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Care England welcomes report from the Health and Social Care Select Committee on workforce burnout and resilience

Care England, the largest representative body for independent providers of adult social care, has welcomed the report from the Health and Social Care Select Committee on workforce burnout and resilience in the NHS and social care.

Professor Martin Green OBE, Chief Executive of Care England, says:

“Whilst the workforce is resilient it is only as resilient as the funding and support behind it hence the need for adequate long-term support for the sector. We want to work with the Prime Minister to ensure that his promise to reform social care is delivered upon and carries the views and experiences of those at the front line. Money alone is not the answer, we need to ensure that social care is established as a career with the kudos associated with due professionalisation and one way to deliver that would be a ten year plan for workforce akin to that of the NHS”.

The inquiry examined workforce burnout across the NHS and social care in particular the increased pressures brought about by COVID-19 and the resilience of services to cope with high levels of staff stress.https://committees.parliament.uk/work/494/workforce-burnout-and-resilience-in-the-nhs-and-social-care/ The key recommendations are as follows:
Repeats call for Health Education England to publish objective, transparent and independently audited annual reports on workforce projections covering next five, ten and twenty years, including assessment of whether sufficient numbers are being trained

Workforce projections should cover social care as well as the NHS

DHSC should produce a People Plan for social care as a priority, aligned to the ambitions set out in the NHS People Plan

Level of resources allocated to mental health support for health and care staff should be maintained as and when the NHS and social care return to ‘business as usual’ after the pandemic

NHS England should review role of targets across the NHS which seeks to balance the operational grip they undoubtedly deliver to senior managers against the risks of inadvertently creating a culture which deprioritises care of both staff and patients.
Martin Green continues:

“As we made clear in our written submission and oral evidence, health and social care are two sides of the same coin. It is therefore essential that the adult social care workforce has the same access to resources as colleagues in the NHS. Maintaining the financial sustainability of social care providers is of fundamental importance in maintaining the capacity of the integrated health and care system and the resilience of the adult social care workforce”.