Showing posts with label 'Shame on social services. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 'Shame on social services. Show all posts

Tuesday 14 October 2014

Thousands of health workers, including nurses, midwives and ambulance staff, have taken part in the first strike over pay


Picket line at Royal Berkshire HospitalThe strikes were the first by NHS staff over pay in more than 30 years

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for more than 30 years.
But disruption was minimised after unions agreed staff would make sure emergency care was covered.
Workers from seven trade unions took part from 07:00 to 11:00 BST in England, while two unions were involved in Northern Ireland.
The strike is being followed by four-days of work-to-rule from Tuesday.
This is expected to involve staff refusing to do overtime without extra pay and insisting on taking their breaks.
The full picture has yet to emerge about how much disruption was caused by Monday's walkout - although no major incidents have been reported.
In advance, unions and managers had met to ensure essential services were maintained.
Military personnel and police were also on hand to help ambulance services where needed.
As the walkouts progressed, reports emerged of ambulance services developing backlogs - but bosses said life-threatening cases were prioritised.

The striking unions

NameStaff groupsNumber of members
Unison
Nurses, healthcare assistants, ambulance staff and porters
250,000 in England
GMB
Nurses, healthcare assistants, ambulance staff, porters, admin workers and cleaners
22,000 in England and Northern Ireland
Unite
Nurses, healthcare assistants, ambulance staff, porters and admin
92,000 in England and Northern Ireland
Royal College of Midwives
Midwives
22,000 in England
UCATT
Maintenance staff
480 in England
British Association of Occupational Therapists
Occupational therapists
24,000 in England
Managers in Partnership (part of Unison)
Mostly middle-grade managers
4,000 in England
Meanwhile, hospital staff were seen leaving the picket lines to deal with patients in some places.
Union leaders had always said their members will be providing "life and limb" cover during the strike.
The expectation was that 999 calls would be answered and A&E units would remain open and that seems to have been the case, according to reports.
Striking NHS staff at Royal Liverpool HospitalThe picket line at Royal Liverpool Hospital was one of many across the country
A member of military driving a London ambulanceThe military was drafted in to help ambulance services
Picket lineUnison has the largest number of NHS members of the unions involved
However, hospital outpatient appointments, community clinics and some routine operations seem to have been affected.
The Royal College of Midwives, which is taking action for the first time in its history, said in advance services for women giving birth were going to be unaffected. Instead, its members targeted antenatal and postnatal care.
Doctors and dentists were not involved. NHS sources said about 5% of staff who were expected in work did not turn up, although unions had always maintained the numbers not working would not reflect the strength of support across the workforce.
Rehana Azam, national officer of the GMB union, said: "Reports from across the country are that the strike action was rock solid. Members are determined to get government to listen to them."
Pay dispute
Unison said the action - the first strike by NHS staff over pay in more than 30 years - would send a "clear message" to the government.
Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt says a 1% pay rise for all NHS staff, could lead to job losses
As well as the RCM, there were another six unions involved in the strike in England - Unison, Unite, GMB, UCATT, the British Association of Occupational Therapists and Managers in Partnership. Between them they have over 400,000 members, including porters, cleaners and administration staff.
In Northern Ireland, members of Unite and the GMB staged a walkout from 11:00 to 15:00 BST.
Pay v inflation chart
Ministers in England have awarded NHS staff a 1% increase, but only for those without automatic progression-in-the-job rises.
These, designed to reward professional development, are given to about half of staff, and are worth 3% a year on average.
An independent pay review board had said the 1% increase should be across the board.
It was implemented in full in Scotland. Northern Ireland has yet to make a decision on pay, while Wales did the same as England but did give extra to the lowest paid. Some unions are balloting their Welsh members about action there.
line
From the picket line: Dominic Hughes, BBC News
A boisterous, noisy picket outside the Edwardian facade of the old Manchester Royal Infirmary has been made up of nursing assistants, porters, paramedics and for the first time in their history midwives.
Plenty of cars are tooting their support as they pass on Manchester's busy Oxford Road.
Inside the hospital some services will be affected, and a number of midwives have already left the picket to go to staff a ward that was short on numbers.
So this is a symbolic strike but one that displays the real anger of health workers over pay.
line
Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt said that hospitals would be forced to lay off staff if the recommended pay award was met in full.
"We have had very clear analysis that if we did that, hospital chief executives would lay off around 4,000 nurses this year and around 10,000 nurses next year," he said.
"The NHS has just come through a terrible tragedy with Mid Staffordshire when we discovered the most appalling care happening there and indeed some other hospitals as well.
"We have turned the corner on that by recruiting in hospital wards around 5,000 extra nurses in the last year alone. We don't want to turn the clock back on that."
Workers in Newcastle, London and Manchester support the strike
Christina McAnea, head of health at Unison, said the offer in England was a "disgrace".
"The fact that so many unions representing a range of NHS workers are taking action or preparing to join future actions should send a clear message to the government," she said.
RCM chief executive Cathy Warwick added: "At a time when MPs are set for a 10% pay hike, we're told that midwives don't deserve even a below-inflation 1% rise. And politicians wonder why the public does not afford them more respect.
"It feels to a great many people, including midwives, that there is one rule for them and another rule for everybody else."

