Launch of the Health and Social Care Workforce Wellbeing line – 20 July

The Scottish Government is funding a national mental health wellbeing helpline to support health and social care workers in Scotland. This will be available 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Trained practitioners at NHS 24 will offer callers a compassionate and empathic listening service based on the principles of psychological first aid, as well as advice, signposting and onward referral to local services if required.

This support line is available at 0800 111 4191.

For more information please click here.

Health and Social Care Workforce Wellbeing line within NHS 24’s Mental Health Hub

Launch of the Health and Social Care Workforce Wellbeing line – 20 July

The Scottish Government is funding a national mental health wellbeing helpline to support health and social care workers in Scotland. This will be available 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Trained practitioners at NHS 24 will offer callers a compassionate and empathic listening service based on the principles of psychological first aid, as well as advice, signposting and onward referral to local services if required.

This support line is available at 0800 111 4191.

For more information please click here.

Health and Social Care Workforce Wellbeing line within NHS 24’s Mental Health Hub

Highland Senior Citizen Network – Highland Hello

Highland Senior Citizen Network (HSCN) has produced a short trailer for their Highland Hello Films. A ‘Highland Hello’ is an initiative created by HSCN to allow people to share experiences and keep in touch during the Coronavirus lockdown.  

You can view this video here.

 

Dementia-proofing future care

(Text of an article published in Caring Matters Magazine, July 2020)

Dementia as we all know is a crippling illness. It robs people of so much in their life not just their memory. It creates a world narrowed down in on itself where routine and familiarity, pattern and predictability become all the more important. It is a world where loss of function and ability has to be matched by caring support, maintaining relationships and adapting communication.

Lockdown has forced change upon most of us. In the care sector it has brought about undeniable challenge and trauma not least in our care homes which have witnessed the distress of deaths at a rate of frequency that we have been left silent in its wake. In our communities the stripping away of packages of support by councils and the ending of contracts by private individuals have left many individuals, organisations and staff vulnerable.

There will be time and space for much reflection on our pandemic response and actions as a whole society, as politicians and scientists, and as health and social care systems. But I hope that at its core that such a reflection includes the experience of those living with dementia. Statistically we know that over three-quarters of those who have died as a result of Covid19 have been individuals over the age of 75, and that a sizeable majority of these have been individuals living with dementia and frailty. 

The story of Covid19 in our country is the story of dementia. Have we acted in a manner that has protected the most vulnerable or have we been expedient and mis-calculating in our efforts to protect the majority at the expense of the life and care of those with dementia? It may be too early to answer that but personally I consider our response to those with dementia has been wholly inadequate if not deadly.

We live in a country which enshrines human rights as the basis of our interactions one with the other. Even in times of national emergency and crisis we agree that there are fundamental behaviours and actions which are necessary to take, and which underpin our response. Conversely we acknowledge that there are approaches and decisions which are deemed unacceptable because of their contravention of the basic rights which we have come to hold as fundamental to what it means to be human and who we are as a community and nation. For people living with dementia upholding their human rights should be the barometer of the care and support they should ordinarily expect. So, any human rights analysis of our response to Covid19 should explore the impact of our actions for those people living with dementia.

In that regard how have we done? Have we enabled the preservation of life at all costs or has there been an expeditious decision taken to prioritise some more than others? Has the overt policy and practice focus of preventing the NHS from collapsing resulted in a failure to adequately support the very social care systems (especially care homes) which are the mainstay of support for people with dementia? Have we so focussed on the need to reserve resource for the acute sector that we have drained local authorities of the abilities to adequately resource people being supported at home? Have we included and involved older people living with dementia at key points of decision-making and our Covid19 response, for instance in decisions around shielding?

Life in a care home under lockdown, with enforced isolation and social distancing has been viewed through the strict lens of infection prevention and control. But have we given enough serious focus to how it is possible to undertake such measures in settings which are non-clinical, non-institutional and personalised to enable them still to be familiar and homely?

