New Scottish Care Palliative and End of Life Workforce Groups

Scottish Care published a report in February 2017 entitled ‘Trees that bend in the wind’.  This report was written following research with front line support workers which explored their experiences of caring for people – in care homes and care at home services – with palliative and end of life care needs.  A link to the report can be found below.

https://www.scottishcare.org/scottish-care-news/scottish-care-launches-new-report-on-palliative-and-end-of-life-care/

We have been overwhelmed with the amount of interest from members – and others – who want to work with us to progress the twelve recommendations made in the report.  We originally thought about creating one palliative and end of life care (PEOLC) workforce group to enable us to do this.  We have now decided that we will have two; one focused on the needs of care homes and the other exploring care at home and housing support services.

The aim of both groups will be to develop a greater understanding of the workforce development needs of people involved in delivering palliative and end of life care, and to generate practical, sustainable  improvements for the workforce.

The first Care at Home and Housing Support PEOLC Workforce Group meeting will take place at 10.00am – 12.30pm on Tuesday 30th May at the Renfield Centre, 260 Bath Street, Glasgow.

 The first Care Home PEOLC Workforce Group meeting will take place at 10.00am – 12.30pm on Tuesday 6th June at the Renfield Centre, 260 Bath Street, Glasgow. 

 We anticipate this group will meet every three months at various locations.  Depending on the level of interest we may be able to also create local forums.

 Both groups are for supervisors, managers, directors – and front line workers.  It is very important that we have support workers involved in both PEOLC workforce groups. 

If you would like to come to either of these meeting please contact Katharine – [email protected] by Friday 26th May.

Social Services Strategic Forum – event

The Social Services Expo 2017 will be held on 13 June at Crieff Hydro. It is a free event for practitioners to hear about current policy and practice developments, including workshops and an exhibition area.

Please see details from organisers, including how to register, below:

 

SSSE_REG_PROG_12

 

Job: Development Officer – Partners for Integration and Improvement (2 posts)

DEVELOPMENT OFFICERS PARTNERS FOR INTEGRATION AND IMPROVEMENT, Health and Social Care Integration – Independent Sector Initiative.

12 months contract initially
£30,000 per annum pro rata – full and part time posts available

Integration of Health and Social Care is the Scottish Government’s ambitious programme of reform to improve services for people who use health and social care services.

Scottish Care is a membership organisation representing the largest group of independent health and social care providers across Scotland.

The Independent Care sector is a key player in health and social care integration agenda and we are seeking to engage Development Officers support this programme. Hosted by Scottish Care and working closely with Independent sector Regional Lead, providers and partners, the post involves ensuring sector involvement in the delivery of the agreed outcomes for integration.

The post holder will have a key role in supporting Health and Social Care Integration in Aberdeen City. They will develop close working relationships with Scottish Care’s Aberdeen City team (Regional Integration Manager and Reablement Trainers) as well as key stakeholders from Aberdeen City Health and Social Care Partnership, Third and Independent sectors, NHS Grampian and people who use services and their carers and family members. The overall aim of this role is “to inform, engage with and support care providers from the Independent Sector so that we can fulfil our obligations and be an equal partner in Health and Social Care Integration”.

The post holder will require to be highly motivated and be able to use initiative, possess excellent communication and networking skills, demonstrate success and experience working with providers, regulators, people supported by services and carers. Qualifications and experience at a management level in health or social care would be an advantage as would knowledge of relevant policy, practice and the needs and aspirations of the Independent sector.

The post will be based in Aberdeen and hosted through Scottish Care. Consultancy, employment, secondment and job share opportunities considered. Employment is the default position.

For further information please contact Julia White, Regional Lead, Aberdeen City at [email protected]. Application forms are available through Scottish Care [email protected]

Closing date 4pm on Friday 26th May 2017 Interviews will be held in Aberdeen on Tuesday 6th June 2017

Care at Home & Housing Support Conference, Exhibition and Awards – 1 week to go!

Scottish Care’s annual Care at Home and Housing Support Conference & Exhibition will take place in the Glasgow Marriott, Argyle Street, Glasgow on Friday 12th May 2017.

There are still a small number of tickets available if you wish to come along. With the care at home reform process ongoing and an ever-changing landscape of health and social care, the conference is a crucial opportunity for providers, partners and stakeholders to hear about how the reform work is progressing and what effect it will have on the sector.

This year’s conference is entitled “Bringing Home Care: Transforming Support in the Community”

#bringhomecare

Click here to view the draft conference programme.

You will notice from the conference programme that there will be insight sessions before and after lunch to enable delegates to attend two different sessions.  When booking, you will be asked to choose the two sessions you wish to attend on the day.

Scottish Care will also be launching a new report on the care at home and housing support sector at this conference.

You can book your place to attend conference at: 
https://cahandhssconference2017.eventbrite.co.uk

You can only pay by card for online bookings.  Alternatively you can contact: [email protected] for a booking form.  Please note: no tickets will be issued until payment is received.

We look forward to seeing you on the day.

