cannot afford to drive to work or cannot afford to drive in their work; and the shadow of the impact of a cost-of-living crisis taking us back to the seventies, and of growing anxiety and fear as we look into the autumn.

Homecare has been and is in the shadows – NOW is the time to come out of them, to stop accepting being done to, to be telt by those who know not of what they speak, and to start stoutly and loudly advocating for what can and must be different, what can and must be changed, what can and will be achieved.

Some of you might be sitting there thinking what’s he worrying about we have the National Care Service just round the corner – when all our ills will be rolled up into solution, when we will have plenty a person to work in homecare, when there will be real financial valuing and fiscal maturity to deliver a world leading social care sector.

Well excuse me despite the political crystal ball gazing and the hype, reality is rooted in the now and we need to act with speed, or we simply won’t have a care sector left by the time of the glorious new dawn. We cannot remain in the shadows much longer or our life blood will grow cold.

The world of care at home and housing support has so much to offer for a new way of being and caring, a more dynamic approach to support and an enlivening of our citizenry.

I think there are several aspects of a sector no longer in the shadows.

The first relates to a re-discovery and a passionate articulation of what it is that we do because I am sick of so many people thinking that homecare is just about ‘home helping’ – a throwback to the eighties in the perceptions even of those who make decisions.

We need to re-discover the social at the heart of the definition of social care. Social care is NOT the same as healthcare and we need to be much stronger at articulating what makes it unique, different and worth investing in for all our communities.

Homecare is that care and support which enables and empowers an individual to be free, autonomous and independent in their own home. It is the energy which gives purpose to someone wanting to remain in their own space and place, it is the structure of support and care which enables citizens to remain connected to their families and friends, their neighbours, streets and villages. It is not an added extra but the essential support service that enables life to be lived to its fullest.

The best of homecare is a care that changes life and gives life.

The problem is that what we have ended up for various reasons with what is a maintenance approach to care – maintain people where they are, as they are, make sure we do not need to draw on precious NHS resources – but that is a total failure to see the potential of homecare which enables people to live lives to the full, to be active citizens and to have their voice count and matter.

So Feeley and his review was spot on when he emphasises the importance of a preventative approach to support and care that allows people to be independent for longer.

But preventative approaches which vest autonomy and choice with the citizen do not just happen – they are not accidental occurrences – they must be invested in up-stream and with co-ordinated determination. That is what has been singularly missing, not least in the failure of the self-directed support legislation when it applies to older adults in particular. SDS has become tokenistic choice and a pretence at involvement and empowerment.

Secondly a homecare sector which comes out of the shadows must be one that has the valuing of the workforce at its core – running through all things like a stick of rock.

Valuing comes undeniably with increases in take-home pay; but it is also in having terms and conditions which reflect priority and parity – like sickness benefit and death in service benefits which are fit for purpose and attractive. It also means paying staff for the whole of their time, for travel most critically. It means an end to paying workers through mechanisms which make them feel as if they are clocking in like badly behaved children ticking the school register in the morning. Can you imagine a nurse or a doctor being electronically call monitored? – then why is it okay for social care frontline staff?

But critically it means respect which values professionalism, which allows the worker to flourish and improve, learn, and develop.

And lastly in terms of the workforce we need urgently to move to an autonomous workforce – where the individual can work with the supported person to determine appropriateness of service and delivery, mapping work and time to the needs of the person not the strictures of the system. Let the worker breathe. Trust her – empower her – there is nothing more likely to create change than a person allowed to take control. So let us give a case-load to our staff and start to bestow professional trust on these individuals.

And for all this to happen, we need the homecare sector to come out of the shadows of mistrust, suspicion, contract compliance and into a dynamic new relationship of trust and transparency, shared management, and mutual integrity.

Thirdly, homecare has to put relationship building and formation at its core. It’s all about relationship, relationship, relationship stupid!

Preventative support, an empowered consistent workforce, the ability to detect and monitor changes in the supported person; the addressing of mental health issues, of isolation and grief – are all founded upon the need for relationship. It is impossible to form meaningful care and support relationships which enhance the dignity of the individual who needs services in a task-oriented approach.

So let us call it out and refuse to be complicit in a system that has effectively become the contracting of compassion slots instead of the enabling of dignity moments, that has crowded out conversation through a stress on contract compliance.