Life for anyone receiving care and living with dementia during this pandemic has been brutal and hard, emotionally empty and traumatic. I am not using hyperbole but stating fact as I see it. We have instructed workers and providers to ‘isolate’ individuals whose very agitated behaviour often results in them needing to be active; we have expected from people who are confused and distressed a compliance which is wholly unreasonable; we have put our staff in masks in the midst of a community for whom recognition and remembrance are fundamental requirements of assurance and comfort, leaving many terrified by appearances. We have stopped using common spaces for people whose routine and pattern of behaviours have meant being in the same space and place, alongside the same people and doing the same activities had become for them the boundary of safety in their confused and conflicting worlds. And perhaps worst of all we have restricted visiting of family and friends, except in a few instances, which has meant for everyone their loss of the relational, of touch, physicality and presence.

The shame of so much of our Covid19 response as a society is not the shame of the care sector but an indictment against some politicians and strategists, against a fundamentalist approach to infection prevention and a failure to embed humanity and person-centredness in our implementation of lockdown measures. Covid19 has brought a challenge undoubtedly but it has shone a light on the failures of our care and support for people with dementia.

I believe that as we reform and reshape ourselves moving out of our immediate response to the pandemic and into a stage of restoration and reform that we need to do much better in the future than we have to date. We have to be better at balancing the human right to a quality of life with dementia over and against the right to the preservation of life. Our care homes hold in care the lives of thousands living at the end of their days, the vast majority with dementia. They do not have weeks, months and years for us to continue to deny them relationship and encounter, memory and engagement. In the future we cannot accept the frequent long-term imprisonment of citizens in the name of their own protection without their willing articulated agreement. Initial protection measures were undoubtedly proportionate and reasonable to achieve the legitimate aim of the wider preservation of life. Every week that has passed, with witnessed deterioration and disintegration of life, with increasing numbers wasting away not from the virus but from the experience of protection, has brought a toll which cannot be acceptable. We have to find a better approach than the adoption of the imperatives of a model of infection control and prevention developed for the clinical, antiseptic environment of a cold hospital ward into the spaces and places people are encouraged to call their own home. A care home is not an institution and we need to develop non-institutional responses. We cannot rip up carpets, remove personal possessions, strip rooms of individuality, replace comfort with clinical compliance – simply in the name of protection. Life is more than existence – it has to be about quality, meaning, purpose and individuality.

Coronavirus will be with us for some considerable time. We have to ensure that our ongoing response to its threat is based on an understanding of human dignity and not solely one of scientific dictate.

Dr Donald Macaskill

Bereavement Charter Webinar – 30 July

Dear colleague,

You are invited to the first webinar to support the implementation of the first Bereavement Charter for adults and children in Scotland on Thursday 30th July between 15:00 and 16:30.

Chair: Dr Donald Macaskill, CEO of Scottish Care

Guest speaker: Mr Derek Feeley, former CEO of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement and of NHS Scotland

The aims of the webinar are to:

  1. Encourage buy-in to and support for adopting the Bereavement Charter within organisations
  2. Establish if/build a consensus for making the case to Scottish Government for national leadership and resourcing of infrastructure for bereavement support, especially reflecting anticipated growth in need due to Covid-19

To register and receive further information please reply to [email protected]

We look forward to meeting you there.

Camphill Scotland and Partners respond to post-Brexit plans for social care workers

The UK Government’s decision to exclude care workers from the proposed new fast-track Health and Care visa is reckless and will have far reaching impacts on both the health and care sectors across the UK, and on those people who rely on quality, human-centred care.

Camphill Scotland along with 50 partner organisations from across the UK including the ALLIANCE, SCVO, the Association of Camphill Communities, Scottish Care, Disability Wales, the Northern Ireland Council for Voluntary Action and UNISON, have raised serious concerns regarding post-Brexit impacts on the health and social care sector for some time. Brendan O’Hara MP lodged Amendment NC1 to the Immigration and Social Security Co-ordination (EU Withdrawal) Bill on their behalf, which was debated and subsequently defeated on 30th June by 344 votes to 247 votes.

