Voices of future‑ready care
Across Scotland, care is being created in ways that prepare people, services and communities for the future. This week’s theme – Future‑Ready Care – shines a light on how innovation, partnership and fresh thinking are shaping care that is resilient, responsive and grounded in people’s lived experience.
The quotes below capture what future‑ready care looks like in practice: people‑led digital change, creative problem‑solving, smarter use of technology, and collaborative approaches that improve safety and quality of life. Together, these voices tell a confident story – showing care as essential public infrastructure that adapts, learns and leads as expectations, needs and possibilities change.
Care Creates… people‑led digital transformation
Rolling out digital care planning across 48 care homes sounds like a technology project. It isn’t.
Louise Fulton led the implementation of digital care planning across 48 HC-One homes in Scotland – and says the biggest lesson was that it’s a people and culture journey.
“Rather than introducing change that felt ‘done to’ staff, we invested time in supporting teams to understand the purpose behind digital care planning and how it could improve both care delivery and their day-to-day work. That early engagement made a real difference in building confidence, ownership, and curiosity.”
The approach was structured: an eight-week mobilisation plan for each home, with training, safe migration from paper records, and – crucially – Digital Care Advocates in every home. These staff members became subject matter experts, supporting colleagues and embedding the change in everyday practice.
The impact has been transformative. Teams can now access up-to-date information, share insights more easily, and move from reactive to proactive care planning.
“What this experience has reinforced for me, is that successful digital transformation isn’t really about technology, it’s about bringing teams with you on the journey. When staff feel involved, supported, and confident, meaningful and lasting change becomes possible.”
– Louise Fulton, Regional Quality Improvement Lead, HC-One
Care Creates… space for new ideas and future thinkers
This week’s Care Creates theme – Future-Ready Care – isn’t just a question for the sector.
It’s one that’s finding its way into lecture halls, design studios, and the hands of the next generation of problem-solvers.
Scottish Care has been working with Edinburgh College of Art, inviting students to engage with the real complexity of care – the ethics, the technology, the trade-offs, and the people at the centre of it all. The results were striking. Not just in terms of creativity, but in how seriously they engaged with the realities of social care – asking different questions, noticing different things, and imagining possibilities that don’t yet exist.
These are emerging designers who are not yet constrained by the legacy systems, language, and assumptions that those of us working in and around care can sometimes default to. They ask different questions. They notice different things. They imagine possibilities that don’t yet exist. We need that.
One student created a Wobble Box, inspired by the NHS Wobble Rooms introduced during COVID – quiet spaces for staff to pause and step away when things felt overwhelming. Charlotte adapted the idea based on a flatmate’s experience of a care home placement, designing it to flex and scale depending on the space available.
Another student is working on a Data Bank that places individuals at the centre of their own data, giving them control over who could access it and how it was shared – shifting the conversation from organisational data sharing to personal data agency.
Six students have been invited to present their ideas at Scottish Care’s Home Care Conference on 15 May, alongside a publication showcasing the full portfolio of projects.
As Dr. Inge Panneels reflects: “They are broadening their horizon of how they might deploy their skills in design thinking into the service of society.”
Future-ready care needs future-ready thinking. That means opening the door to new disciplines, new perspectives, and new partners.
– Dr Inge Panneels, Lecturer in Service Design, Edinburgh College of Art
Care Creates… smarter, safer care through technology
“Digital alerts, electronic care plans and real-time reporting help us respond quickly and accurately to changes in health. Technology strengthens safety, quality and outcomes across every stage of the care journey.”
– Bluebird Care
Care Creates… safer ageing through collaboration
A Carnoustie care home has significantly reduced falls by working in partnership with Angus Health & Social Care Partnership (HSCP). The initiative, led by BCG Brookfield Home Manager Tina Harris, introduced enhanced falls prevention measures now embedded into everyday practice.
Since trialling the approach last autumn, the home has seen a further 57% reduction in falls per quarter. Staff completed specialist training, carried out detailed falls risk assessments, and built strength, balance and daily movement into residents’ routines, including a Health Walks Corridor developed with Angusalive.
“We’re always looking for further initiatives that will support our determination for continuous improvement across BCG.
“At Brookfield, we are committed to doing everything we can to prevent falls and our teams work tirelessly to reduce risks. But of course, it’s important to acknowledge that falls remain a common concern in our residents. Age-related factors such as muscle weakness, balance difficulties, and changes in vision can increase vulnerability but we know many falls are preventable and wanted to do all we could to maximise that prevention.
“Our ongoing efforts focus not only on prevention, but on empowering our residents where possible with the knowledge and tools to stay safe, confident, and independent.
“The success of it really comes down to great collaboration and targeted intervention to improve outcomes for our residents. Our thanks go to Kay and Paul for supporting our drive for greater falls prevention. One year in and we’ve continued to monitor fall trends every month, maintaining the use of this valuable joint project.”
– Tina Harris, BCG Brookfield Home Manager
Care creates a future we’re ready for
Taken together, these quotes remind us that future‑ready care isn’t something we wait for – it’s something being built every day across the sector. From involving staff meaningfully in digital change, to inviting new disciplines into care conversations, to using technology and partnerships to improve outcomes, this is care responding with purpose and ambition.
This is what Care Creates… when future‑ready care is put into practice:
a sector that is adaptive, people‑powered and prepared – supporting wellbeing, strengthening communities, and creating a future we can face with confidence.
#CareCreates