Transcript Slide 1

Consultation Engagement
Liberating the NHS:
Developing the
healthcare workforce
Workforce planning,
education and training
Overview
 The White Paper “Equity and Excellence: Liberating the NHS” sets
out a vision, strategy and proposals for the NHS where:
 Patients are at the heart of everything the NHS does
 Healthcare outcomes are amongst the best in the world
 Clinicians are empowered to deliver results
 Consultation Liberating the NHS: Developing the healthcare
workforce launched on 20th December 2010 and closes on 31st March
2011.
 Today is an opportunity to ensure common understanding of the
proposals and consultation questions and to share views.
What are we trying to achieve
 Successful patient care depends on the whole workforce. Staff who are
empowered, engaged and well supported provide better patient care.
 The NHS Constitution requires all employers to ensure all staff have personal
development, access to training, line management support to succeed and
support to improve staff health and well being.
 The White Paper sets out proposals for a new framework for education and
training: driven by patient need, led by healthcare providers and underpinned
by strong clinical leadership.
 A focus on value for money, and effective linkage to delivery of better
healthcare outcomes.
 A strong relationship with education providers to ensure that we can improve
on the quality and value for money for pre registration and post registration
training and continued professional development.
We want to design a system that has:
 Robust workforce planning and security of supply.
 A flexible workforce that can respond to the needs of local patients.
 Continuous improvement in the quality of education & training of staff.
 The right incentives and accountabilities to drive value for money.
 A diverse workforce that has equitable access to education, training and
opportunities to progress.
The design principles are set out on page 18 of the consultation.
Where We are Now
 Greater security of supply, more patient focused
 Increased focus on the quality of education
 Improved engagement with professions through
new professional advisory boards
 Improved partnerships across health, education
and research
 Centre for Workforce Intelligence starting to put
forward recommendations and improve workforce
information quality.
 Strides in implementing skill mix changes in some
areas
 Stable funding system with increased
transparency
Building on Success
 Planning and development of the whole workforcemore flexible and adaptable to patients and public
needs.
 Integration between service development and
financial and workforce planning for continuous quality
improvement
 A streamlined, whole system approach shifting the
balance to local planning with clear accountabilities
 Tackling chronic shortages of particular skills
Stronger engagement and ownership of employers
 Funding transparently linked to activity to provide
incentives for value for money
What the system needs to do
Local ‘skills networks’
will take on SHA
workforce functions.
Quality of education
and training will remain
under the stewardship
of healthcare
professions, working in
partnerships with
universities, colleges
and other education
providers.
Local Autonomy & Accountability
 Healthcare providers are the engine of the new system.
 All providers have an obligation to plan and commission thoughtfully for
the whole workforce and long-term sustainability.
 Clinical leadership will raise standards of education and training at every
level.
 Appropriate ‘checks and balances’ will provide accountability.
 Centre for Workforce Intelligence will raise standards of education and
training at every level.
Local Autonomy & Accountability
 Clear duties for providers:
 To consult on workforce plans.
 To provide data about the current and future workforce needs.
 To cooperate in planning the healthcare workforce and
planning and provision of professional education and training.
Do these duties provide the right foundation for healthcare
providers to take on greater ownership and responsibility for planning
and developing the healthcare workforce?
Are there other incentives and ways in which we could ensure an
appropriate degree of cooperation, coherence and consultation in the
system?
Healthcare Providers
 Will decide how they work together.
 Will need to create and own a legal entity to:
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Manage workforce data.
Develop and consult on a local skills and development strategy.
Hold and allocate education and training funding.
Contract for education and training, secure value for money and quality.
Manage all clinical placements including deanery functions.
Work in partnership with universities and other education providers.
Work with LAs across the health, public health and social care workforce.
Contribute to the development of national policy.
 Will decide on size and governance of their local ‘skills networks’
Are there other functions that healthcare providers working together need
to provide?
Health Education England
 A new executive expert organisation bringing together interests of healthcare providers,
the professions, patients and staff.
 Building on the work of MEE and professional advisory bodies, involving patients and
promoting equality.
 HEE will have four main functions:
 Providing national leadership on planning and developing the workforce.
 Supporting the development of healthcare provider ‘skills networks’.
 Promoting high quality education and training responsive to the changing needs
of patients and local communities.
 Allocating and accounting for NHS education and training resources.
Are these the right functions?
How should the governance and functions be established so they have the
confidence of the public, professions, healthcare providers, commissioners
of services and higher education institutions?
Moving to a fairer more responsive funding system
 Current funding is based on historical funding flows and varies across the
country.
 Need increased clarity and transparency on what is funded and how funding
flows.
 The Government is committed to the principle of tariffs for education and
training as the foundation for a transparent funding regime providing genuine
incentives and minimising transaction costs.
 Central budget should only fund education and training for the next generation
of clinical staff. Healthcare providers responsible for funding development of
their existing workforce.
 In the long term, further transparency achieved through a levy on providers to
align funding and incentives to secure supply of skills without chronic
shortages or significant over-supply.
What should be the scope for central investment through the MPET budget?
How can we manage the transition to tariffs for clinical education in away that provides
stability, is fair and minimises the risks to providers?
What is the appropriate pace to progress a levy?
Transitional Arrangements
 SHAs lead on investment and commissioning of education & training
and planning with providers and the higher education sector throughout
2011/12. Leading transition to the new system, building up local
processes and infrastructure, supporting smooth migration of functions.
Maintaining/building effective partnerships with health and social care
sector.
 Health Education England (HEE) will be established in shadow form in
2011 and as a special health authority from April 2012.
 Healthcare Provider ‘skills networks’ - healthcare providers set up
‘skills networks’ that can enter into legally binding contracts. Models
developed and shared. Agreed signed off processes. Operational from
April 2012.
 Education Sector – continue strong engagement with education sector
building effective partnerships with universities, colleges and other
education providers.
Timeline
Dec
10
Jan
11
Feb
11
Mar
11
Apr
11
Jun
11
Sept
11
Dec
11
Jan
12
Feb
12
Mar
12
April
12
Onwards
Consultation
Transition
SHA closure
*
Shadow form
HEE
‘skills
networks’
Development
Shadow form
Benefits of the new framework
 Increased autonomy of providers, best placed to understand the
needs of their patients, staff and local communities.
 Increased staff engagement to improve staff well-being and support
during their career progression.
 Robust workforce planning to ensure sufficient numbers of staff with
the right skills mix to ensure high quality patient care.
 A flexible high quality, adaptable workforce offering better value for
money.
 Strong clinical leadership to ensure high quality education and
training.
 HEE bringing together the interests of providers, the professions,
patients and staff to provide leadership and assurance in the whole
system
Big Questions
What should we preserve out of the old system?
Do we have the right checks and balances?
What are the key success measures for the new arrangements?
How to secure strong clinical leadership?
How to ensure provider ownership to drive the new system?
What should be funded from a central education and training levy?
What is the sensible pace of change?
What about Public Health education and the role of Local Authorities?
How to ensure effective partnerships with universities, colleges and other education
providers?
What are the critical risks?