The amendment called for an independent evaluation to determine the full impact of the ending of freedom of movement and of the introduction of a points based immigration system on the care, support and safeguarding for disabled adults, children and young people, and people with long term conditions or other support needs.

The announcement made by the Home Secretary earlier this week confirms the worst fears of the partnership of 50 organisations, and leaves the care sector confused and concerned as to how they will retain and recruit skilled, committed staff. Carers continue to be undervalued despite the incredible work they do and the positive life changing impacts they can have on the people who they care for and support.

Emma Walker, Director, Camphill Scotland said:

“This is a devastating blow to the care sector and the people who depend upon it most. The points-based immigration system places Camphill communities and care providers across the UK in a vulnerable position. Many questions remain unanswered but one thing is certain, and that’s the detrimental impact this decision will have on care provision.

For Camphill communities and other organisations who have international voluntarism embedded into their working practice, it’s a double-whammy. Cost of care will increase and the connections between our international volunteers and those that they work with will be lost.

Despite statements to the contrary, it is clear that the incredible commitment and work shown by our carers during the coronavirus pandemic has gone unnoticed by those who have made this decision. Clapping for carers each week is deeply insulting if the next act of government is to announce the curtain call.”

Professor Ian Welsh OBE, Chief Executive, Health and Social Care Alliance Scotland (the ALLIANCE) commented:

“Dedicated and committed social care workers provide invaluable support that enables disabled people and people living with long term conditions to enjoy their right to independent living and participate equally in – and contribute to – Scottish society. By excluding care workers from the proposed new fast-track Health and Care visa, the UK Government demonstrates a lack of understanding of the skilled and vital role played by the social care workforce.

This decision further perpetuates the lack of parity between health and social care, and underlines even more the need for an independent evaluation of the impact of the Immigration and Social Security Co-ordination (EU Withdrawal) Bill on the health and social sectors, as called for by the ALLIANCE, Camphill Scotland and 50 partners.”

Dr. Donald Macaskill, Chief Executive, Scottish Care said:

“It is a matter of the deepest regret that the Home Office has failed to take into account the representations made by the care sector in Scotland. The failure to recognise the distinctive social care needs of Scotland both in terms of its ageing population and workforce and the shortage of workers in Scotland in general is a matter of incalculable folly.

To initiate such dramatic restrictions on the ability of social care providers to recruit from outwith the United Kingdom and to fail to identify social care in the Shortage Occupation List beggars belief in the midst of a global pandemic.”

Alison Thomson, Chair of trustees, Tigh a’Chomainn Camphill remarked:

“The international volunteers that support our Camphill Community and many others across the UK provide a unique and very valuable support network to the vulnerable adults that we support. Over the last few months they have shown their true colours through their dedication and commitment to our Community. Despite pressures to return home they remained in the country and have played a key part in ensuring the good health and wellbeing of everyone at Tigh a’Chomainn Camphill.

Their efficacy speaks for itself – to date we have had no cases of Covid-19, and our care metrics indicate that despite the immense uncertainty people supported by Tigh a’Chomainn Camphill remained well and in good spirits. Good care must include health and social care. We call on the government at Westminster to reverse its decision and include all health and care workers in the health care visa scheme.”

Camphill Scotland, ALLIANCE, SCVO, the Association of Camphill Communities, Scottish Care, Disability Wales, the Northern Ireland Council for Voluntary Action, UNISON and our partners totalling 50 organisations across the UK will continue to pursue the issues raised by Amendment NC1 to the Immigration and Social Security Co-ordination (EU Withdrawal) Bill with Peers of all parties and groupings in the House of Lords.

The Ear Protector

The Ear Protector is a UK developed and manufactured innovation that has been designed to stop pain and sore ears due to wearing face masks for an extended period of time.

We (at our UK based company AMufacture Ltd) have a product dedicated website – www.theearprotector.com

By way of background, AMufacture is a 3D Printing service company servicing industrial clients from sectors ranging from marine to construction. From the beginning of the crisis we immediately repurposed some of our capacity and began printing our own designs of face shields and ear protectors for the front line workers on a free of charge basis.

