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Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill

Overview

This Bill aims to make sure there are correct levels of staffing for NHS Scotland and care services providers. 

The Bill seeks to provide safe and effective care for all patients. 

This will be done by having: 

  • the right number of staff
  • staff with the right skills
  • staff in the right place 

How staff levels are monitored and managed is part of the Bill. Scottish health boards must plan health and care staffing to deliver their services.

Staffing level and professional planning tools will be introduced to manage and monitor services. These will seek to identify, develop and put in place continuous quality improvement.

Scottish Ministers will specify the tools to be used and the frequency of the reports produced. 

You can find out more in the Explanatory Notes document that explains the Bill.

Why the Bill was created

The Scottish Government is responsible for planning the NHS Scotland workforce. 

There are times when the staff have not been able to meet patients' care needs. This has been because of: 

  • staff shortages
  • issues with the mix of skills on teams 
  • increasing demands on services

In 2002, Audit Scotland published, Planned Ward Nursing - Legacy or Design. 

This recommended workforce planning that takes into account quality measures. For example, that staff have the right training for the planned care needs.

You can find out more in the Policy Memorandum document that explains the Bill.

Becomes an Act

The Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill passed by a vote of 113 for, 0 against and 0 abstentions. The Bill became an Act on 6 June 2019.

Introduced

The Scottish Government sends the Bill and related documents to the Parliament.

Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill as introduced

Scottish Parliament research on the Bill 

Stage 1 - General principles

Committees examine the Bill. Then MSPs vote on whether it should continue to Stage 2.

Have your say

The deadline for sharing your views on this Bill has passed. Read the views that were given.

Committees involved in this Bill

Who examined the Bill

Each Bill is examined by a 'lead committee'. This is the committee that has the subject of the Bill in its remit.

It looks at everything to do with the Bill.

Other committees may look at certain parts of the Bill if it covers subjects they deal with.

Who spoke to the lead committee about the Bill

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First meeting transcript

The Convener

Agenda item 4 is two evidence-taking sessions on the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill. I expect the sessions to last roughly an hour each to give committee members the opportunity to ask our witnesses about aspects of the bill.

I welcome to the meeting Dr Sally Gosling, who is assistant director of practice and development at the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy; Kim Hartley Kean, who is the head of the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists Scotland and is representing the Allied Health Professions Federation Scotland; and Patricia Cassidy, who is the chief officer of Falkirk health and social care partnership and is representing the chief officers group for health and social care in Scotland.

We will go straight to questions. First, I ask the witnesses to kick things off by briefly outlining their main concerns about and considerations with regard to the bill’s proposals. Who would like to start?

Kim Hartley Kean (Allied Health Professions Federation Scotland)

I am happy to start, if I could have the opportunity to sort out my papers.

Thank you for the opportunity to speak to the committee this morning. I represent 12 allied health profession bodies, so I provide real value for the committee—you are getting 12 for the price of one. I represent music therapists, art therapists, drama therapists, occupational therapists, dieticians, orthotist-prosthetists, orthoptists, physiotherapists, paramedics, speech and language therapists, podiatrists and radiographers. I am representing a lot of professions.

We account for more than 11,500 staff, which is 8.3 per cent of the NHS workforce. That compares well with the 8.9 per cent of the workforce that is made up of medics and dentists. We work in health and social care—OTs are employed by social services—from birth to palliative care, in public health preventive services and in primary, secondary and community care. It would be challenging to find a care group in which AHPs do not work.

I have five key points that I want to make; I will do so as quickly as possible. We believe that the bill will not achieve its objectives and is not future focused. We have several significant fears about it and none of the 12 professional bodies that I represent can support it as it stands. We will offer some solutions.

First, the bill will not achieve its objectives. Only the right staffing team can provide the highest quality of care that leads to the best outcomes. In that sense, legislating for the right staffing presents a great opportunity, so in principle we like the bill. However, it is not outcome focused but is focused instead on a restricted range of inputs, which is its big challenge.

The bill is not future focused and plays to the old unidisciplinary siloed model of health and social care that seems to go against the grain of modern models of health and social care that are promoted in the general practitioner contract, the national clinical strategy and, most recently, in “National Health and Social Care Workforce Plan: Part 3—improving workforce planning for primary care in Scotland”.

The bill does not reflect the reality of multidisciplinary working: some parts of the bill seem specifically to exclude AHPs. AHPs work in all 11 types of healthcare that are listed in proposed new section 12IC of the NHS (Scotland) Act 1978, which would be inserted by section 4 of the bill. The list of employees in section 12IC, however, identifies only registered nurses, midwives and medical practitioners, along with people who work under the supervision of those staff groups. Allied professions do not work under the supervision of any of those staff groups. For 40 years, we have been autonomous clinicians. The bill does not cover that.

The bill says that it is multidisciplinary, but the financial memorandum is disheartening. It seems to indicate that it will be 10 years plus before we see any multidisciplinary tools. The bill is also not needs based: people need AHPs, but the bill is all about doctors and nurses.

Our fears are shared by the AHP directors who are working in the health service already, trying to run AHP services. The bill will create unintended consequences and will skew resources from the current dire financial distribution. Directors are likely to say: “Sorry, we can see what you mean about needing more AHPs or multidisciplinary teams, but my hands are tied by the legislation.”

Our fears are grounded in reality. No one is saying that the £500 million-plus that has been announced for primary care should not have happened, but compare that to the £3 million that was announced for AHPs in 2015: we have not heard about any more money for AHPs since then.

There is a sense that we have been forgotten; we were excluded from the process of writing the bill, which is indicative of organisational habits. There is one reference to AHPs in the bill papers, in paragraph 93 of the policy memorandum. I am sure that everyone can remember what that says.

The Scottish Government nursing directorate itself says that:

“The potential for resources to be diverted to nursing and midwifery to meet the mandatory requirement could be to the detriment of other professionals’ contribution to the care of patients.”

It is recognised that that is a problem.

As I said, none of the professional bodies that I am here to represent can support the bill, as introduced. We would like there to be an outcomes focus in the general principles and a general presumption that quality and safety are best supported through multidisciplinary teams. We want the list of tools in proposed new section 12IC of the 1978 act to be replaced with a new section that would establish a statutory duty on, for example, Healthcare Improvement Scotland, which would be equivalent to the duty on Social Care and Social Work Improvement Scotland, to annually or biennially review and improve the common staffing method, including the tools to reflect the developing evidence base on multidisciplinary staffing. That same body should make annual or biennial recommendations to the minister on improving the tools.

The Convener

That was a comprehensive answer.

Dr Sally Gosling (Chartered Society of Physiotherapy)

I will add to what Kim Hartley Kean has said. As she said, the CSP is part of AHP Federation Scotland. I will briefly outline some additional issues that relate to our concerns about the bill as it is currently couched.

First, we believe very strongly that a multidisciplinary team approach to staffing levels must be taken. There will be risks to the quality of patient care, in terms of experience and outcomes, unless a multidisciplinary team approach is taken.

The bill also risks focusing on staff levels in one part of the workforce and potentially depleting other parts of the workforce, which would add to staff workload in unhelpful and unintended ways. We think that the bill assumes that looking at staffing levels in isolation will make a difference to the quality of patient care, in terms of experience and outcomes. We strongly believe that looking at staffing levels in isolation cannot address needs. That risks a partial approach being taken that would not look at outcomes for patients; at best, it would look at avoiding negative outcomes or negative incidents.

There is also a risk that the bill would build in rigidity and inflexibility when, as Kim Hartley Kean said, there is a need to focus on future service delivery models. We need to ensure that staffing is responsive and able to meet current and future staffing service delivery models, rather than it being grounded in historical models.

The bill risks being a distraction and creating bureaucracy. Staff groups that come under the legislation would need to invest their time in gathering data about activity, but there would be no real focus on the benefit of that work. The survey that the Scottish Parliament information centre undertook recently seemed to affirm that a lot of time is invested in looking at how the tools are used currently, but that there is no clear sense of how use of the tools impacts on analysis of staffing issues or on accountability for decisions.

On that basis, we think that the existing nurse staffing level tools and workload management tools are an odd place on which to base legislation. Embedding those tools in the legislation would build in rigidity, inflexibility and a lack of responsiveness to changing population and patient needs and service delivery models. Again, that view seems to have been borne out by the survey feedback that has been obtained. Nurses who use the tools reflected that how they are working and contributing to patient care is not being captured. That risks the bill being grounded in historical issues.

We are also concerned that the tools are not in the public domain. We are not able to see—as I understand the committee will not be able to see—what the tools are at the moment. We do not understand how the tools have been evaluated, so we have some concerns on that front.

We believe strongly that a whole-system approach to staffing levels must be taken that reflects changing models of delivery, moving care closer to home, integrating health and social care and delivering the Scottish health and social care delivery plan. The grounding of the bill, as introduced, could work against delivery of Scottish Government’s “Health and Social Care Delivery Plan”. The grounding of the bill, as introduced, could work against delivery of health and social care policy through the bill, for example, taking only a partial approach to staffing.

The bill would also generate the risk of unintended consequences and create perverse incentives and unintended activity. Again, that is because the bill is grounded in a singular approach to one staff group, albeit that it is a very important group.

The bill could also divert resources in order to meet its requirements while not meeting service delivery needs or patient needs. Our strong concerns about unintended activities are borne out by some evidence that, in states where such legislation has been introduced, particularly for nursing its impact has not been what was intended. We are concerned about that.

10:45  

We absolutely recognise the spirit in which the bill has been introduced and we recognise that it is intended to enhance patient care and to address issues of staff wellbeing, but we do not believe that, as it is couched, it will do that. It needs to be much more responsive to changing population and patient needs, much more in line with health and social care policy and much more focused on being integrated into that.

We are looking for legislation that is much more strategic and integrated in its approach, does not sit in isolation, and introduces a much stronger sense of accountability. Rather than just accountability for demonstrating use of the tools, we need accountability for integrating a strategic approach to workforce planning, workforce deployment and so on.

Patricia Cassidy (Chief Officers Group for Health and Social Care in Scotland)

I welcome the opportunity to come and speak to the committee. I preface my comments by saying that we must remember that the focus of everything that we do is to ensure that we have person-centred care that is flexible, responsive and safe, as well as being of high quality.

I am here representing the 31 chief officers for health and social care across all the integration authorities in Scotland. Our response to the initial consultation in July 2017 made it clear that we did not support safe staffing tools that would protect only one element of the health and social care workforce. Conversely, however, that did not imply that we were in favour of tools being extended to other parts of the workforce. When we responded to the second consultation, we stated that, although we understood both the political and public desire to ensure that our health and social care services are appropriately resourced in terms of staffing, our position remained the same: that we would be cautious about supporting a legislative approach, for several key reasons.

There is potential for a significant additional layer of administration and bureaucracy to be added to existing systems. Our challenge in the system is to ensure that, if people do not need to be in an acute hospital, we have sufficient health and social care provision in the community to keep them out of hospital. If they are in hospital, we need to be sure that we can receive them back into the community and support them to be reabled there. That requires us to service acute hospitals and community hospitals across Scotland and to be able to be quick and responsive in anticipating needs and the volume of care that we need to provide or to commission from other providers. We would be very concerned if the legislative process impeded that as opposed to adding benefit and impact and increasing our ability to respond to that need.