Fourthly it is time to build on what we know from the pandemic that has really worked.

I am thinking of the astonishingly positive use of in-home treatments for Covid and more – what has loosely come to be termed ‘Hospital at home’ – but it should not just be hospital but care at home – the home is too important to leave to the NHS alone!

There is a real potential if we work together for solid multi-disciplinary team working around the person with a mix of secondary, primary, and social care – so let us get on with it and turn the home into a sanctuary of independence where care comes to you rather than unnecessary and expensive hospitalisation and withdrawal from community and connectedness. Social care – home care – the clue is in the word – has a massive role to play in that dynamic process. Let us make the home the place of health and the centre of social care

Fifthly and lastly there is massive untapped potential to use technology and digital innovation to reshape the way we deliver homecare. This is already happening – it is not tomorrow’s world but today’s possibility. I do not mean the gizmos and the gadgets of the designer still at school – I mean the tech and gear you and I use every day which litters so many of our homes and with which most people regardless of age have become familiar and comfortable.

George Crooks will doubtless say a lot more. But in all this more than anything else there is the possibility of making care more person-led, more individual-centric, more likely to foster control and nurture autonomy – that is if we use technology to enable choice and individuality rather than to limit, cost save, remove privacy, control and diminish capacity. For that to happen a robust human rights and ethical modelling and set of principles must be in place.

There is so much more that could be said about the potential of homecare – but one thing I am clear of after the pain and absence of the last three years is that it needs to happen now, with people who matter most, those who use services, with those who work, and those who employ – a future out of the shadows created by those who live in the real world not policy heaven or political utopia.

For all this to happen – for homecare to come out of the shadows and fully into the light – we need not just the people in this room but political leadership at national and local level – to work with the sector to achieve the aspirations I believe we all broadly hold in common.

That working together means creating full engagement and involvement with the independent care sector. It means elevating social care as a whole and cutting us from the perceived umbilical cord to the NHS – you will never solve the crisis of the NHS by ignoring the crisis in social care – the symbiotic relationship of the two demands a mutuality of equality and treatment which recognises that.

But it also means being realistic and honest about how much radical reform requires adequacy of resource. An ethical commissioning system which goes beyond a sound bite.

It is time to cast off the shadows both those imposed and self-limiting, to walk out of a past which has failed to put social care at the heart of our communities, to start to create our homes as places of care, wellbeing, connection and independence, to walk away from models which have put systems before people, reaction before prevention, and clinical care before social care.

There is so much potential, but it can only be achieved in the sunlight of a realistic day not the shadows we have been placed in. It is time to start breathing a new air. It is time for a new future.

New insights report on nursing in social care – 12 May

New report on nursing emphasises need to change perception of careers in social care

Scottish Care has published a new insights report on nursing in social care  today (Thursday 12 May 2022) as part of International Nurses Day.

The report titled ‘Hearing the nursing voice:  Listening to Independent Sector Social Care Nurses’ is a follow on from the 2016 report – ‘Voices from the Nursing Front Line’, capturing the experiences of frontline registered nurses working in the independent social care sector in Scotland. The report depicts the rewards and challenges of social care nursing, whilst highlighting the importance of nursing within the sector as well as the specialism of the role.

‘Hearing the nursing voice:  Listening to Independent Sector Social Care Nurses’ is based on a qualitative study of approximately 84 participants through one-to-one interviews and a focus group. Most of these participants are Registered Nurses, with a variety of different roles in care home and care at home settings.

The research identified four areas of particular expertise, described in the report as ‘Principles of Practice’, which help to define and describe nursing in social care. These include:

  • Building relationships with residents and relatives
  • Supporting wellness
  • Being a visible and compassionate leader
  • Sharing knowledge and empowering others

It also found that there is a continued stigma associated with social care nursing, especially in care homes. Some of this stigma has been exacerbated by the Covid-19 crisis, with misguided political decision making and disproportionately negative media coverage  serving to devalue the role of nurses in social care and massively impacting this workforce. Nurses from the study reported that they feel that they are negatively perceived by their peers, professionals, the public and the media. The report highlights  a continued lack of understanding of the role of nurses in social care, including it being viewed  as a ‘low status career choice’, and this negative image contributes to the nursing recruitment and retention issues currently faced by the social care sector.

