I should stop reading the Nursing Times, it depresses me. The
following article comes from their site, I’m responsible for the edits.
Question;
What;
1] Fell by 4% last year.
2] Will rise by 2% this year.
3] Will fall by 30,000 between 2014/2016?
Nursing numbers decline again with more cuts planned
Nursing Times
29 July, 2013 | By Shaun Lintern
Real cuts
in the number of NHS nurses – almost 1,000 in a month – have continued to
emerge as more than 140 hospital foundation trusts plan to slash their workforce
by 30,000 by 2016.
Latest
figures, from the Health and Social Care Information Centre, show the number of
nursing posts in the health service dropped by 956 between March and April –
leaving a total of 307,939 whole time equivalent nursing midwifery and health
visiting staff.
This is
almost 3,000 fewer than when the coalition government took office in May 2010,
while the total headcount has reduced by more than 5,000.
The cuts in
nurse numbers have been criticised as “dangerous” by shadow health secretary
Andy Burnham. Royal College of Nursing chief executive and general secretary
Peter Carter highlighted recent scandals, saying: “Where nurse numbers are
slashed, standards of care plummet.”
The figures
were published last week, one day after latest three-year plans from 145
foundation trusts exposed plans to brutally cut the NHS workforce by 30,000
whole time equivalent staff in the next two financial years.
The annual
review of FT plans by the regulator Monitor revealed there was a 4% fall in the
number of nurses at their organisations during the last financial year,
2012-13.
During the
current 2013-14 year, FTs plan to increase staff in response to the Francis
report on Mid Staffordshire Foundation Trust and this month’s mortality review
of trusts with high death rates the report, published by NHS England medical
director Sir Bruce Keogh.
The Monitor
reports said FTs are planning to recruit staff as a “short-term fix”, with
4,133, or 2%, more nurses along with 5,867 doctors, healthcare assistants and
other frontline staff. They will off-set the cost of this year’s £500m
recruitment by imposing a 39% cut in the use of bank and agency staff, the
plans suggest.
But during
the 2014-16, trusts are planning a return to staff reductions and want to cut
30,000 WTE staff, with a majority coming from nursing.
This is
despite predictions by the Centre for Workforce Intelligence of a potential
nursing shortage. It believes the NHS is likely to have 47,500 fewer nurses
than it needs by 2016, as revealed by Nursing Times in June.
RCN policy
director Howard Catton described the FT’s plans as a “classic example of boom
and bust, yo-yo approach to workforce planning”.
“We have to
move away from this, it’s not sustainable for the future,” he warned. The
Francis and Keogh reports crossed the Rubicon in terms of making nursing cuts a
patient safety issue.”
Good planning, good patient care?
Errh no.
Neil Harris
(a don’t stop till you drop production.
Home: helpmesortoutthenhs.blogspot.com
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