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Better career progression needed

Posted: 23 October 2003 | Subscribe Online


Keeping workforce issues high on the political agenda will be a challenge as policy concentrates on changes to structure, delegates were told during a session on the future social care workforce.

Liz Kendall, chief executive of the Maternity Alliance, said "changes to workforce were as equally as important as changes to structure".

Kendall, who worked previously for the Institute for Public Policy Research and was one of the authors of the think-tank's From Welfare to Well-being report, said the Agenda for Change framework in the NHS could be used as a model for the social care workforce. This provided good career progression and movement across different health roles and had helped with the introduction of new roles.
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But Unison's national officer for social services, Owen Davies, said the lessons from the Agenda for Change programme were "limited" as there were "25,000 employers in social care and one employer in the NHS".

Bill McKitterick, director of social services at Bristol and chairperson of the Association of Directors of Social Services workforce committee, said one of the main challenges was to build "a flexible and attractive career with transferable skills that would attract young people".

Universities hindered progress by not allowing NVQs to contribute as credits to the new degree, he said.


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