Despite these challenges, participants also spoke about their love for their role and how proud they are of being a nurse in social care, with the research findings reinforcing the crucial leadership, value and support that nurse in social care provide for people who live and work in care homes.

The author of the report, Dr Jane Douglas, Scottish Care’s Transforming Workforce Lead for Nursing commented:

“All the nurses who took part in the study were proud of what they do, their passion and compassion shone through. Nursing in social care is a specialist complex role, which is sometimes challenging but also dynamic. Historically the role has been an enigma: sometimes invisible, often misunderstood and undervalued. This report provides a real insight into the nursing role in social care with an aim to define the role and help to change perception.”

‘Hearing the nursing voice:  Listening to Independent Sector Social Care Nurses’ was launched at the ‘I feel, I see, I imagine’ virtual nursing event in celebration of International Nurses Day 2022. This event was organised by Scottish Care, the representative body for independent social care services across Scotland, with key speakers including the former Director of the Royal College of Nursing Scotland (RCN Scotland), Theresa Fyffe and the Chief Executive of the Queen’s Nursing Institute Scotland (QNIS), Clare Cable

Read the report here.

Launch of new Bereavement-Friendly Workplace Toolkit

New award will recognise compassionate employers

A new scheme launches this week to make workplaces better for people who are grieving.

The new Bereavement Charter Mark will recognise employers who support bereaved staff.  It is accompanied by a Bereavement-Friendly Workplaces Toolkit providing tips and advice on how employers, managers and colleagues can support people who are grieving.

“Losing someone we love is the hardest thing many of us have to go through, and the pandemic has made life even more difficult for people who are bereaved.” Says Rebecca Patterson, Director of Good Life, Good Death, Good Grief. “No-one can take away someone’s grief, but employers have the power to make someone’s life a little better or a lot worse.”

To gain the new Bereavement Charter Mark, employers must agree to take some simple steps towards creating a supportive environment for people who are bereaved, for example educating staff about bereavement, or creating a local bereavement policy.

“I was worried about how I would cope.“ says Clare, who was apprehensive about returning to work after her Mum died.  “My line manager was just brilliant.  It was a case of ‘do what you can, when you can, if you can’. I can’t begin to tell you the relief this gave me.  But other people at work said and did some really insensitive things that made me feel terrible.  Hopefully these new resources will help other people facing the same situation as me.”

The new resources were produced by the Scottish Bereavement Charter Group, and Good Life, Good Death, Good Grief, a charity initiative working to make Scotland a place where everyone knows how to help when someone is caring, dying or grieving.

The resources include:

  • A Bereavement-Friendly Workplaces Toolkit with information to help employers develop helpful workplace practices relating to bereavement.
  • A Charter Mark that gives recognition to employers working to become more bereavement-friendly.
  • An Employer’s Guide to the Bereavement Charter.
  • A leaflet ‘What to do when a colleague has been bereaved’.
  • A checklist of ‘things to do’ to become a bereavement-friendly workplace.

“Becoming a bereavement-friendly workplace doesn’t have to be expensive – a lot of it is about flexibility, sensitivity and good communication.” Says Donald Macaskill, Chief Executive of Scottish Care.

“The Charter Mark and Toolkit help employers to see how simple actions by colleagues and managers can make a big difference to people who are living with grief.”

The new resources have been tested out with business leaders in Inverclyde, with positive results.

“At CVS Inverclyde we’ve been working towards achieving the new Bereavement Charter Mark, and it has been an incredibly positive experience for all involved.” says Alison Bunce of Inverclyde Cares.  “It has been a great opportunity to bring colleagues together and talk through what we want to do to support each other through the difficult times that can come with bereavement.”

The new resources are being launched as part of ‘Demystifying Death Week’ which runs from 2-6 May.  Demystifying Death Week is about shining a light on death, dying and bereavement in Scotland.

“People usually want to do the right thing when someone they know is caring, dying or grieving. But often they can feel awkward offering help, or worry about making things worse.” says Mark Hazelwood, Chief Executive of the Scottish Partnership for Palliative Care.

“Demystifying death week, and the new Bereavement Charter Mark and Workplaces Toolkit, are about giving people knowledge, skills and opportunities to plan and support each other through death, dying, loss and care.”