There is a risk that the legislative requirement to use particular tools could stifle innovation. We are in a very exciting policy landscape in health and social care in Scotland, where there is a big transformation in developing community-based needs. The health and social care partnerships are not solely about national health service boards and the councils, although they are important partners. Our key partners are communities—the individuals themselves—and the third sector.

We would be concerned if we became preoccupied with a tool when existing legislative and inspection frameworks are in place, along with the new health and social care standards. That could preclude our innovation and our developments at locality level in working with families, communities and third sector partners to develop a range of supports in communities to enhance people’s wellbeing.

It is not just about providing care and support. Isolation is a main issue in Scotland and we need to work with other providers and communities to provide solutions for that. Any tool that is developed needs to be sufficiently flexible and dynamic to allow the developments that we will lead in the next few years to meet local need. It is very much about that.

We are talking about diverse communities, geographies and landscapes across Scotland. I know that colleagues in the islands and rural areas are concerned about any restriction to their ability to respond to local need appropriately and—I must emphasise this—with safety and quality of service at its heart.

We are concerned that legislation is still quite restrictive. Colleagues from AHPs have laid out their concerns on that, and we are equally concerned. In the health and social care service at the moment, there is quite a lot of development of advanced roles to support general practice and the delivery of out-of-hours and other services. We would like to continue to look at that and to see that nothing is dropping off the end of nursing and other roles. We need to look at the workforce that we need. Is it a blended workforce? Is there a baseline workforce for which we can create pathways to a variety of health and social care professions by offering ground-level opportunity?

We are all facing significant recruitment and retention issues across every element of health and social care. We all face a demographic challenge and we need to be able to develop services that respond to that reduction in the availability of employees and recruitment opportunities and develop innovative solutions to attract people, to retain them, and to develop them into more senior or sophisticated roles to meet need across the whole system.

To sum up, legislation should not create a rigid compliance framework that undermines the new integrated environment for health and social care. Each partnership is expected to work at locality level to identify local needs and then meet those needs. We need to be responsive.

Part 2 of the bill, which is focused on staffing and the NHS, does not take cognisance of the significant overlap of governance responsibilities between health boards, integration joint boards and local authorities. That would require clear guidance.

There is tremendous diversity in the workforce in health and social care across care at home, care home provision and intermediate care. The one-size-fits-all approach to workforce planning simply will not work. We have a potential legislative framework, but it needs to be contextualised within that much broader national workforce plan that is happening nationally across all the professions and, looking forward, with our colleagues in schools, colleges and universities around what could be innovative health and care careers that we could feed people into through various pathways into the professions.

Thank you for the opportunity to speak to the committee and I am happy to take any questions.

The Convener

I thank all three witnesses for laying out your concerns in some detail. Questions and answers will henceforth go through the chair. You do not have to respond to every question, but please do respond when you wish to comment.

Sandra White (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

You have already given me some answers to the questions that I was going to ask about health and social care integration, but I want to tease the issue out a bit more. The bill is meant to enhance the work that is being done with health and social care and integration. You talked in great detail about the effect that the bill will have. What effect will it have if it is passed without due care and diligence in looking at the integration of health and social care? What will happen if we do not change the bill to take cognisance of what you have said today?

Patricia Cassidy

It could drive resource to focus on being compliant with the bill’s requirements, and that could add more administration and avert resources from front-line care. Every day in social care, we receive referrals directly from emergency departments, from hospital discharge teams, from general practitioners, from families and from social workers.

That can involve quite a significant volume of work, and we need to flex our system to make an assessment, to provide that care, to link with allied health professionals in order to provide a rounded package of care and to provide equipment, and to do that across a range of several thousand people on a daily basis. That might require us to commission additional provision from one of our providers if we cannot meet the demand internally. We would need to be assured through a commissioning process that that supplier was also compliant, and we would need assurance in that regard. The thrust of outcome-based care involves an assessment of need with the service user and their family and an identification of what their personal outcomes are, and then agreeing a way in which we will jointly work towards those outcomes.

We already have in place checks and balances to ensure that we are commissioning and employing sufficiently registered and high-quality trained staff and that there is coverage across the people receiving care, but the proposals would bring in another dimension.

Kim Hartley Kean

Our central concern is the outcomes for service users. That skewing of resources towards the professions that are covered by the tools has already resulted in significant cuts for AHP service users. My radiography colleagues say:

“at present departments are running with gaps in the rota due to unfilled vacancies, maternity and sick leave, leading to delays in examinations, reporting of results and radiotherapy treatment as well as increasing stress on the radiographers”.

At present, those absences are treated differently in AHPs from how they are in other professions. Colleagues in another professional body have said that, basically, the situation will mean fewer AHPs on all those patient care pathways. For example, multidisciplinary teams delivering rehabilitation in community settings, which prevents hospital admissions and readmissions, reduces length of stay and restores function, which increases people’s independence, would be in jeopardy. They are the new models relating to prevention and self-management that enable people to live in a homely setting. That is what is threatened.

Dr Gosling

To add to what colleagues have said, the situation risks the issues of skills mix and job-role reconfiguration across health and social care not being addressed. It also risks the assurance being given to the public that staffing-level issues are being addressed when, in reality, the legislation would not address workforce needs in line with population, patient and service demand or deal with the need for increases in workforce supply. It risks appearing to provide a solution while not doing so, which would distract attention from more strategic approaches in line with policy.

Sandra White

I would like to maybe get a one-word answer to this question before moving on to my next question. Are you saying that, if a set of workforce planning tools for nursing were put on a statutory footing, that would have the adverse effect that you are talking about?

Kim Hartley Kean

If you are a director, you might see that there is a need for multidisciplinary team planning. However, if only the needs of the service users of nursing are statutorily protected, the interests of people who are using the other members of the multidisciplinary team will not have the same legislative protection. That means that people will ensure that they have the nursing staff in place first rather than thinking about the necessary skill mix.

Sandra White

Patricia Cassidy mentioned integration joint boards. We know that they do not have a statutory duty to produce a workforce plan, as basically they are not employers. How do you see things working from the point of view of the IJBs? You mentioned that you work with them. Do they need flexibility? Do they need to be involved in the plan and in the bill?

Patricia Cassidy

Integration joint boards are required to produce a workforce plan as part of the integration schemes. We are working very closely with colleagues in the council and the health service. The employees remain their employees, but we jointly create a workforce plan.

11:00  

Sandra White

I apologise; I missed that wee bit.

As the bill stands, do you think that it gives IJBs less or more authority?

Patricia Cassidy

The bill does not add or detract from the authority of IJBs. It has no significance in that way. We are cited in the bill and we are obviously key stakeholders, but we will always work with our colleagues in the NHS and the councils.

I have some experience of working in education, and I would be concerned if, as my colleague described, one or two professions had legislative protection of their numbers, because we have seen that in education, where classroom assistants, bus escorts and so on are subject to cuts against the backdrop of protecting the pupil to teacher ratio and the teacher numbers in schools. I would like us to learn from that and recognise that there is a complexity of skills required to meet need and that each of those skills is valid. Consideration would have to be given, using professional judgment, as to what combination of those staff members and skills is needed. That is much more subtle than a legislative tool might allow.

Sandra White

Absolutely. If the bill is passed, whose responsibility will it be to ensure the adequate supply of workforce? Who will have a say in that?

Patricia Cassidy

I would need to bow to colleagues who have more detailed knowledge of the legislation to answer that. The integration joint boards, health boards and councils work very closely together and currently share that responsibility.

Dr Gosling

At the moment, it is not clear how the bill would address the workforce planning issue. There is, as yet, no workforce planning process in place in Scotland for the allied health professions. What is important and fits well with the integration agenda is to look at the workforce needs across the whole system—not just NHS workforce need, but workforce need from any part of delivering care to patients, as well as leadership, management, education and research capacity. The bill as drafted does not address that.

However, it is imperative that, above and beyond the legislation, a much more strategic approach is taken to what workforce is needed, how that is best delivered and produced and how investment is made to develop the workforce appropriately to meet changing population and patient needs. That can be done only in a multidisciplinary way in order to meet the blended skills mix that is required.

David Stewart (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)

I thank our three witnesses for their excellent contributions. I would like to drill down into the detail of staff planning outwith nursery and midwifery. The committee frequently hears about major problems in Scotland with recruitment and retention. To what extent will the bill aid your difficulties in dealing with recruitment and retention?

Dr Gosling

I am not clear that the bill as introduced would address those issues, because it is not premised on them, but is concerned with staffing levels of the body that is already in place—in just one profession. We are keen that the broader issues around workforce planning, development and investment are considered, such that recruitment and retention are addressed across all staff groups. As I said, there is currently no strategic process to address those issues for AHPs.

It is possible that there is insufficient data to understand the recruitment and retention issues for AHPs. Just one example from a workforce supply perspective is that, for a number of the AHPs, the workforce comes through postgraduate pre-registration education routes. Those are well established—in physiotherapy, they have existed in Scotland for well over 20 years—but they are not funded, so the students who go through those routes are self-funded. If those routes were funded, that could be a useful way of expediting workforce supply. At the moment, the mixed-economy approach and the lack of data make addressing that issue difficult, but I do not think that the bill that we are considering really touches on those issues, so it needs to be integrated into a more strategic approach.

Kim Hartley Kean

The question touches on the clash between other policy and the bill. On recruitment, part 3 of the national health and social care workforce plan talks about considering increasing or controlling the numbers going into some of the AHPs and increasing the number of paramedics in training, but there is nothing in the bill that will enable jobs to be created for those people to go into. On retention, because the bill is focused on one discipline, investment in continuing professional development and the career structure in others is in doubt. The workforce data that is available across the professions shows that there has been very small growth in the AHPs, and that has primarily been at band 5, which is where new graduates go. There is really nowhere to go, and the bill does nothing to address that.

Patricia Cassidy

To be fair to the bill, it does not purport to be a workforce plan, but there is nothing in it that gives assurance that it will contribute to improving the situation with recruitment and retention.

David Stewart

I will move on to planning tools, which Sandra White touched on briefly. Obviously, that is a big element in nursing and midwifery, but when do you envisage multidisciplinary tools being created for other areas, such as the social care sector? If you think that they will be created, can you give a timescale within which those tools will be of practical use to those in the industry, and particularly to the clients who get the service across Scotland?

Kim Hartley Kean

The only clue in the bill as to the answer to that question is in the financial memorandum, which details the plans for the development of tools in the next five years. It states that the tools take a minimum of three years to develop and will be focused on nursing. Therefore, going by the financial memorandum, we believe that there is a risk that we will not see any multidisciplinary tools for up to 10 years, which will be 10 years behind current policy.

David Stewart

That is a long time.

Kim Hartley Kean

That is 10 years for people to wait for adequate AHP services and for us to establish the vision that we share of prevention, self-management and enabling people to stay and be cared for at home. It goes totally against the grain of what we are trying to do.

David Stewart

Would anyone else like to comment?

Dr Gosling

I agree that it seems a long timescale in which to develop those tools. It might be helpful to make the point that, as the professional bodies for AHPs, we have quite a lot to contribute to the development of multidisciplinary tools. A number of us have done a lot of work on safe and effective staffing levels, which has involved taking a more nuanced approach to the complex issues that are bound up with that. We have done work that we could contribute to the development of a much more multidisciplinary approach.

