The social care workforce must be reformed to fit the changing government agenda, a conference heard today.
James Churchill, chair of the occupational standards and qualifications committee at Skills for Care, said the changes set out in the health and social care white paper, the Wanless review and the Options for Excellence strategy would require the creation of a new “trained and trusted” workforce.
He told the Skills for Care conference in Manchester that personal assistants had grown fast in the workforce over the last six years and predicted that the role could dominate the future of the social care workforce.
News round up: NHS complaints going unheeded
10 October 2008
NHS complaints going unheeded
10 October 2008
BASW conference: Practitioners sceptical about Derbyshire reform
10 October 2008
Career Clinic: how to handle cliques at work
08 October 2008
LGA issues child protection warning about obese children
Phil Hope succeeds Ivan Lewis as adult social care minister
Cafcass to introduce competence-based pay for practitioners
DH study reveals councils still haven't embraced personalisation
Details of government consultations
02 October 2008
Private Member Bills
25 July 2008
Government Legislation
25 July 2008