The new resources can be accessed at: https://www.goodlifedeathgrief.org.uk/content/bereavement_friendly_workplaces/

University of Stirling Job Vacancy – IMPACT facilitator

IMPACT facilitator

Part time (50% FTE),

Fixed term for 12 months

University of Stirling – Stirling Campus

Location: Baillieston Community Care, Glasgow

Grade7 £34,304-£40,927 p.a.

Closing date – Midnight – Sunday 15 May 2022
Interviews – Tuesday 24 May 2022

IMPACT (‘Improving Adult Care Together’) is a UK-wide centre for implementing evidence in adult social care, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), part of UK Research and Innovation, and the Health Foundation. IMPACT is an ‘implementation centre’, drawing on knowledge gained from different types of research, the lived experience of people using services and their carers, and the practice knowledge of social care staff.

Its aims are to enable practical improvements on the ground, and make a crucial contribution to longer-term cultural change, by:

  • Supporting more widespread use of evidence in adult social care, leading to better care practices, systems and outcomes for people who use services, their families and communities
  • Building capacity and skills in the adult social care workforce to work with evidence of different kinds to innovate, improve care and deliver better outcomes
  • Facilitating sustainable and productive relationships between the full range of adult social care stakeholders to co-create positive change/innovations and improve outcomes for people using adult social care and their families
  • Improving understanding of the factors which help and hinder the implementation of evidence in practice, and using this to overcome longstanding barriers to positive change

To demonstrate how evidence can be deployed in adult social care to improve services and people’s lives, IMPACT will appoint three IMPACT Facilitators, one each in England, Scotland and Wales, who will design, deliver and evaluate an evidence-informed improvement project based in a host organisation (a local service or social care system).  Drawing on evidence from research, lived experience and practice knowledge, Facilitators will design a local project, review evidence of what works, work with diverse stakeholders to implement the project in practice, share learning with others and evaluate the project of another Facilitator.

In 2022, we are seeking three Facilitators, each on a 50% basis for 12 months in the first instance.  Successful candidates can be employed by a lead University or explore scope for secondment from their current employer.  We hope that the 50% nature of these roles may encourage development of ‘hybrid’ roles (for example, researchers working to implement evidence in practice, and people from policy/practice backgrounds gaining experience of working with universities).  Given the focus on practical implementation in the realities of front-line practice, these roles will be ‘academic-related’ (in University terms), and would be relevant for an applied  researcher or someone working in a policy or practice setting with an interest in improvement through evidence-informed practice.

Scotland site – location and topic:

The recruiting organisation for this post is the University of Stirling. The IMPACT Facilitator post will be located in Baillieston Community Care, Parkhead, Glasgow. The post-holder will support the implementation of a new model developed by Scottish Care to increase the use of technology in care at home services.

Find out more about this job role and apply here.

Celebrating Nursing in Social Care Virtual Event -12 May

We are delighted to publish the morning and afternoon programme for our virtual event on Thursday 12 May 2022 to celebrate International Nurses Day.

This event, hosted by our Transforming Workforce Lead for Nursing, Dr Jane Douglas, will run from 10:00 am – 4:00 pm on Microsoft Teams.

The morning session will focus on celebrating social care nursingwith a number of keynote speakers to raise awareness of nursing in the social care sector, the launch of a new nursing insights report and career nurses sharing their journey of becoming a care home nurse.

The afternoon session will look at highlighting the value of care homes as a practice learning environment. This session will be hosted by Donna Craig – Senior Educator, Nursing and Midwifery Practice Education & Pre-registration, NHS Education for Scotland. Attendees will get to hear from care home providers and their experience of supporting pre-registration nursing students and using their care homes as a practice learning environment. Attendees will also get the chance to ask questions during a Q & A session.

This event is free and open to everyone, including students, care home and care at home providers. If you are interested in attending this event, please register on: https://scottishcare.org/nursing-event-2022-12-may-registration-form/

Those who register will receive a Teams invite a few days before the event. Please contact [email protected] if you come across any issues.

If you come along to the event, we encourage you to tweet on the day, sharing your thoughts and comments using hashtags #IfeelIseeIimagine and #hereforlife.

Nurse Event 2022 Programme (3)