Thursday 22 May 2014

people in A&E lying in corridors

Hundreds of thousands of patients are being sent home from hospital in the middle of the night despite a promise to limit the practice.
During the past two years at least 300,000 people, many of them elderly, have been discharged between 11pm and 6am to relieve pressure on wards.
An investigation by The Times in 2012 revealed that patients were being woken and removed from their beds, even if they had no way of getting home. Some were left in night clothes, with no medication or paperwork, and in vulnerable or dangerous situations.
At the time, health chiefs promised that patients would be moved at night only in exceptional circumstances, but new figures obtained under a freedom of information request show that the practice remains just as widespread.
More than half of the NHS trusts that responded reported that the number of patients sent home at night had increased during the past three years. Almost 60,000 of the patients were over 75. The true number of patients discharged overnight is likely to be much higher because less than half of England’s 160 NHS trusts responded to the data request by Sky News.
Katherine Murphy, of the Patients Association, said: “These figures are truly shocking. It is simply unacceptable that patients are being discharged from hospital late at night.
“We are particularly concerned that tens of thousands of these patients are aged over 75. For older people, spending time in hospital can be extremely distressing and disorientating.
“Patients need to be treated with care, compassion and dignity. For the many older people who live alone, being discharged after early evening shows not only a lack of care and thought, but can actually be dangerous.”
Nadra Ahmed, chairwoman of the National Care Association, said that elderly patients were returning home or arriving at care homes in disarray.
“They come out very often without the appropriate papers that would give information and the history of what has happened to them. Often they will come out without the appropriate medication, because the hospital pharmacy has closed, and there is no cross-referencing to what medication they’re already on.
“You’re also discharging them into the hands of night staff at care homes, when the manager or owner may not be there, so it’s creating an unplanned and chaotic atmosphere. They may find it disorientating and very distressing. We keep hearing these platitudes that things are so much better now. But I’ve heard of people being discharged with no clothes on, just a blanket around them, or wearing soiled incontinence pads that haven’t been changed. We’re not a third world nation.”
Two years ago, Professor Sir Bruce Keogh, medical director of the NHS, demanded that all hospitals review how they discharged patients, describing the practice of sending elderly people home in the middle of the night as unacceptable.
He said: “By and large the NHS is coping reasonably well, but there are times of peak admissions where there are real, significant pressure on beds. But the answer to that is not chucking people out in the middle of the night.”
Two months ago, he added that moving patients within hospitals at night struck at the heart of NHS efforts to “treat all patients with respect and compassion”. He ordered hospitals to review night-time ward transfers and stop all but the essential.
Dr Mike Smith, chairman of the Patients Association, said: “They have got people in A&E lying in corridors, they have got to be admitted and they have no beds. It’s for the convenience of staff and the person they are admitting but at the gross detriment to the person they are chucking out.”
NHS England said: “Discharging patients at night without appropriate support is unacceptable. The decision to do this should always be based on what is best for the patient

Thursday 14 November 2013

Birmingham children's services takeover warning

Birmingham children's services takeover warning


Keanu Williams died in January 2011 after being found with 37 injuries

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Children's services at Birmingham City Council could be taken over by the Department for Education before Christmas if standards do not improve.
The takeover will happen if Ofsted inspectors do not see improvements when they return later this month.
The department is the biggest of its kind in England and has been rated as "inadequate" for four years.
Department head Peter Hay said the city council had to be involved in its running but there were no easy answers.

Analysis

The moment of reckoning for Birmingham is near. There has been a clamour for years from some campaigners for Whitehall to do something, but that is far easier said than done.
Earlier this year, Mr Gove announced he was to create an independent trust to run Doncaster's equally-troubled child protection services. But the model has now been watered down amid concerns about accountability and potential legal challenges.
Birmingham is far, far larger and there simply isn't a ready-made solution out there. It would be a brave private company that would approve running services in a city with nearly 2000 children in care and 300,000 young people living here.
Anything can happen at any time. And any contract would need to have a lot of zeros at the end of it, which is money the government probably doesn't have. So while the problems are clear, the solution is anything but.
Earlier this week, Michael Gove signalled a significant shift in direction in the way his government will deal with failing child protection services.
He suggested in a speech that more children's services departments could be taken over - in the same way that Doncaster began the process earlier this year.
Doncaster children's services is set to be taken out of council control, with the services to be run by an independent trust, in the mean time the council is working with a management consultancy firm to improve its services.
There have been a number of high-profile child deaths in Birmingham in recent years, including those of Khyra Ishaq in 2008 and Keanu Williams in 2011.
Rebecca Shuttleworth is serving a life sentence for murdering Keanu after he was found with 37 injuries at his home in Ward End, Birmingham in January 2011. A serious case review concluded last month there were "a number of significant missed opportunities" to save the two-year-old.
Khyra died aged seven in 2008 after being starved at her home in the Handsworth area of the city. Her mother, Angela Gordon, 35, and her ex-partner Junaid Abuhamza, 31, were jailed in 2010 for her manslaughter.