Donald Macaskill: Cast a Vote for Care on May 4

 

With just a few days before the Scottish Local Government Elections, voters are being urged to consider social care when casting their vote.

Scottish Care’s recently published Agenda for Care sets out the priority areas for care in Scotland, at a hugely important time for the sector. The manifesto document calls for the following to be placed at the heart of the care system:

  • fairer allocation of resources for the care of older people
  • protection of the social care budget from austerity cuts
  • a valuing of the social care sector and its importance in the same way that the NHS is valued
  • a concerted effort to encourage people to work in the care sector
  • meaningful involvement of services, individuals, families and communities in the planning of local care provision
  • removing the inequality between what Local Authorities pay for the services they deliver directly and those they outsource
  • more balanced media coverage of the care sector
  • support for innovation and the development of new models of care
  • better informed political comment and debate

Scottish Care Chief Executive Dr Donald Macaskill said:

“In Scotland we are faced with a 28% vacancy level in nursing in our care homes. There is a real crisis in the number of staff available and willing to work in the care sector and this is in part because local authorities do not provide sufficient funding.

“I’m calling for everyone to consider care before casting their vote on Thursday and to take five minutes to reflect on what the various candidates stand for when it comes to care.

“We want a dignified and respectful system for both care recipients and care providers and sadly, it is currently falling short of the mark. But by electing candidates who prioritise social care on May 4, this can change.”

Latest blog from our CEO: Take Five for Care

Its just a few days to go before folks across Scotland will be going to their local polling stations to cast their votes in the Scottish Local Government Elections. In some senses since the General Election has been called less and less profile has been given to the Local Elections. This is hugely unfortunate because, and not to diminish the import of the General Election, so much of what affects our day to day living is planned, decided and delivered at local authority level. This is especially the case for social care.

Over the last few weeks as part of our Agenda for Care Scottish Care has been trying to raise the profile of social care and in particular some of the challenges we are currently facing as we seek as providers, workers and families to support our growing older aged population in Scotland.

So in these last few days and hours before the polling stations open I would like to invite you to take five minutes and think about what your candidates are saying about social care.

Take Five minutes to think about the fact that in Scotland we are faced with a 28% vacancy level in nursing in our care homes. There is a real crisis in the numbers of nurses available and willing to work in the care sector in Scotland. This is in part because local authorities do not sufficiently fund providers to enable them to offer the same terms and conditions that nurses in hospitals or in our communities receive. So is the candidate you vote for going to do something to attract nurses into social care because if elected they can make that change? Is your candidate prepared to challenge the myths and stereotypes which exist around care homes as places of care?

Take Five minutes to think about the fact that for many of the 100,000 people working in delivering social care across Scotland that their work is timed to the minute by electronic monitoring systems. Do you think it is possible to deliver dignified care in a 15 or a 30-minute visit where we have workers having to clock in and out and organisations paid for by the minute? I don’t think this is a system which gives respect and treats people with trustful dignity. Scottish Care believes  that we need to treat both workers and people who are cared for with dignity, trust and humanity. So is the candidate you are going to vote for someone who will try to make sure the way we buy care in our community is fair to both the workers and the person being supported?

Take Five minutes to think about the fact that local authorities pay only £3.97 an hour to support some of our most vulnerable older people in our care homes with 24/7 nursing care. Do you think that that is sufficient to offer dignified care to people who are often at the end of their life and who are living with conditions such as dementia? Is the candidate you are voting for even aware about the realities of the pressures care homes, whether private or charitable, are currently facing?

Take Five minutes to think about what sort of care and support you might want for a family member or for yourself in years to come. The way we care for our older citizens, is I believe, a sign of the sort of nation we are or want to be. Do you think that we spend enough on social care of the old? Ultimately these are decisions we all have to make because we have a limited amount of resources. Scottish Care would like us as a nation regardless of political allegiance to sit down and start planning seriously for how we are going to pay for social care in the future. We need a National Conversation about Social Care. Our current challenges will be dwarfed in the future unless we start taking hard decisions. So ask your local candidate how seriously are they taking social care? Is it just an added extra to their political concerns or is it at the centre of their priorities?

Take Five minutes to think about older people in Scotland. It is often said that older Scots have created our nation and that is undoubtedly true. But what is often forgotten is that our older citizens are still contributing, still shaping and still making our nation. As a society we often display significant discrimination against our older citizens. Local Government can do a lot more to include the voice and experience of people who still have a huge amount to offer. What is your local candidate saying or willing to do to include the voice of older Scots?

I could ask you to take a lot more than the five issues I have raised but whatever is important to you at this time, I would ask you as you stand in the polling booth to Take Five for Care because they are likely to be five minutes or five thoughts that will make a life of a difference to so many thousands who care for a family member, who work in caring or who receive care.

 

Donald Macaskill

@DrDMacaskill

Care at Home & Housing Support Conference, Exhibition and Awards – 2 weeks to go

Scottish Care’s annual Care at Home and Housing Support Conference & Exhibition will take place in the Glasgow Marriott, Argyle Street, Glasgow on Friday 12th May 2017.

