{"id":4753,"date":"2023-08-31T10:28:05","date_gmt":"2023-08-31T10:28:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/integratedcarejournal.com\/?p=4753"},"modified":"2023-11-03T11:23:15","modified_gmt":"2023-11-03T11:23:15","slug":"nhs-workforce-plan-change-approach-clinicians-patients-systems","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/integratedcarejournal.com\/nhs-workforce-plan-change-approach-clinicians-patients-systems\/","title":{"rendered":"NHS Workforce Plan will need a change in mindset from clinicians, patients and systems"},"content":{"rendered":"
The NHS Long Term Workforce Plan<\/a> centres on the need to train, reform and retain its employees to meet future demand, leading to an increase of up to 360,000 new staff across integrated care systems (ICSs).\u00a0Increasing the number of formal training places available through more diverse points of entry and improving retention through rewarding career and development are at the heart of what needs to be done to deliver this plan.<\/p>\n The introduction of new roles, reforming the way care is delivered and by whom, will be critical to meeting anticipated demand in 2036\/37. But these roles will need to be designed, clinically-led, and committed to driving productivity to create the capacity needed.<\/p>\n It is important to recognise that more staff will not increase capacity unless clinical pathways can be redesigned to be more efficient and effective. During COVID-19, there was about a 10 per cent increase in headcount within NHS acute trusts. However, at the beginning of 2023\/24, providers were at 97 per cent of pre-pandemic productivity levels. Delivery of the NHS Workforce Plan means broadening the skill mix of multidisciplinary teams, creating new and diverse roles across systems. In designing the new workforce, the roles need to create new capacity to meet demand, either through new services to meet future need or by increasing provision in existing services.<\/p>\n Creating a new role requires the redesign of the way that multidisciplinary teams work together. The starting point for this workforce design should be the optimal clinical pathways, rather than what is being done today. That means setting out the clinical red lines (what can only be done by a registered healthcare professional), looking at the skills and roles needed, and the most efficient use of capacity.<\/p>\n
\nDetermining which roles will be needed to meet demand<\/h3>\n