Kim Hartley Kean

Absolutely. Many of the professional bodies have something. In addition, it is important to point out that AHPs are already using multidisciplinary tools. There is not the same level of publicity about, or knowledge of, those tools, and they do not have the same level of investment as the tools in the bill. There are the six-steps methodology and the Balanced System, which the Scottish Government has recently piloted and which concerns AHP provision in children’s services. Therefore, there is something to build on. It could take 10 years to implement the bill but it does not have to be like that.

David Stewart

If I can come back—

The Convener

Patricia Cassidy wants to respond to your previous point.

Patricia Cassidy

The Government and the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities co-produced “National Health and Social Care Workforce Plan Part 2” in 2017. One of the recommendations in that proposes the development of multidisciplinary workforce planning tools. I am not sure what the timeframe for that work is but I understand that it is under way. The plan also proposes the development of a dependency tool, which considers the acuity of need in the care sector. That work will help to inform staffing models and the national care home contract.

David Stewart

Patricia Cassidy has partially covered my next point. We talk about multidisciplinary teams in hospitals and in the community. How is staffing calculated in reality? It is a complex and dynamic issue. I ask the witnesses to say a little bit more about the tools that can currently be used.

Kim Hartley Kean

I cannot say anything about them as a practitioner. To be clear about your question, are you asking about the tools that people are using, such as the Balanced System?

David Stewart

Yes.

Kim Hartley Kean

Children and young people need services at several levels. They need universal provision so that we develop all children’s capacities; children who are at risk of having poor outcomes need targeted services; and children who have identified disabilities or additional support needs need specialist provision. The Balanced System is a way of considering the assets that are available in the school, the family and the community as well as among all the AHPs so that we can decide together how many AHPs we need in a particular population—for example, in Ayrshire or Lothian. That brings us back to Patricia Cassidy’s point: it is about starting workforce planning by considering population need, not how many AHPs we have.

David Stewart

Some people have asked me why we need legislation to have good workplace tools because good management would normally involve such tools. That question has also come through in submissions to the committee. Although it is probably a simplistic general point about the bill, it would be useful to hear the three witnesses’ views on it.

Patricia Cassidy

I reiterate that, as our submission says, there are tools in place and we do not see the need for legislation. However, we embrace the need for good workforce planning for multidisciplinary teams.

Kim Hartley Kean

We must introduce consistency in the intelligence that we need to produce a staffing complement for any particular community. If the approach were more multidisciplinary, it would support the delivery of the new model. The common staffing method in the bill contains many good things that people need to take into account. Because workforce planning is complex, it will be difficult ever to reach perfection, but we want to move away from a wet-finger-in-the-wind approach and people making decisions based only on what their knowledge happens to be and move towards a system that reassures the public that the services that they need and might need in future are being planned for and are not down to some random decision making.

11:15  

Dr Gosling

Adding to what colleagues have said, I think that the question whether legislation is what is needed or is what will meet the spirit of the bill is very valid. What seems to be missing from the bill as it is couched is accountability. However, if there is going to be stronger accountability for ensuring safe and effective staffing levels to deliver safe and effective care to patients, any such move must be predicated on integrated and strategic approaches that are robust and which focus on the whole system, not just one part of the workforce. I think that the question whether this is the right thing to do is a multilayered one.

Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD)

Good morning, and thank you very much for your presentations.

I want to pick up on the impact of the proposals on integration. The committee has done a lot of work on the integration agenda—indeed, we have had an inquiry on that issue in the past year—and, with the bill’s introduction, I have a niggle that it might fly in the face of the good work that we have been doing through integration by creating a silo in which primary care gets a different set of rules and is considered in a more focused way than AHPs, social care and all the other arms of integration. Could we remedy that in the bill by including AHPs and social care provision, or should we just tear it up and start again?

The Convener

That is a very good question. Who would like to answer it? Does the bill provide a platform or is it going in the wrong direction?

Kim Hartley Kean

First, AHPs work across health and social care. The bill’s general principles would be okay if they were extended to cover outcomes, and it could create some kind of foundation. As far as the specifics are concerned, however, I would remove the list of tools and, as Sally Gosling has suggested, set up some strategic way of continuously improving the way in which we plan for staffing that reflects the evidence base and new models. The bill provides a foundation, but it needs to be changed radically. I hear what my colleague Patricia Cassidy has said about not having legislation at all, but I think that the bill could be significantly improved instead of its being chucked out altogether.

Patricia Cassidy

It is helpful to think about the bill’s origin, which was about having a uniprofessional model for nursing, and it is to be lauded for that and its aim to secure safe staffing across all care groups in the NHS. Indeed, my colleague, the nurse director in NHS Forth Valley, is a real supporter of the bill.

I think of this as a train that began on a journey; integration happened, and we joined that journey. The development of the tool started about 10 years ago, before the current policies on integration and health and social care were put in place. In an ideal world, we would start from the other end of the telescope by visioning our workforce needs, the services that we want to provide across health and social care and the skill mix from a very low to a very high level, striking a balance across the system and then looking at how we get from where we are now to having a blended, multidisciplinary workforce. Obviously, this is not an ideal world, but that would be one way of finding a solution, and it would not come at the cost of the long and hard work that nursing colleagues have put into the tool. The fact that things have been extended has raised a whole series of questions at this meeting.

Dr Gosling

I agree with my colleagues that the bill is an odd place to start. The introduction of the bill as it is framed seems an odd contribution the delivery of Scottish health and social care policy. It would be helpful and important to take stock of the available evidence about what works and how legislation that is introduced in good faith may have an unintended impact. The perverse impacts of other legislation should be carefully evaluated to take account of other healthcare systems. I highlighted an example that showed that legislation has led to more reliance on agency nursing staff rather than increasing nursing capacity; reduced opportunities for nursing staff to exercise professional judgment when making decisions; and services deciding to incur the penalty fee for non-compliance with the legislation. None of that was intended by that legislation. We should take strong account of the changed context for what the bill seeks to achieve and recognise everything that has been done in nursing. The risk is that the model is outdated, as the nursing staff survey results reflect. The legislation needs a thorough review to ensure that it is not going in the wrong direction.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

You are all in professions that work cheek by jowl with nurses with regard to integration in hospitals and other care settings. Taken in isolation, does the bill achieve what it set out to do? Is it needed?

The Convener

On the back of the previous questions, panellists may be able to give brief answers to that question. If Alex Cole-Hamilton has a tiny follow-up, this is the moment for it.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

We learned this morning about an horrific case in NHS Highland, where a gentleman has had his social care package removed. He is paralysed from the neck down and has been waiting for the package for months. That case is symptomatic of problems across the health service. Should we use our legislative time to tinker with something that is not badly broken—at least in terms of the nursing profession—or should we bring in legislation that overhauls our approach to social care? That is not a little question, is it? [Laughter.]

The Convener

If any witness wishes to respond to that very broad question, they can feel free to do so.

Kim Hartley Kean

The answer to your question whether the bill is needed is yes. Things are broken and we need massive improvement in how we plan our workforce. The fact of one, two and three workforce plans indicates that there is a lot of work to be done.

Brian Whittle (South Scotland) (Con)

A lot of information is flowing in this direction that we need to gather together. The theme of multidisciplinary working comes up every time that we take evidence and the bill could impact positively or negatively on that. I would like to drill down further into the role of allied healthcare professionals in multidisciplinary groups—specifically, their distinctive and crucial role in bridging the two sectors of health and social care. I am interested in how AHPs play into the preventative agenda. For example, how do they ensure that there are fewer unnecessary admissions into hospitals?

Kim Hartley Kean

I can talk in detail about my profession of speech and language therapy. I hope that the AHP colleagues whom I represent will forgive me, but that is what I know most about. I am sure that Sally Gosling will talk about physiotherapists.

Let us talk about people with dementia. Everyone who has dementia will have an eating, drinking or swallowing difficulty at some stage in the progress of their disease. An impairment of the ability to swallow safely is one of the first things that happens to someone with dementia, so they cough and choke, start aspirating, get chest infections and possibly pneumonia. Speech and language therapists work with the individual, their spouse and home-care staff to assess where the swallow is going wrong. They do that in partnership with radiographers, doctors and the screening and monitoring that is done by our nursing colleagues. The speech and language therapists will make recommendations about how to eat and swallow safely, so that the person is not choking or aspirating and needing to be admitted to hospital. That is an example of the work done in speech and language therapy that prevents people from becoming undernourished, from having unpleasant and traumatic experiences every time they try to eat and drink and from having to go into hospital and have lots of medication.

Dr Gosling

A key development in physiotherapy across the UK is physiotherapists playing a much stronger role in delivering care within primary care and general practice settings, particularly to address musculoskeletal disorders. The evidence is growing that the front-line, first-point-of-contact role is helping to ensure more timely care for individuals and avoids issues becoming worse before the individual can gain treatment. It reduces unnecessary referrals and admissions to hospital, as well as unnecessary tests and medications. Physiotherapists can also develop and support patient self-management.

As Kim Hartley Kean said, there is much potential within each of the allied health professions to build on such preventative, more timely, closer-to-home care for patients, which keeps people out of hospital when they do not need to go into hospital. Those kinds of service delivery models are at risk of not progressing under the approach in the bill, because, as we have said, the bill is predicated on old models of service delivery and does not capture the multidisciplinary team approach. We need to consider how primary care teams work collaboratively in the patient’s best interests and the best interests of the service, as well as how we tackle workforce development to meet those changing service delivery model needs.

Those issues of integration and taking a more strategic approach to meeting changing population patient needs are at risk of not being addressed by the approaches in the bill, which, as Patricia Cassidy suggested earlier, are quite rigid.

Patricia Cassidy

I will build on the theme of dementia. Where we have a person at home with dementia, working with speech and language therapists, physiotherapists and community psychiatric nurses, through joint planning and communication we can really improve the level of care that we are able to provide and the consistency of that care.

If someone is being cared for in a care home, it is really important that the care home staff are aware of the level of care that is required. Community psychiatry can be really helpful in coming in and giving training on how to cope with a particular service user’s manifestation of their illness, how to de-escalate situations and how to work around and retain the consistency that that individual requires.

It is about considering how we can blend and work together, rather than having layers of services going in to meet needs. We want to be clear and agree on the need that an individual has at that point in time and who is best placed to co-ordinate that and who is best placed to deliver it. People will come in and out of that care delivery package, but there will be a joint and shared assessment and multidisciplinary discussions about that patient’s progress or otherwise.

Keeping people in care homes or at home, if that is where they want to be, and avoiding unnecessary hospital admissions, is key. If providing nursing care is challenging for colleagues in a care home, we look at how district nurses and others can go in to provide such care and keep a person in a care home who is at the end of their life and wants to be in a homely setting of their choice. Care is very much blended and planned around the person, and that should be done not in a siloed way but in a shared space.

I point out that the allied health professionals who are directly employed in social care, as well as in the healthcare setting, are occupational therapists.

11:30  

Brian Whittle

So we should start with quality care that brings quality of life. Who should lead such a methodology? Who should be involved in developing that under the bill? The bill says that the Care Inspectorate will lead the development of new methodologies for social care and that Healthcare Improvement Scotland will lead on new healthcare tools. Do you share my concern that that poses a danger of divergence in development?