Khyra Ishaq weighed just 2st 9lb (16.5kg) when she was discovered at her home in 2008
'National disgrace'
Birmingham children's services has been rated as inadequate by Ofsted since 2009.
Mr Hay, who took over as head of the department in July, said shortly after starting that improvements had not been made and he could not guarantee the safety of children in the city.

Analysis

Is a government takeover of Birmingham's children's services the best solution for its problems?
Firstly, there is not a fully-tested or functioning model as only a couple of councils have had the control of their children's services taken away.
Even in the case of Doncaster Council, the most advanced case where the government has stepped in, the takeover is more of a half-way house.
An independent management consultancy runs the department but Doncaster retains responsibility for commissioning out services.
This is because a change in the law is required to enable a third party - not the local authority - to issue the life-changing court orders that take a child away from their parents and place them in care.
The education secretary says he is planning more intervention in struggling authoritie, and considering allowing successful authorities to innovate by commissioning outside organisations such as social worker practices.
So perhaps the dawn of fully privately-run children's services is nearer than we thought.
Last month Ofsted chief inspector Sir Michael Wilshaw said the city's failure to protect vulnerable children was a "national disgrace".
A spokesman for the DfE said it had warned the council that unless Ofsted identified signs of improvement in its next inspection in the coming weeks it would have to take further action.
Speaking to BBC Radio 4's Today programme, Mr Hay said the department was "very clear that performance is inadequate" and it had been trying to establish a greater transparency so it could "get governance right of how we improve services".
He said there should be a role for the city council because it could "bring the relationships and the money and the investment".
"But it can't do what it's always done and I absolutely respect that the secretary of state has a very difficult decision," he said.
The key was having "enough social workers to do great social work" but his department currently had vacancy rates for qualified staff of more than a quarter and experienced supervisors of more than a third, he added.
"I've heard people thinking about jobs say that they've been told not to come to Birmingham because it's a blot on their CV. I think that's unacceptable," Mr Hay said.
Computer-generated image showing four injuries to Keanu's headA computer-generated image shows some of the injuries inflicted to Keanu's head
He said social care involved many "risky decisions" and "fine calls".

Key dates in 'failing' social services

  • May 2008: Khyra Ishaq, seven, dies after months of abuse by mother and mother's ex-partner
  • Feb 2009: Council served with improvement notice by government
  • Feb 2010: High Court judge rules Khyra "might still be alive if had not been failed by social services"
  • July 2010: Serious case review says Birmingham social services is still failing to protect vulnerable children
  • Oct 2012: Ofsted inspection shows council's child protection services are "inadequate"
  • Feb 2013: Report reveals 431 children's services staff were on long-term sick leave in 2012
  • Oct 2013: Serious case review finds opportunities missed to save two-year-old Keanu Williams, who was beaten to death by his mother
  • Oct 2013: Ofsted singles out city for criticism for 23 serious case reviews over past seven years
  • Nov 2013: Council says children's services budget to be protected despite £600m cuts from budget over six years
  • Nov 2013: BBC learns council could be taken over if standards do not improve
"We sometimes expect people to have had a crystal ball. All I'm expecting them to have done is to have made a judgement - an analysis of the information - and to live with that risk," he added.
Khalid Mahmood, Labour MP for Birmingham's Perry Barr constituency, said the takeover warning was a "complete and utter political move" by the government.
"If they are going to do it they should just do it instead of making leaks and threats," he told BBC Radio 5 live.
He said the government could instead look at devolving the department to constituency level, as there were some constituencies with more than 100,000 people.
With a population of 1.1 million, Birmingham is the British city with the most residents outside London.
Former Tory MP Tim Loughton said he had visited Birmingham more times than any other authority when he was children's minister and the major problem was "the city was in denial about the extent of the problem".
He said Birmingham had to contend with challenges such as its size and its ethnic diversity, as well the the lack of consistent leadership with four leaders in as many years.

More on this story

Listen to The Report, broadcast on BBC Radio 4 on Thursday 14 November at 20:00 GMT
Sue White, a professor of social work at Birmingham University, said the city would "not get better simply by being shamed by Ofsted inspections".
"In my view that process has made the patient sicker. The medicine is killing the patient," she said.
Tony Rabaiotti, of Unison West Midlands, said the idea that the Department for Education "could do a better job than the people on the ground" was "ridiculous" and the move was "purely ideological".
In 2010, Birmingham was ranked 13th in a government list of deprived areas, behind authorities such as Hackney and Tower Hamlets in London.

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