Social Care Workforce 2023-07-11

2023-07-11

TAGS
Response quality

Questions & Answers

Q1 Partial Answer
Desmond Swayne Con
New Forest West
Context
The question arises from ongoing concerns about the adequacy of social care services, particularly regarding staffing levels and recruitment challenges.
What steps he is taking to increase the social care workforce. I am concerned that we do not have enough domiciliary care workers to meet the needs of our elderly population, especially during winter months when demand spikes.
Social care depends on the skills and compassion of our care workforce. That is why we are investing £250 million in reforming care as a career, with a new care qualification, specialist training courses for experienced care workers and a new career structure to support progression, alongside increased funding for social care, our national recruitment campaign and the care worker visa.
Assessment & feedback
Specific measures to address the shortage of domiciliary care workers were not detailed
Response accuracy
Q2 Direct Answer
Desmond Swayne Con
New Forest West
Context
There is a pressing need for more domiciliary care workers to support the elderly and disabled, with high vacancy rates reported by home care providers.
We need many, many more domiciliary care workers. How will we get them? I am concerned about the rising demand and falling availability of these essential roles in our communities.
My right hon. Friend is right. We have some good news: Skills for Care data shows that home care job vacancies are falling—something I hear when I speak to home care providers. Looking ahead to next winter, I want every local authority to have enough home care on hand. That is why I emphasised the importance of home care when we distributed £600 million of discharge funding to local councils and NHS organisations in April. We are asking all local authorities to plan ahead and book enough home care in advance for this coming winter.
Assessment & feedback
Response accuracy
Q3 Direct Answer
Context
There is a need to improve the recognition of care workers' contributions and ensure they are adequately compensated for their work, especially considering irregular payment schedules.
Is this not the very day to thank our care workers up and down the country? So many families depend on those people who toil away, day by day, visiting houses, often not being paid in between their visits. Could we look closely at recruitment and the agencies involved? Let us get real pay for care workers up, now.
I think that every day is a good day to thank our care workers for their skills, compassion and hard work. We gave social care a record funding settlement of up to £7.5 billion in the autumn statement, which is being used to help local authorities increase the fees that they pay to care providers, in turn enabling care providers to pay their workforce better. That is going hand in hand with extra funding to support discharge into social care this winter and our reforms for the care workforce.
Assessment & feedback
Response accuracy