Patricia Cassidy

I would be concerned about such an approach, because the integration space is about how we plan integrated care together and how we plan the workforce together. That is key to our success in cutting across areas. People care about getting high-quality responsive services, but they do not necessarily care about whether someone’s uniform represents an external provider, the council or whoever.

People want to know that the members of the team who are working with them are working together and can meet their needs. It should not be the case that no conversation takes place in teams; if district nurses and carers go in, they should speak together and plan the care together. Integrated teams provide that approach, because staff speak to each other daily, work together, do joint planning and assessing, and, when it is required, they adjust care or pull in other professionals.

Previously, the GP was often the point of entry for care workers and social workers, so they had to go back to the GP for someone to have access to a service. That took up a lot of GP time. When we establish the shared understanding among professionals of limitations and responsibilities, that takes a lot of the obstacles out of the way of delivering responsive care in a timely manner.

Kim Hartley Kean

The AHP Federation suggested in our submission that HIS should be given an equivalent role to that of SCSWIS. That would offer the potential for consistent integrated planning across health and social care. Having that equivalence and ensuring that we work together, as Patricia Cassidy described, would be innovative and transformative across the two agencies in planning services. Beyond those statutory sectors, the integration joint boards have clear relationships with service user forums and the third sector.

Such an approach offers opportunities for much better integration. It would be good for the bill to enable and facilitate joint working.

Emma Harper (South Scotland) (SNP)

The discussion has been really interesting, and a lot of it has focused on allied health professionals. The Nurse Staffing Levels (Wales) Act 2016 focused only on medical and surgical acute care, but the bill goes further than that by including the community.

My background is 30 years in nursing. The bill says that the guiding principles are

“that the main purpose of staffing for health care and care services is to provide safe and high-quality services”

and

“that, in so far as consistent with the main purpose, staffing for health care and care services is to be arranged”.

The bill goes on to refer to service users’ needs and abilities and all that.

Yesterday, I had a conversation about an upside-down triangle of health and social care, where the broad part at the top represented care that is provided in the community and the pointy bit at the bottom represented acute care. Some care is delivered in acute settings, but most of it should be delivered in the community.

The bill needs to be good at focusing on the differences in communities that require allied health professional input. I agree that we should not be working in silos in health and social care, and that the bill has come about after 10 years of implementing tools, and we have seen a patchy approach to the way that the tools are accessed and used across the whole of healthcare, even in the NHS. Does the bill not support better training and enablement of the use of tools, and could not the professional judgment tool and the quality tool be used as part of that, feeding in to allied health professionals’ contribution to whatever we see as the best way to staff and plan our workload?

Kim Hartley Kean

The short answer is no, it does not feel as if that is going to happen. If we look at what is happening already around attention to the needs of AHP service users, we see that we could not be confident that there would be some kind of hoped-for trickle-down effect, if that is what you mean. It is important to point out that AHPs work in both acute and community provision. The bill as it stands would allow training and enabling use of those specific tools for those specific staff groups.

As Patricia Cassidy noted, the survey that has been published on how the tools are used has noted their patchy use. Patchy use might indicate a lack of training, which is one of the messages, but it might also just indicate that the tools are not any good. We all have a kitchen drawer full of bits and pieces, but we use only the tools that work. I do not mean to be flippant, but are those the right tools? Sally Gosling has made it clear that there is no evaluation of those tools. In fact, none of us can tell how good those tools are, because they are not publicly available to anyone. The CSP has worked hard to get hold of them and we cannot, so you are in danger of putting into legislation something that nobody knows about.

Dr Gosling

It is possible to see the Scottish bill as progress from the Welsh legislation, from the point of view that it is not just focused on nursing in acute adult in-patient wards. As you would expect, we had and continue to have concerns about the impact of that in terms of the risks of staffing resources being focused on meeting the legislation and not on being in line with the direction of health and social care policy.

It is progress from that point of view, but the tools that we understand underpin the legislation are predominantly acute-care focused, and the feedback in the survey results was that nurses who are currently using them found them particularly limited in relation to community-based service delivery and did not seem to have a huge amount of confidence in them. However, as I said, we are not aware that an evaluation of those tools has been undertaken.

As Kim Hartley Kean said, if the legislation were to be progressed, we would want to have some direct involvement, as AHP professional bodies, in how that is done, given the work that we have done around safe and effective staffing levels, on which we have done quite a thorough appraisal of different approaches. We feel that we have a lot to add to how it could be done differently that would be in line with a whole-system approach and could add to a multidisciplinary approach. At the moment, we would be sceptical about the starting points as couched in the legislation.

Patricia Cassidy

For the avoidance of doubt, there is no evidence base to show that those tools will work across health and social care, and no evidence base has been applied to other professions such as social work or social care provision to show that they would work. We need a more thorough evaluation of the success and the evidence base within nursing. We also need to be sure that the impact of any legislative tool is to improve outcomes for people who require our care and support services.

Emma Harper

As far as I am aware, the tools are being revised, because they have been used—or not used—and obviously there needs to be further education on their implementation and use. The tools have been developed by clinicians involved in the specialty areas such as community, mental health and maternity. I agree that any legislation needs to be based on evidence—that is the number 1 priority. I look forward to having clearer evidence, if it is not already out there, to use as the basis for supporting or changing the bill. For me, allied health professionals, especially those who are working in the community, need to be included in the bill. The allied health professional teams are working together with nurses in the community and need to be considered as part of the bill.

The Convener

I see assent from all the witnesses. I think that what is being said is that we need the evidence first.

Miles Briggs (Lothian) (Con)

I want to carry on from Emma Harper’s point and from Brian Whittle’s point about capturing quality, because that is one thing that we have kind of lost. Given that we are told that the idea is to have two speeds for the bill, how do you capture information on quality, outcomes and impact at present without the tools, especially in a community care setting?

Kim Hartley Kean

We are not doing it without tools, but it is left up to the professional bodies. Obviously, we are here for people who use our services and we want the best provision possible. My professional body has developed outcome measurement tools and tested them across the UK, and I am sure that a number of other professional bodies have done so. We have set up a platform that allows speech and language therapy services to record and report the outcomes that they deliver. Therapy outcome measures are a common tool that people use, and we have adapted those to be used by all our speech and language therapy services in reporting.

Rightly, all AHP leaders have to make the case for investment in AHP services, and they will use the data that is developed through those outcome measurement tools to make that case. One of the main drivers of the development of those tools is the need to create a case based on outcomes. There are outcome measures.

Dr Gosling

As we have said throughout, our key focus is on the quality of patient outcomes. As Kim Hartley Kean said, AHPs use tools to appraise, evaluate and demonstrate the quality of their outcomes for patients. To go back to the example that I cited on physio roles in primary care relating to musculoskeletal conditions, with other key stakeholders, we are undertaking a thorough evaluation of the impact of that new model of first-contact practitioners.

Professional bodies have a strong focus on demonstrating value and impact in taking forward service improvements for patients. As currently couched, the bill is focused much more on issues of input and activity of staff than on quality of outcomes or, potentially, quality of experience for patients. We are talking about different aspects of quality. The issue is how we ensure that the bill is focused on quality of patient experience and outcomes and not on input and activity, which is what staffing level tools have traditionally tended to focus on. We have done work to shift that and to focus more on patient outcomes than on things such as inputs, tasks and activity.

Patricia Cassidy

The current legislative framework for social care is set out in regulation 15 of the Social Care and Social Work Improvement Scotland (Requirements for Care Services) Regulations 2011, which has regulations and a scrutiny framework. The Care Inspectorate inspects all the services that are provided and the new health and social care standards that came in this year, which are a key focus of inspections, very much focus on outcomes, particularly outcome 3, which is:

“I have confidence in the people who support and care for me”.

Care homes began to be inspected against the health and social care standards in July this year. That is a whole new filter that is very much outcomes focused.

At a more local level, across the multidisciplinary teams, there are a range of outcome measures. People’s person-centred plans are developed using their personal outcomes and with their carers. Under the Carers (Scotland) Act 2016, we are required to do planning with carers as well.

A range of checks and balances are in place to measure outcomes, safety and quality across the services.

The Convener

I thank our witnesses for their informative contributions, for answering a wide range of questions and, of course, for their written submissions.

We will now take a short break and resume at 11:50 with our second witness panel.

11:46 Meeting suspended.  

11:51 On resuming—  

The Convener

We resume our evidence taking on the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill with our second panel of witnesses: Rachel Cackett, policy adviser, Royal College of Nursing Scotland; Dr Mary Ross-Davie, director for Scotland, Royal College of Midwives; Dr David Chung, vice-president, Royal College of Emergency Medicine Scotland; Professor Alex McMahon, executive nurse director, NHS Lothian, who is representing the Scottish executive nurse directors group; and David McArthur, director of nursing, midwifery and allied health professionals, NHS Orkney. I welcome all of you to this morning’s meeting.

As you might know, we have already taken extensive formal evidence on health and social care and allied health professionals and on the tools that are a focal part of the bill. I ask each of you to comment briefly on your overall view of the bill and what it brings to objectives for health and social care. Perhaps Rachel Cackett can start.

Rachel Cackett (Royal College of Nursing Scotland)

I am happy to do so, convener, and I thank you for the opportunity. It has been an interesting morning, and I am sure that the discussions that you have already had will give us a lot to build on.

The Royal College of Nursing has submitted extensive evidence and has been working with the Government—and now through the parliamentary process—to develop the bill for the past 12-plus months. We have heard a little bit about this already this morning, but the first point that I will make is about how far the bill has moved from where it began, as a means of simply putting certain tools in legislation. It is important to note how far things have gone and how complex the bill now is, and there is still work to be done.

There are six areas where the RCN is particularly keen for the bill to be improved. First—and we have heard a lot about this already—the bill must be rooted in positive outcomes for patients and staff, because if we have an overstretched staff and workforce, the members of staff who go the extra mile every single day will struggle. Indeed, that is the situation that we are in. The first panel giving evidence was asked why we need this bill, and that is certainly the reason. There is clear evidence of a link between patient outcomes and nursing staff, and, if it helps, we are certainly happy to provide some of that evidence to the committee.

There is work to be done to increase the level of the strong professional voice in the bill—and I stress that term “professional voice”. I am speaking today for the Royal College of Nursing; as nursing forms our remit and mandate, it is important that nursing has a voice in all of the bill’s elements. That is what we hope to see by the time the bill completes its parliamentary passage. That does not mean that we are trying to exclude other professions; it is just that that is the mandate that we are speaking to.

It is important that decision making about staffing is informed, which means using the best available evidence and data. Obviously, the duty to follow the common staffing method in the bill is limited to emergency medicine as the only area in which there is a multidisciplinary tool, and to nursing and midwifery. The RCN is clear that we have spent a lot of time in Scotland developing a series of tools for the largest workforce in the NHS, which provides 24/7 clinical care. It is often high-risk clinical care and we have to be aware of the patient safety elements that the bill affords us the opportunity to address. However, that does not mean that those tools are set in aspic. They are not and it has never been our position that they are. It was mentioned that the tools are being reviewed. Even for us, not all elements of nursing are included in the available tools. For example, prison nursing—an area on which we have done a lot of work—does not have a tool attached to it.