After very positive feedback, we were approached by a leading London NHS Trust for significant volumes of Ear Protectors so we have invested in setting up production to produce a strong, flexible, multi-use and reliable solution that is now available for purchase.

Contact details

Email: [email protected]

Website: www.theearprotector.com

Phone number: +44 (0) 7825 082113/ +44 (0) 1489 784141

The Ear Protector

SAFE2GO

SAFE2GO is a hassle free, easy to use contact tracing solution that is perfect for use in care homes particularly with the re-introduction of visiting. The care home displays a SAFE2GO QR code which is scanned by visitors and staff, they are then prompted to enter their contact details. This information is stored securely for 28 days, in line with government guidance.  The burden of data collection, storage and disposal is taken from the care home completely and they can rest easy. Should there be a Covid-19 positive case all relevant contact details will be passed to NHS tracers, by SAFE2GO, at the touch of a button.

SAFE2GO is currently offering a  discount to all Scottish Care Members at £8.00/month.

Sign up via this website:  https://www.safe2go.live  using the following Enterprise code:  P-3HW048428P0641217L4HXU5Q

Contact details

Email: [email protected]

Mobile: 07999303055

Website: https://www.safe2go.live


S2G0001 Safe2Go A3 Poster FV

The Service Directory Booking Tool

The Service Directory has created an online booking tool specifically designed for the care sector that gives each care home a bespoke offering. For just £3 per month, the Booking Tool gives care homes complete control, efficiency and a personalised approach for relatives & visitors.

Fife’s Health & Social Care Partnership shines a light on the care homes in Fife

To support Care Home Day 2020, Fife’s Health & Social Care Partnership wanted to shine a light on the wonderful care homes in Fife.

Care homes are communities within communities and every member of staff, every resident and families and friends all play a valuable role.  It really is an extended family. As an integral part of our communities, care homes provide high quality person-centred care to support the health and wellbeing of residents.

Cllr David Graham, Fife Council Spokesperson for Health said:

“Our care home staff really are amazing, and I would like to thank every care home worker for the commitment and passion they show in supporting residents and their families, not only through this pandemic but every day. Staff have come up with so many different ways of keeping residents entertained and families and friends have been very supportive of the care and attention that their families have received, and they continue to receive.”

Cllr Graham joined Fife’s Health & Social Care Director Nicky Connor and Divisional General Manager David Heaney at Ostlers House Care Home today in Kirkcaldy.

Caption: From left Cllr David Graham, Nicky Connor, John Cooper, Service Manager, FHSCP, David Heaney, Divisional General Manager, FHSCP and Ostlers House staff Kirsten Wilkie, Helen Oliver, Eddie Hepburn and Elaine Patrick. Kneeling is Elaine Siggers with the star of the show Ozzie the home’s therapet.

Nicky Connor, Director of Fife HSCP added: “It really was very humbling speaking to staff. They are an inspiring group of people and what they have done to keep families connected throughout this period whilst visiting was cancelled has been really innovative. Having the ability to use iPads to connect with families and friends has made a huge difference and residents adapted well to using Facetime. Visiting has now resumed, although this looks a little different with physical distancing measures and PPE now the norm. I can’t thank care home staff enough for their commitment to keeping their communities safe and well”.

Scottish Care’s Paul Dundas and Fiona Mckay, Head of Strategic Planning, Performance and Commissioning. FHSCP also popped along to Bandrum Care Home in Saline to catch up with staff.

Fiona added: “We work closely with our independent care providers and relationships have been enhanced throughout the pandemic, supporting each other and working together has been key to everything we have achieved. The generosity also received from local organisations who have helped out during this crisis has been appreciated. This really is partnership working at its’ best”

Paul also added: “Care homes are an essential part of our communities and staff demonstrate their commitment and compassion every day, always putting those they care for at the heart of everything they do. Their dedication and professionalism are inspirational, and I can’t thank them enough.”

Photo from left: Fiona McKay, Paul Dundas, Rachel Payne (Bandrum), Jacquie Stringer, Service Manager and PPE Lead, FHSCP and Katerine Spence (Bandrum)