Fears
for patient safety as 60,000 NHS jobs face the axe
The
NHS is "sleepwalking" into a nursing crisis with thousands
of frontline posts lost and training positions axed, the Government
is warned today.
12
November, 2012
The
Royal College of Nursing (RCN) said that despite the Coalition's
promise to protect frontline staff from cuts the NHS workforce has
fallen by almost 21,000 since the Coalition Government came to power.
This includes a loss of more than 6,000 qualified nursing posts –
from a total of 312,000 nursing posts in the NHS.
The
RCN's report also warns that parts of the health service face the
prospect of nursing shortages within three years as thousands of
training posts are slashed, meaning trusts will have to recruit from
overseas.
Patient
safety will be seriously undermined by falling numbers of nurses,
with the RCN's chief executive warning that standards of care "are
going to get a lot worse".
The
nursing union has been tracking job cuts since the Coalition came to
power in May 2010. It has found that about 1,000 posts are being
earmarked as "at risk" by NHS trusts every month as they
try to find savings of £20bn during this parliament.
As
well as job losses, the number of new nurses being trained has fallen
sharply, by 14 per cent in just two years. In London, training places
for adult nurses have fallen by 21 per cent, which will lead to
substantial shortages by 2015 – highlighting failures in long-term
workforce planning, warns the RCN. District nursing is heading
towards crisis, as numbers of nurses have plummeted by a third since
2001 to 8,000.
The
RCN questions how the NHS can re-focus care from hospitals to the
community – essential for improving patient outcomes and saving
money – if the cull of district nurses continues.
Nurse
leaders warn today that the Government will soon be stranded in a
"perfect storm" of an ageing population with increasing
numbers of long-term conditions without enough nurses safely to care
for patients.
Peter
Carter, the RCN's chief executive, said: "London is facing a
workforce crisis within three years. The remedy will be to go
overseas to countries like the Philippines to raid their workforce
again, and an over-reliance on agency and temporary staff – in
order to bail out the Government's poor workforce planning." He
added: "The standards of care are under huge strain across
England and if this trajectory continues unchecked then things are
going to get a lot worse. There is no rogue information in our data.
This is not the worst-case scenario: it is the declared scenario from
trusts."
The
pledge to protect frontline staff was a key Coalition promise even as
it announced the need to save £20bn to cope with increasing
healthcare demands as budgets flatline after years of record
investment.
But
official figures reveal that there were almost 6,150 fewer full-time
equivalent qualified nurses in July this year compared with May 2010
despite Coalition promises to protect frontline staff. In total,
there are 20,790 fewer NHS staff, but the number of doctors has
increased by 7,000, according to the NHS Information Centre.
The
long-awaited report into the Mid Staffordshire hospital scandal is
expected to recommend minimum nursing levels to improve patient
safety in hospitals. On average there is one qualified nurse to every
four paediatric patients, but only one for every nine elderly
patients.
Yet
there is compelling evidence from King's College London that patient
outcomes improve when science is applied to nurse-patient ratios –
in short, making sure there are enough nurses safely to care for
patients in different settings.
The
Government has repeatedly dismissed the RCN's figures as
scaremongering, but does not monitor proposed cuts by NHS trusts
centrally. Furthermore, the growing number of NHS contracts being
awarded to private companies such as Circle, Virgin Health and Care
UK will soon make it even more difficult to track job losses. Private
companies do not submit such data to the NHS Information Centre, nor
will workforce plans be available for public scrutiny.
The
Health minister Dr Daniel Poulter said: "NHS performance is
strong: waiting times and infection rates are at record low levels.
To say that the NHS is in 'crisis' is scaremongering and doesn't
reflect reality.
"The
health service is changing – the workforce is changing to reflect
this, but changes must be decided at a local level, based on evidence
that they will improve patient care."
A
spokeswoman for the Department of Health added: "In the past,
governments have failed to give workplace planning the priority it
needs. Health Education England [a new training organisation] is the
first of its kind and will give training [and education]
unprecedented clarity and focus."
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