We would like the evidence to be developed for nursing and other professions, but we do not want what we already have to be dropped, because that would be a retrograde step. Kim Hartley Kean used a helpful phrase when she talked about not wanting to put a wet finger in the air. For a significant part of the workforce, the tools give us the starting point and the opportunity to learn and develop more. It would have helped had provisions for how the methodologies will be developed in the future appeared clearly in the bill—we certainly seek for that to be the case—and had the financial memorandum given a greater, timed commitment to the extension of those tools for nursing and our colleagues.

We want responsibility, accountability, real-time action and long-term planning to be a part of the bill. The paper that the Government shared last night was helpful and clearly sets out areas for development. The common staffing method is a means for setting establishment. It goes beyond the current tools to include far more data about how professional data will inform that establishment. However, it does not deal with real-time risk, which our members need it to do and patients should expect it to do. What happens if a nurse turns up on shift and there are not enough staff, or not the right staff, to deliver the required care? In our submission, we provided a schematic for how that could be better dealt with. My understanding is that the Government’s thinking is that it will be linked to the general duty to provide appropriate staffing. However, we must remember that that duty is for all staff, not just nursing, midwifery and emergency medicine.

There is no scrutiny or sanction in the bill and we would like that to be added. We do not want another measure like the 12-week referral to treatment target to be put into legislation that can be breached as many times as we like without it making any difference. The bill must have teeth. It is a crucial patient safety issue and we need to ensure that there is accountability in the right place.

One issue with the bill is that, in part 2, which focuses on the NHS, accountability is put on to boards to deliver the general duty. That is important, but it needs to be linked to a scrutiny methodology. HIS is reviewing how it undertakes scrutiny to include that, which provides a great opportunity, but there also needs to be an opportunity for public scrutiny when things repeatedly go wrong or something very serious happens. We need to ensure that staff on the ground are enabled to undertake that scrutiny in real time and that the Parliament and others have a role in doing that over the longer term.

We need to ensure that there are enough staff to care. I know that the committee spoke informally to many senior charge nurses this morning. They are crucial to the process. They set the culture for their teams, supervise them and set the staffing to deal with risk. If we do not free up our senior charge nurses and their equivalents in the community, the bill will not be able to do what we expect it to do. It is extremely important to note that, as comes out in the staff survey, they do not have the time to do what they need to do. Therefore, we seek for the bill to make senior charge nurses and their equivalents in the community non-case load holding so that they are freed up from direct patient care to be able to supervise their teams’ work and ensure that it is safe.

We also need to ensure that supply is dealt with, but the bill does not do that. We cannot tie the hands of boards and put a duty on them to provide appropriate staffing if the supply, which is held by the Scottish Government, does not come through. We would like that to be added.

We appreciate that part 3 is complex because of the landscape in which it works. However, our interest in that relates to our clinical nurses who provide clinical care in the care home sector. Our stance is that a patient should expect no difference in the clinical care that they receive whether it is in a care home, their own home or a hospital. That is why we support part 3.

12:00  

Dr Mary Ross-Davie (Royal College of Midwives Scotland)

The Royal College of Midwives believes that the bill might help to establish a consistent strategic focus on the staffing of maternity services. We have been grateful for the focus that our sister organisation the Royal College of Nursing has given to the legislation. We have been working alongside the RCN to effect change in the nature of the bill and support the developments that are needed to ensure that the planning tools are fit for purpose.

The committee will have heard from some of my colleagues in the pre-meeting this morning that the existing midwifery planning tool has some weaknesses, and there are issues over how effectively it has been implemented. Implementation has been a bit patchy.

We recognise that the preparations for the introduction of the bill have led to greater focus on the need to amend and develop the midwifery workforce planning tool and to increase the support that is provided in health boards to run the tools successfully.

The bill is part of a much wider picture ensuring that we have safe staffing levels and midwives in all parts of Scotland. We have particular challenges in recruiting and retaining midwives in the north of Scotland and in more remote and rural areas. There are a whole raft of supports and changes needed in addition to the bill.

The committee will know from the SPICe survey that was undertaken earlier this year and from our consultations with our members that there is a range of problems with the current midwifery workforce planning tool. I apologise for not having tabled this before today, but I have copies of a paper for the committee that summarises the challenges that have been identified.

Some areas in Scotland have invested significant time and energy in providing dedicated time for completion of the tool and training. In those areas, there have been instances where a staff shortfall has been identified and a business case could be made for more midwifery staff. We acknowledge the significant amount of national activity now under way to ensure that staff are trained to use the tool effectively and to give on-going support.

Dr David Chung (Royal College of Emergency Medicine Scotland)

The Royal College of Emergency Medicine is broadly supportive of the principles behind the bill. As others have said, it is important to have oversight and integrated planning of the health and social care system within Scotland. The bill acknowledges that. We have an unofficial motto—if it is right for the patient, it is right for the emergency department.

We are the interface between different parts of social care, primary care, secondary care and public health. We see things quickly and issues manifest for us more acutely than for other areas. Most of the times when we feel that patients may be getting a raw deal—when they are waiting for a long time on trolleys in a department trying to get into a bed or to go somewhere to be processed rapidly and have their needs met in a clinic or wherever—are due to staffing issues elsewhere in the system. While we welcome the emphasis on multidisciplinary care within emergency medicine, it is also important that there is an emphasis on care outwith the emergency department. Staffing levels in other areas need to be adequate for the whole process to run smoothly. We are the canary in the mine or, for younger people who cannot remember that, the indicator light on the dashboard telling you that you have a problem in your engine.

As others have said, the principles are good, but we need to accept that, although the concept of the bill is sound, it will be an iterative process and there needs to be feedback from clinicians of all stripes if they find that bits of the bill are not workable, that the tools do not provide what is necessary or that there is a weakness. There must be the ability to rectify matters as soon as possible. That is the same for any process, whether in health, social care, industry or wherever. If people feel that there has been a mistake, we need to be able to correct that. There is no point in doing the same incorrect thing, just because it has been set in legislation.

It is also important that there is transparency in data recording. When the legislation comes in and various organisations show how they have implemented the tools and reached appropriate staffing levels, the process should be in the public domain. I am not sure whether the bill makes that explicit. It is important because it involves the taxpayer’s money and it is important that we are able to say that the process is transparent and open to scrutiny.

In short, the RCEM is broadly supportive. The bill should help speed and provide greater impetus to true integration of health and social care. Although we are making some steps towards that, it could progress at a faster pace. As long as we are mindful of that, it definitely has the potential to benefit patients and staff and improve the human experience of everyone working in health and social care.

Professor Alex McMahon (Scottish Executive Nurse Directors Group)

I will build on some of the comments that people have made, all of which I agree with. No one would disagree with the principles of the bill or the aspirations for patient safety and looking after the staff we employ. Most people would agree that although, as they stand, the tools are not perfect, there is a process to review those tools and their implementation. That has a bearing on the infrastructure that would support the running and analysis of the tools and the implementation of their findings—we have not had that before. We want to address those issues with the Government and others.

The principles of the bill also relate to how health boards, councils and integration joint boards work in partnership. There is already a workforce planning process in place and we need to build on that, and not just from a nursing perspective. In my role, I am also responsible for AHPs in Lothian. I have a duty at executive level to ensure that the voice of AHPs is heard at workforce planning level and professional level.

As the tools progress, I want them to become much more multidisciplinary, because we need to ensure that patients get access to the right staff, across the spectrum, and not just in the nursing profession.

It is important to consider the process around escalation from a public scrutiny point of view, but it must not become bureaucratic and interfere with the daily business of health boards.

David McArthur (NHS Orkney)

I will give an outline of the scale of NHS Orkney, which is the smallest health board in Scotland. A head count of our AHPs gives the princely sum of 40. We have 62 whole-time equivalent community nurses and we have 135 WTE hospital nurses.

Although we are not talking about huge numbers of people, we run into challenges when we apply the staffing tools, for example in our lack of resilience. Our bank nurses are already wholly employed by the board, so there is no spare capacity. We tend to staff up by working towards a worst-case scenario. The tools will be helpful for us because they will provide transparency and will, we hope, support our approach, particularly the professional judgment tool.

I entirely support what my colleagues have already said. It is about transparency and being able to demonstrate that we are doing the right thing and have the appropriate amount of staff. I have some concern about the lack of specificity in the bill on the impact on remote and rural areas. That goes back to earlier comments about the Scottish Government holding the supply. We need that supply coming on to the islands and we need that flexibility in the workforce.

In support of my AHP colleagues, I will say that we need to build a very strong multidisciplinary workforce that can work across barriers and professional boundaries.

On any caveats that we may have about the bill and the tools, I see the bill as a huge opportunity that we can utilise to build that multidisciplinary workforce and to ensure that the workforce tools are utilised properly. One of the issues that we have with the workforce tools is that there is a lack of knowledge in their application. We need to ensure that that educational piece is out there. Where the tools are not working for us, as professionals, we need to put our hands up and say so, but we also need to provide an answer to those questions.

Sandra White

Good morning and thank you for your presentations. As others have said, things have moved on, but it seems that you are saying that you would like the tools to move on a bit more, and for there to be more of them.

I have a question that was raised by the previous panel of witnesses, who said that the bill and the tools are acute-service based. Do you agree? Your answer could be a quick yes or no, but please expand on that if you want to.

Dr Ross-Davie

I can certainly speak from a midwifery perspective. In the original research to develop the midwifery workforce planning tool, some observations were apparently undertaken not just in an acute labour ward setting but in community settings. However, when we speak to colleagues in the service, they make it clear that they feel that the tool is more effective in the acute setting—in other words, in labour wards or antenatal and postnatal wards—and less so out in community settings.

One key problem is that the tool’s community elements allow community care to be provided only in working hours. Obviously, not all babies born out in the community come between 9 o’clock and 5 o’clock, Monday to Friday. There are a significant number of home births and births in midwife-led units all over the country, and there have been real issues with acknowledging that care and ensuring that it is being recorded correctly. That key element is not well covered in the midwifery workforce planning tool, and we hope that the look that will be taken at this issue will improve things.

We are particularly concerned about the issue because, as a result of “The Best Start” review recommendations, maternity services will definitely become more community based over the next five years, with many midwives moving from hospital settings out into the community. As a result, the tool must be robust and fit for purpose to ensure that we have safe staffing levels in the community, particularly in remote and rural areas, where midwives sometimes have to drive four hours there and back just to make one postnatal visit. That needs to be taken into account, and colleagues in remote areas have certainly said that they feel that that is not done effectively at the moment.

Professor McMahon

Many of the tools were developed at a time when many of the services that we currently deliver were not being delivered by healthcare professionals. For example, prisons and police custody have been mentioned. We have only recently delegated to IJBs responsibility for community mental health, learning disability and substance misuse services, and as time progresses, there will be a greater need to look at how we provide that care to people in different settings and the workforce requirements in that respect. There is now much more scrutiny of that issue, and we need to rebalance some of the tools to ensure that we take as much cognisance of the community elements as we do of the acute elements.

For me, the issue is the pathway for patients. Patients are not quite linear—they do not just go into one bit of a system. Instead, they cover many pathways, and we need to ensure that we have synergy and connectedness.

Rachel Cackett

The tools that are currently in the bill include community ones. They are not comprehensive and, at this time, do not cover all areas of community nursing, but they are there. There are more tools that sit in specialties in the acute sector; however, they are not just for that sector, which is to be welcomed.