This year’s conference is entitled “Bringing Home Care: Transforming Support in the Community”

#bringhomecare

Click here to view the draft conference programme.

You will notice from the conference programme that there will be insight sessions before and after lunch to enable delegates to attend two different sessions.  When booking, you will be asked to choose the two sessions you wish to attend on the day.

With the care at home reform process ongoing and an ever changing landscape of health and social care, the conference is a crucial opportunity for providers, partners and stakeholders to hear about how the reform work is progressing and what effect it will have on the sector.

Scottish Care will also be launching a new report on the care at home and housing support sector at this conference.

You can book your place to attend at: 
https://cahandhssconference2017.eventbrite.co.uk

You can only pay by card for online bookings.  Alternatively you can contact: [email protected] for a booking form.  Please note that no tickets will be issued until payment is received.

We look forward to seeing you on the day.

If you are interested in booking an exhibition stand at the conference, please contact [email protected]

‘Come On In’ – new resource published for families

The Care Inspectorate has launched a guide to help family and friends of people living in care homes make the most of the time spent together. This resource was developed by the staff, residents and their families of Campbell Snowden care home in Bridge of Weir with support from the Care Inspectorate and Scottish Care.

The guide is short and easy to use with practical tips, from preparing for your visit and giving your visit focus to looking after yourself and very importantly what residents themselves say makes a good visit.

Please see the full news release from the Care Inspectorate below:

 

Care Inspectorate Newsroom

27 April 2017, 10:00

Come on in!

 

Visiting and keeping in touch with loved ones who have moved into a care home is a vital part of family life.

And now a new resource has been launched to help families overcome some of the barriers that can crop up when a loved-one living with dementia moves into care.

A care home in Renfrewshire has teamed up with Scottish Care and the Care Inspectorate to produce a handy guide to help making a visit to a care home an enjoyable and engaging experience for everyone.

Heather Edwards the Care Inspectorate’s dementia consultant said: “We know that maintaining close relationships with loved ones is really important for the wellbeing of people living in care, particularly those living with dementia.

“But we also know from our experience, and the experience of the care providers we work with, that it can sometimes be difficult for people to adjust to visiting their loved ones in a new setting, particularly if that person’s behaviour or needs are changing.

“This guide contains some practical, simple advice about how to prepare for and enjoy visiting loved ones.

“For example sometimes people living with dementia don’t talk a great deal. It can be important not to worry about this , and understand that it’s ok to sit quietly together.

“Similarly, instead of asking questions like ‘what did you have for lunch’ which can cause distress if someone can’t remember, you could ask staff what was for lunch, or take a look at the menu, so you can then have a chat about lunch.”

The booklet, called Come On In! came together after Jackie Weston, manager of Campbell Snowdon care home in Bridge of Weir discussed the issue with some the families who visit the home.

The project has been in development for 12 months, and was led by residents and their families. Campbell Snowdon care home received funding from the Life Changes Trust for 150,000 copies to be printed. These will be distributed across Scotland by the Care Inspectorate and Scottish Care.

Jackie Weston, said: “We are absolutely delighted that we are now in the position to share this resource with others.

“We started sharing our experiences of what makes a good visit at one of our Abbeyfield ‘Family Forums’. We knew this kernel of an idea had massive potential, and here we are today!

“‘Come On In’has been a labour of love for us all and we are so proud that it will help others support their friends and family with dementia. We would like to thank everybody involved for making it happen.”

Anna Buchanan, Director of the Life Changes Trust’s dementia programme, said: “We are pleased to support this valuable resource.

“Too often people with dementia living in a care home do not receive visitors because family and friends feel awkward, or don’t know what to expect.

“This booklet breaks down some of those barriers and shows that it is important to have people coming and going in a care home. We believe this small booklet will have huge impact across Scotland.”

Contact information

Media Team
01382 207171
[email protected]

Notes to editors

Notes to editors:

The Care Inspectorate is Scotland’s social care scrutiny and improvement body. It registers and inspects all of Scotland’s 14,000 care services including care homes for older people, nurseries and childminders. Find out more at www.careinspectorate.com

The Abbeyfield Society, established in 1956, is a charity providing residential care and support to older people. The organisation has 601 homes and houses in the UK and overseas, in which staff and 4,000 volunteers support 8,000 older people living in a family-like atmosphere.

The Life Changes Trust was established by the Big Lottery in April 2013 with a ten year endowment of £50 million to support transformational improvements in the quality of life, wellbeing, empowerment and inclusion of people affected by dementia and young people with experience of being in care. www.lifechangestrust.org.uk

 

 

Scottish Parliament debates Social Care

Social Care has been the focus of a debate at the Scottish Parliament.

Ahead of the debate, Scottish Care Chief Executive Dr Donald Macaskill participated in a phone-in on BBC Radio Scotland, where he took the opportunity to highlight the significant issues affecting social care in Scotland. With local and general elections approaching, Dr Macaskill reiterated his plea for voters to consider these issues when they head to the polling station in the coming weeks.

To listen to the piece on Radio Scotland’s Call Kaye programme please click here

For more details on the debate at Holyrood please click here