One area that will be covered in the review of the tools, which the Scottish Government has begun, relates to the fact that the services that nursing is providing in the community are now very different from what they were 10 or 12 years ago. As we change the way in which we deliver services and as new options come online, people will now receive in the community the sorts of services for which they would previously have gone into hospital. That certainly needs work, because there are areas of the community that are not covered.

A linked issue that the committee discussed earlier is the multidisciplinary approach and what that might look like, particularly in the community. We need to pick that apart a little. I do not think that there would be a single person around this table, including me, from the RCN, who would not promote the need for multidisciplinary teams if they are exactly what is required by patients and service users either in the community or the acute sector. The team has to be multidisciplinary where that is the right approach to take.

However, when you come to set your establishment and understand your workforce planning, you have to know how many of each individual profession you require in your team to meet the needs of individual patients. For example, you need to know how many paramedics you need in the back of an ambulance to run an ambulance service, and that might or might not be done on a multidisciplinary basis. Moreover—this brings me back to the discussion about what the changes might look like in the care home sector—you need to know how many district nurses you need to deliver your multidisciplinary community service. It is therefore really important to bear in mind that, when you set establishments—particularly when you think about the number of bodies needed on the ground in one day or, at Scottish Government level, the supply that you are planning for—you have to know how many nurses you need. Of course, that does not mean that that will not then be applied to a multidisciplinary setting.

Often one tool might not be appropriate. For example, I would be surprised if someone who ran a 24/7 nursing service that had sessional input from our AHP colleagues used exactly the same tool to work out whether they had enough physios or OTs as the one that they used to work out whether they had enough nurses. However, they would use a multidisciplinary workforce planning process. We must bear it in mind that the bill does not necessarily deal with everything that has been described.

12:15  

Dr Chung

It is important to try to lose the distinctions between community and acute settings, because they are part of the problem. More staff might well be needed in the community, which would ameliorate negative effects on acute care, and vice versa. As the tools become better developed with feedback, we hope that the outcome measures will be decided, which will allow us to know whether the tools are working. The community tool should not look only within the community or at the average level—it would be a mistake to use the average to plan capacity, because that would mean that the supply was not enough for half the time.

We support the principle, but we are talking about what we want to happen. Will the community tool mean that no delayed discharges occur? More important, will it enable people to have assessments at home, as they do in East Ayrshire, so that they do not get anywhere near a hospital, which is good for them? Will the tool mean that there are enough acute staff so that, if patients need to come into hospital, they will stay there for the time that they need to, rather than go out into the community? That will ensure that the two sides do not create a constant merry-go-round for patients, which they do not need, because the capacity is not right on either side.

I emphasise that, whatever the tools are, we cannot afford for them to be seen in the next five to 10 years as a community tool or an acute tool. All the tools should be integrated; that is how the system should be developed.

David McArthur

I wholly support that. We mentioned the challenges in midwifery. We support home births from our central base in Kirkwall out to Papa Westray, which can involve a helicopter or a boat ride of a couple of hours. While we wait for a midwife to arrive and for the team to get to the location, we need the ability to provide care, which is where our multidisciplinary piece comes in.

I agree that the workforce tool needs to be based on a holistic view that provides continuity and a continuum of care; otherwise, we will end up siloed and lose the ability to flex. Such an approach also allows the IJB to commission appropriately and to provide the correct services.

Sandra White

Looking to the future, the tools as they stand do not seem to be fit for purpose. The witnesses might not agree, but will they say something about that? All the tools are based on the Scottish standard time system, which deals with pay and staffing. It is difficult to look beyond that to the upside-down triangle that my colleague Emma Harper described. How do we fix that? Everyone wants the bill to work and to do so for the community. Are the tools that are based on the SSTS fit for purpose? How do we get round that to include other issues?

Professor McMahon

The SSTS is simply an e-payroll system; it is not necessarily fit for purpose, because it involves a lot of entry of information and duplication of effort by staff to triangulate information from the system for workforce planning. The Scottish Government is leading a piece of work with NHS National Services Scotland to review the system and consider a better platform and information system.

That is one element; another element is education, training and awareness about the tools and the implementation of their outputs, whether that involves a desktop exercise or running information through an e-system. Latterly, an issue has been the expert capacity in the system to work with people such as me to ensure that the outputs from tools are being interrogated, analysed and turned into robust plans.

All those elements are being addressed. If we have got them right by the time the bill is enacted, that will put us on a better playing field.

David McArthur

I reiterate what Alex McMahon said and emphasise that, when the tools were first established, there was a huge training effort to support them. That cohort of trained people has changed and moved out. We have not kept as up to date as we should have on the tools. The tools provide us with a starting point, and the direction of travel in the way that they are being introduced is correct. That is recognised by the chief nursing officer’s office, which has provided the boards with an expert resource, both from within that office and to be recruited from within the boards, to provide continuity and additional input.

Rachel Cackett

As I said, no one wants tools that are set in aspic, because the world moves on. It is encouraging that the Government has put in a process to review the tools. That process should be on-going; we cannot let the dust settle on the tools at any point. They must be fit for purpose.

That is why the bill should be amended to include a duty to have in place an on-going method of review. We must be able to say when a tool has come to the end of its life and we need a new one, and we need to be able to keep the tools that we have up to date. That important process is missing.

Under the social care provisions, the Care Inspectorate has responsibility for developing new methodologies, but again the bill does not go far enough, because it does not say that the Care Inspectorate needs to keep the tools up to date and set out the process for doing that. Those are important issues that we need to look at to make the bill more fit for purpose.

I go back to the survey and the discussions that we have been having with our members. When you want to run the tools, you need the education, the time and the expertise to do so. Those things matter and have to be in place, and we need to look at where the levers are in the legislation to get that right.

Brian Whittle

This is probably an appropriate time to mention my entry in the register of members’ interests, which states that I have a close family member who is a midwife.

I want to follow on from Sandra White’s questions on the technology. If the bill is going to succeed, it is fundamental that the technology that underpins it will support the tools that are required. I have heard in evidence and again at our pre-meeting this morning that a wide variety of tools are used by midwives and nurses. This morning, some did not recognise the names of the tools that other areas use.

As Alex McMahon mentioned, the SSTS platform was not built for purpose and is therefore not fit for purpose. Are you suggesting that, before the bill can go anywhere, we need a platform that is developed specifically to deliver and better regulation of the tools across the profession?

Professor McMahon

I know that NSS is looking to procure a new system and I believe that it hopes to have that by the end of the calendar year. There is then the issue of how that can be developed and implemented. One would hope that that could work at the pace at which the legislation goes forward.

It is not just about having a system in place; it is about having people trained and educated to use the system. There is a lot of work to be done. The systems also have to be tested. Not to have a new system in place and then to introduce one after we have introduced the provisions in the bill would cause confusion and more work for people. I am not saying that one should prevent the other from progressing, but in an ideal world it would be nice to see both coming in at the same time.

Dr Ross-Davie

The introduction of the bill has focused people’s minds on what is not working. That has certainly been the case for the midwifery workforce planning tool. Views were sought from the heads of midwifery on how effective the tool is. It is clear that implementation was patchy, and at least half of the health boards felt that the tool did not reflect what they needed. The introduction of the bill has helped to move things forward and the work on the new platform is well progressed. It helps to do this in tandem.

Rachel Cackett

What we are hearing and the information that you got back from the survey shows that there is not a uniform picture. Things are working more fluidly in some areas than in others. That is part of the work that the Government is now doing with its additional support. As Dr Ross-Davie said, it will certainly focus minds in boards and elsewhere on rethinking how the tools are implemented. I would certainly be reluctant to say, “Let’s hold off until everything’s perfect” because, as we said earlier, it is an on-going improvement process that should never stop. The health service is built on an improvement focus, as is our social care service.

There are other platforms that we are looking at. The care assurance system that the CNO is developing through the excellence in care approach will give us really important indicators about the quality of care that is being provided and the outcomes for people, and that is being developed in tandem with the bill. It is really important that we do not forget that there are other indicators and platforms out there.

We must remember that the common staffing method is more than just the tools. The RCN lobbied hard for that to be the case and the Government listened. In setting an establishment, it gives those with professional judgment a variety of other means to come up with what the establishment should be. It is not limited to the tool alone; we will look at other things. For example, we would like to see the addition of professional guidance from royal colleges or from peer-reviewed international evidence, which could be brought in by those who have the professional judgment to make decisions on what an appropriate staffing level would be for any particular setting.

David McArthur

I reiterate what Alex McMahon said. Ideally, we would see the new platform and the bill come together—that would be the perfect solution. In my previous employment, it was made clear to me on many occasions that we needed to go with the best current solution rather than holding up the plan, because we will never get the perfect plan, and we need to know whether is it going to survive first contact.

Professor McMahon

I want to pick up on what Rachel Cackett said. I guess there is potential to run with systems that do not necessarily all collect the same data and are not defined in the same way so that we start to select things as we wish in order to try to make the argument. However, what we really need is a like-for-like or an apples being compared to apples situation, not the situations that we might have had in the past, whereby we got different outputs depending on what day of the week it was or what question we asked. We need absolute clarity and consistency.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

Good morning to the panel. I have a large narrative question and then a couple of more detailed questions, which are perhaps more for those who deal with the nursing profession daily.

Dr Chung, I was struck by your reference to the canary in the mine. You described coherently and in great detail how the problem in social care is causing an interruption in flow that is manifest in accident and emergency services. You cannot release people into the wider hospital because there are no beds to receive them. Are we missing a trick by not including aspects of social care? Will that cause us problems for the whole integration experiment because the bill is so siloed and focused on primary care?

Dr Chung

You have summed up quite nicely the points that I was making. It is essential that social care is involved, because that is where a lot of the capacity is. A lot of this is aimed at what is best for the patient, and if patients are getting the right care it should also turn out to be what is best for the staff. The two have to go hand in hand.

As I have indicated, the bill needs to account for integration and the fact that the different parts of the system cannot afford to plan in isolation from one another. They will have to work together. We hope that the effects will be positive, but they could be negative if one bit does not get it right. Whatever tools are developed and whatever planning occurs in a particular area, we must ensure that there is a broader scope and some overview to say, “That’s all very well, but is it going to have a negative unintended consequence somewhere else?” Planning is littered with such considerations. If we make the system one where rapid assessment is possible, we will be able to change and update the tool to ensure that that does not happen.

Your analysis is correct. It is imperative that all parts of the health and social care system are involved. Emergency medicine is called “emergency”, but a lot of it is social medicine as well, in some ways. People come to us because there are issues in their lives and we are available, but we are often not the best place to solve their problems.

Increasingly, we are seeing some very good work in Scotland about using other staff groups to help and signpost people to the right places. For example, there are navigators in big hospitals, including in Arran and Ayrshire, and there are roles such as community connectors and adult support and protection. Those are all integrated groups that can get to the root of the problem. If we apply that to the likes of paediatrics and adverse childhood experiences, that will solve the problem for the next 20 years. If we can get to grips with the early childhood stuff, there will be less work for us to do in accident and emergency.

It is difficult to nail this down with the tool that we have at present. It is easy to look at a defined group but, as the tool develops, it needs to become more sophisticated to reflect where the system is going to get the biggest bang for its buck, for the patients’ benefit and for value for money for the taxpayer.

12:30  

Alex Cole-Hamilton

Thank you for that. My second question is a bit more detailed. With the toolkit and the other provisions in the bill, it is clear that this is about better workforce planning. I have been struck by the focus in our background briefing on head count and being sure that we have capacity, but it is not always necessarily clear whether that is the right capacity. Should we specify the need for an appropriate skills mix within the staffing that we are planning for?

Rachel Cackett

There are a few points to make in answer to that. First, the duty to provide appropriate staffing is clear that the staff need to be competent and qualified. That is the way in which the bill attempts to deal with the issue of skills mix.

The nursing tools as they stand will not give a skills mix. They will give a number for the average workload. That will give a baseline, and professional judgment will then be applied to work out what the staffing should look like. Going back to a point that was made earlier, I note that, because of the way that the common staffing method is written, it focuses on a number for the average workload based on a certain set of assumptions such as bed occupancy, which may be well off the current situation for the NHS in Scotland. It does not deal with risk, and that is the big bit that is missing in the bill, for us, along with the other things that I set out earlier.

On the risk management process, we can have a number and a skills mix, but if there is a sudden outbreak of flu that affects both the staff group and the acuity of the patients who are coming in, we need to be able to adjust that and do on-going risk assessment. Only part of this is about an evidence-based number. We need that for workforce planning and to get the finance right, but we need to have professional judgment in place, with the support for that, in order to consistently, every day, adjust that according to patient need, whether that is in the community or in the acute sector.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

Is there sufficient provision for that in the bill?

Rachel Cackett

No. It needs to be added. I know that the Government is looking at work to do that. We will not see what that looks like for a while, but discussions are going on, and we have put forward proposals on how it could look. That would address many of our members’ concerns. It is fine to set a number and get the budget right for the establishment—that is an important process and it needs to be based on the best available evidence, which is why we need the tools—but there is also a need to be able to deal with risk in real time.

Dr Chung

Like all issues, this tends to get more complex the more we look at it. It is just one of those things. That’s life. Using an average to plan capacity is a fool’s errand because, by the law of averages, there will not be enough half of the time. There are certain ways to plan. The perfectionist would say that we need to plan to have enough reserve to cope with 95 per cent. That is probably not far off, and maybe 85 per cent is the minimum. However, using the average will cause problems because it is not going to work. People will be unhappy half of the time and will lose engagement. There needs to be some modification around that.

Head count is too crude a measure in itself because of differences in skills mix. The time of day, day of the week and season of the year all create different pressures. Most tools and workforce planning appear to have been based on historic numbers of staff and how to divide them to put them where they need to be. We need to do some work on how many staff we need, and the Royal College of Emergency Medicine can certainly give some help on that.

On national benchmarks, we should ask what kind of health service model we are aiming for. In Australia there are not twice as many, but certainly 70 or 80 per cent more beds, more doctors and probably more nurses. We are at about the level of the United States. Compared with our European neighbours, our levels are lower than those of many countries. I have the figures here. I mentioned the issue to the committee last time I was here, and I have the figures to hand.

We could ask whether the tool will reflect the need for certain numbers of different staff on, say, a Monday evening, which is the busiest time in an emergency department, compared with the need at a less busy time, which might be a Saturday morning. Does a paediatric assessment area need a different number of staff in the middle of the bronchitis season? Every area has different peaks and troughs and different advantages to having different staff levels. A certain volume might be able to do stuff, or having more senior people who can move from one task to another might be more efficient, although they might appear to be more expensive.

As I have said, the position is complex. Thought is needed about how the tools can adapt to give more detail and reflect complexities, which might vary from area to area or according to the time of day, the day of the week or the season.

Unexpected pressures are another aspect. We have done a lot of work to create a very efficient system—by international measures, the NHS in the UK and in Scotland is very efficient—but an increasing body of thought, which is starting to be backed by evidence that is not just in healthcare but more to do with industrial processes, is that getting very efficient means becoming more fragile. That might be what we see when we are squeezed in periods when there are pressures on the system, as in winter.

When we do workforce planning, we must decide where the balance will lie. At the moment, it is very much about efficiency, but perhaps we need to think about our reserve and the level that we need to plan for. I say for the third time that using the average would be the wrong approach.

Professor McMahon

We must remember that such tools are run at best once a year, so they give a snapshot at a point in time. As Rachel Cackett said, they do not deal with the skills mix or the risk element, which we address day to day in a ward or a community setting. We often start a day by asking whether we are safe to start; there are huddles and discussions about patient and staff safety, and none of that should be taken away. The issue is how we plan that into a process that involves the tools; another issue is the frequency with which the tools are run. We will need to marry the day-to-day activity with an annual process, if that is the way that we decide to go.

Many submissions on the proposals support giving band 7s a supervisory role. That is an important conversation that we should have. It should not be the case that everything falls to them, but they have a key role to play in day-to-day staff and patient safety. They could also become experts in running the tools and educating and training others in the tools.

I stress that we look at risk day to day—and hour to hour in some departments—but it is a key element that needs to be built more rigorously into the overall process.

Dr Ross-Davie

We support the thoughts about risk and the use of averages. In maternity care, we have peaks—one is often nine months after Christmas—that we cannot necessarily plan for. As has been said clearly, basing the workforce on averages would mean that midwives were running short a lot of the time.

Midwifery workforce planning tools were some of the first such tools to be developed, to try to cope with the peaks and troughs that we see. The rest of the UK uses a workforce planning tool that is called Birthrate Plus but, in about 2010, it was felt that that was not appropriate in Scotland, because it did not take into account some of our remote and rural issues. People down south are trying to evolve that tool; they are looking at new models of care that involve continuity and have realised that the tool needs to develop to reflect the new ways of working.

As Rachel Cackett clearly said, we will need to continue to develop tools as services change so that they reflect new practice. We do not know yet what that will look like, because that model of care has never been applied at scale—it has been used only in small research projects and randomised controlled trials. The tools cannot replace day-to-day risk management.

David McArthur

I wholly support that view and I will pick up on the skills mix. We have 23 beds in an acute ward in the Balfour hospital in NHS Orkney, which can at any time accommodate acute surgery, acute medicine, renal, gynaecology, ear, nose and throat, and orthopaedics patients—and the list goes on.

We are very much in the business of being the specialist generalists. I fully support the approach, but we need to ensure that any skills mix package takes due cognisance of the fact that not only do we need to be able to provide those specialist generalist people, but also that we do not have the critical mass to call on. For example, when I was theatre manager of Glasgow royal infirmary, I could call on colleagues from the intensive treatment unit and any one of the 27 operating theatres that we had. We lack that critical mass in remote and rural areas.

For us, there is not only the question of assessing skills mix and managing that risk, but also the knock-on training element and training margin. Those margins should be increased as well.

Emma Harper

I welcome our second panel of witnesses.

Alex McMahon talked about not having another level of bureaucracy, as it would lead senior charge nurses to say, “No way—this will impact my clinical supervision abilities.” I support there being no more pieces of paper that simply reflect an additional workload.

The letter from Fiona McQueen, the chief nursing officer, includes information from NHS Lothian on the number of rosters and staff that have applied the tool, which suggests that it is pretty successful. Can you tell us about the success of applying the tool and what you have done in that respect? After all, training will be key to engaging the staff in taking on board something like the workforce tool.

Professor McMahon

As with any data, there are always more questions than there are perhaps answers. That information came from the CNO late last evening.

I have been in my post for only two years, but I am very fortunate in having a deputy director who is steeped in the tools and has been involved with them right from the very beginning. The deputy director is an expert and works with associate nurse directors, clinical nurse managers and charge nurses across the system. However, that does not negate the fact that more education and training need to be done.

During a recent internal audit of our own processes, we found that, although it feels like we use the tools—and use them well—we are not as good as we could be in the implementation of some of their outputs. Sometimes there is an issue with closing the circle. As I have said, it is about using and building on what we have.

Picking up on the SSTS issue, I think that my deputy director would say that the current system makes implementation clunky and cumbersome. She has to spend a lot of time working with others to try to get the data out of the system. We might want to use it more often, but many of the things that are in her way relate to infrastructure and having the time and expertise to be able to do that. That said, I welcome the Scottish Government’s commitment on the adviser posts; they will help her, and they will work with us to build up that awareness, education and training.

We are all in slightly different places. Some people might use the tools, but they might do so as a table-top exercise, or it might be that they sit outwith the reporting system in Ayrshire. When I saw the information that you mentioned, I thought that it raised more questions than we know the answers to at the moment.

Emma Harper

E-rostering was mentioned as something that could pick up the competence or skills required. Depending on who is on shift, you might need someone who is central-line trained, intravenous trained or catheter trained—the list goes on—and is able to give competent care wherever needed. After all, IVs are now delivered in the community, too. Is that part of the development process?

Professor McMahon

Absolutely. NHS Lothian has almost completely rolled out the electronic rostering system, but it has not been without its challenges. Bedding in a new system always creates challenges.

E-rostering allows us to see the acuity of the patients and the skills mix that is required for any particular shift, but it does not mean that you can always respond to that as effectively as you might want. However, it gives the charge nurse and others the ability to see on a day-to-day basis whether the staffing and skills mix meets patients’ needs at that point in time.

The bit that sits behind all that is called SafeCare. As we have said, there are different systems in use; NHS Lothian uses SafeCare, and it is proving to be successful, but not without challenges.

David Stewart

I thank the witnesses for their contributions. I am particularly interested in rural, remote and islands issues, so I will address my questions to Mr McArthur.

Your submission contains the stark conclusion that the philosophy behind the Islands (Scotland) Act 2018 is not fully reflected in the bill. Will you say a little more about that?

12:45  

David McArthur

The 2018 act refers to having

“regard to the distinctive geographical ... and cultural characteristics”

of the islands, and I would ask whether that is wholly reflected in the bill. I think that a clear reference would be useful—that reflects the opinion of my IJB and council colleagues, too. It is a crucial element in our move to a new hospital, which you are probably aware of. The philosophy behind that is that we will roll out more and more to our community and use all the facilities that are out there, including Attend Anywhere and other video systems.

Our perspective is that the bill must give due recognition to the fact that some things will differ. We are asking not for allowances to be made but for that kind of recognition, so that we can test and adjust systems. For example, although our staffing tool might tell us to have X staffing for a given period, perhaps the figure should be X+1, because we do not have the same resilience.

David Stewart

The philosophy behind the 2018 act is about island proofing, so every piece of legislation needs to be conscious of the islands. Your submission says that the existing tool is not sufficient for use in small hospitals. Does that represent a lack of island proofing?

David McArthur

I am sorry—I meant small wards rather than small hospitals. The tool applies nationally across the country, and I wholly support the approach in the bill. However, for the remote and rural element, we need to look at something slightly different. The letter from the CNO that came out last night referred to areas of non-compliance, which are not just in the islands. I know that Shetland has been mentioned; we applied the tools only late last year, when I joined the staff in NHS Orkney. However, there is also non-compliance in remote rural areas such as the Borders. Some areas are taking the view that the tools do not really meet their needs or apply to them; I would counter that by pointing out that some of that arises from a lack of understanding and training. However, it is difficult to apply the concepts to very small units.

David Stewart

I do not want to be flippant, but I note the famous military quote that every plan collapses on first contact with the enemy. Are you suggesting that the plan is not sensitive enough to deal with rural and remote areas?

David McArthur

I think that the quote is that no plan survives first contact, but such tools can be made to work for remote and rural areas. As I have said, the tools are not at their perfect point, but we can make them work by giving people appropriate education and training. We have support from the Scottish Government—and I would ask that you bear it in mind that my submission predated the additional support that was made available. I am confident that we can make the tools work for us, but they need to be nuanced.

David Stewart

You made an interesting point about the tension between using a tool as a financial workforce predictor and using it as a safe staffing predictor. Will you say a little more about that?

David McArthur

I go back to risk and the skills mix. The way in which the tool was used did not produce the skills-mix sensitivity. As Alex McMahon has said, a tool is run once or twice a year, so the sensitivity is not built in for us to make day-to-day changes. We have huddles every morning; in some ways, that is probably easier for us, as it is about half a dozen people sitting round a table, saying whether we are safe. However, the situation is also challenging, because we do not have the critical mass of people to move about. The tool does not facilitate the piece of work that needs to be done on the skills mix and risk.

The Convener

Clearly we have not had time to cover every aspect of the bill in detail, but do the witnesses have any final brief comments on the financial memorandum, particularly the absence of funding for any additional staffing, and on whether there is adequate funding for full implementation of the tools as they exist across health boards? Finally, is there a risk of creating a perverse incentive, in that running the tools might demonstrate that you do not have adequate staffing and that the way to balance the tool might be to reduce the number of beds? Is that a live or real risk in this context?

Rachel Cackett

In our evidence to the Finance and Constitution Committee—I know that this committee is now considering the bill’s financial elements—we were critical of, as we read it, the assumption in the financial memorandum that the bill would not necessarily result in more staffing. Our members are certainly under extreme pressure. With the vacancy rate that we now hold, I think that the assumption that the new models of care that are arriving and the greater demand from the public will not result in any change in that rate seems an interesting place to start. After all, the bill is supposed to be about improving the safety and quality of service to people and, from our point of view, where that is delivered by nursing across health and social care.

I would be deeply surprised if that were to be the result of the bill. The submission that we received last night seemed to address some of that by talking about the need for any additional staffing to go into the annual uplifts and for that to be a discussion in the budget process. If that is where we are going with this, that would be helpful, but whether it will be sufficient for the boards to be able to do what they need to do, I do not yet know.

With regard to creating a perverse incentive, I guess that one of the things that we need to say—and which might not have been said clearly enough—is that nurses go into work to do a really good job. That is why they join the profession. It does not matter whether that person is a healthcare support worker or a director of nursing; their aim is to do a good job and to make sure that the safety and quality of the nursing care that is provided, wherever it is provided, are good.

I hope that the bill provides an important balance to the financial positions that boards are under—which brings us back to the governance discussions that we had around this table some time ago. That is crucial, but I certainly hope that things are not gamed in that way. From a nursing perspective, it is certainly not why nurses go into the profession.

Professor McMahon

We have not really touched on workforce planning. Although the numbers for student nurses and midwives have increased this year—and might increase next year, too—they will not be out for the next three or four years, so there will be an overlap with the legislation coming into effect. There are and will continue to be vacancies, particularly in areas such as where David McArthur comes from, where it is incredibly difficult to recruit staff. From that point of view, more of the same will not do it, so we need to look at the skills mix. That is not about denuding or putting down nursing—it is about how we grow a workforce that better meets the needs in different areas.

We often look to advanced nurse practitioners as a solution to many of those problems. However, sometimes when we do that we are actually robbing Peter to pay Paul, because we are taking them from one area and are not able to replace them. There are also areas of medicine that are difficult to recruit into, and sometimes the answer to that is nursing. From a workforce and skills-mix perspective, we need to look at the issue in the longer term. It should not distract us from the principles and aspirations around the bill, but it is a reality.

As for any unintended consequences, we are aware that there is a need for clarity in the process of escalation. If we have done everything that we can to ensure that things are safe from a staffing view, but we then have to consider putting two wards into one, that has to be supported. It is not that we are fudging things; it is just that nothing else is available to people. The focus must be on looking after patients and staff.

David McArthur

I entirely agree. If we look at beds as currency, the only variable that we have in Orkney—and this is reflected throughout the health service—is the availability of beds and the need to do things safely. We therefore have to be very careful. We have not hit that issue yet but, looking to the future, if we found that we did not have enough staff, would we need to close beds and start moving our patients to the mainland?

I am not saying that that is going to happen, and it sounds like scaremongering, but that is where the Islands (Scotland) Act 2018 and the idea of island proofing come in. We need to be able to attract students to the island. We have issues with affordable housing, transport infrastructure and broadband, and those things, especially communications, are important for young people coming out of training. I therefore agree whole-heartedly with Alex McMahon. I would point to the Islands (Scotland) Act 2018 and put a remote, rural spin on it.

Dr Chung

There is a fear that the tool might be used to justify what many perceive to be inadequate staffing levels. If the bill is to progress, it is important that we replace that fear with the hope that we will provide evidence-based engagement with professionals in order to plan and implement proper staffing and provide proper patient care across the entire health and social care network.

The Convener

That is a strong message on which to finish our meeting, and I thank all the witnesses for answering such a range of questions so succinctly.

We now move into private session.

12:55 Meeting continued in private until 13:06.  

11 September 2018

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Second meeting transcript

The Convener

We move on swiftly to agenda item 2, which is two evidence-taking sessions on the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill. The sessions will focus on the bill’s impact on the social care sector.

I welcome to the committee Karen Hedge, who is the national director of Scottish Care; Alison Christie, who is the policy and development officer for workforce at the Coalition of Care and Support Providers in Scotland; Andrew Strong, who is assistant director for policy and communications with the Health and Social Care Alliance Scotland; Mark Hazelwood, who is the chief executive of the Scottish Partnership for Palliative Care; and Katherine Wainwright, who is the head of human resources at Turning Point Scotland, and is here representing the Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations. I thank you all very much for joining us this morning.

I am sure that you are all familiar with the procedure: I will kick off the questions, then colleagues will ask their questions. All questions and answers should go through the chair.

I will start by asking all of you a general question about the bill’s provisions and the issues that the bill might be intended to address. Do you believe that current staffing in the social care sector is adequately covered by the current regulation and inspection regimes? Who would like to start?

Karen Hedge (Scottish Care)

We already have the policy and legislative context to support staffing in the social care sector. Social care in Scotland has come a long way and is beginning to create the conditions that are required for improvement and innovation, which can be seen in the health and social care standards that were introduced earlier this year in legislation—the Social Care (Self-directed Support) (Scotland) Act 2013—and, as far as our practice is concerned, in the inspection methods that the Care Inspectorate has recently brought in.

I am proud to represent an ever-evolving sector that retains at its heart an asset-based and individualised approach to providing care that is grounded in human rights. As human beings and as a society our wants, needs and wishes change, which means that we need to be able to meet the needs of our older citizens and of those who act as caring support, and we must be flexible in relation to those demands.

On top of that, the market is ever changing and people are living longer. With regard to austerity, we need to be able to think differently about how care and support are delivered. The committee will know that the purpose of legislation is to freeze components. My concern is that the bill will enshrine use of tools and statute that could put at risk several things that I can outline later. At this time, however, the context fits what is required.

The Convener

I am keen to understand how far the current regimes operate and how adequate they are.

Alison Christie (Coalition of Care and Support Providers in Scotland)

The CCPS’s members believe that the current regulations provide for high-quality trained staff to support individuals to achieve their required outcomes. We are aware that the “National Health and Social Care Workforce Plan: Part 2—a framework for improving workforce planning for social care in Scotland” looks to address workforce planning and that the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities and the Scottish Government are progressing the recommendations to do just that.

We have worked quite closely, and had several discussions, with the bill team, but we have yet to get clarity on the benefits and added value that the bill will bring to social services or to the people who use social care.

Andrew Strong (Health and Social Care Alliance Scotland)

Our perspective differs slightly from that of other members of the panel. Our response was written in conjunction with individual members of the Health and Social Care Alliance Scotland who use health and social care services regularly. We feel that their views have so far been missing in the debate about the bill.

I will go back to the question. It is important to see the bill as a means to an end, rather than as an end in itself. People told us that continuity of care is key and is critical to them. They want, as far as possible, staff whom they know. Greater consideration of staff input is likely to lead to a greater possibility of achieving that continuity, so many of those people are in favour of the bill.

However, in our member consultation, we heard about experiences of understaffing in health and social care settings. That situation could be improved by the introduction of appropriate and ambitious tools, and the resources that are required to make it possible to use those tools.

Mark Hazelwood (Scottish Partnership for Palliative Care)

The health and social care sector obviously has major workforce issues, which we believe are primarily driven by factors including national workforce planning, affordability for commissioners and wider issues that affect recruitment and retention in the labour market. Those main issues are not primarily caused by deficiencies in workforce planning at local level or by inadequacies in legislative or regulatory frameworks.

Katherine Wainwright (Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations)

We believe that the plans, policies and legislation and the new health and social care standards and inspection approach are more than adequate, at the moment. We see no particular benefit coming from the bill; it has no focus on outcomes, which is how the sector thinks at the moment. In short, we do not believe that the bill is necessary or required.

The Convener

Thank you very much. I will go back to Andrew Strong’s particular perspective on the users of services. Is it possible to describe the user perspective as it currently exists in relation to staffing issues, or is it so dispersed and varied as not to allow for such characterisation?

Andrew Strong

I am sorry. I am not sure about the question.

The Convener

Is it the alliance’s view that there is a user perspective on staffing issues and how they are being addressed, and how they should be addressed?

Andrew Strong

People are clear that there has been a lot of consultation on the health and social care standards. There has been a lot going on in relation to workforce issues and the regulatory framework of the Care Inspectorate. People are clear about what they expect from social care services, but I would not say that there is complete understanding of that. There are different opinions on the bill among our membership.

David Stewart (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)

I thank the witnesses for the evidence that they have given so far. I am interested in workforce planning, particularly in the care home sector, which has three aspects: the private sector, local authority care and third sector provision. Can the panel outline the tools—if any—that are used for workforce planning in the sector?

Karen Hedge

Those who currently use workforce planning tools often use something called the indicator of relative need, which is known as IoRN. There are two versions of that tool, one that was created about 15 years ago and a more recent version. The tool served a purpose as guidance. However, in current social care thinking, an asset-based approach does not meet the needs of society. That is exactly what some of my colleagues on the panel were talking about—the individualised and personalised approach to delivering health and social care. Do you want me to talk more about the tool?

David Stewart

Yes. Could you briefly explain the tool for those who are not familiar with it?

Karen Hedge

The tool asks questions and assesses dependency and need. However, it is not fit for purpose. We need to think about capability, enablement and prevention. It is not able to take those into account. The tool also misses what happens overnight. That is why it is not fit for purpose.

If new tools were to be developed, there would need to be a two-stage process. The tools would have to be developed such that they would take into account all the concerns about the bill that my colleagues and I have. The first stage would be to develop an asset-based model that can assess the needs of and outcomes for a person, and which can assess what that person is able to do, rather than their dependency, as outlined in the Care Inspectorate’s submission.

There is concern because the Care Inspectorate has lead responsibility for producing such tools. We need to think about how to work better so that the tools could be co-produced. The tools need to work for the people on the ground who will use them—otherwise, they will create an additional burden.

The second stage of the process would be to develop an algorithm. I have absolutely no idea how that would work, but I am sure that there are digital experts who would be able to think about that. We would take that staffing and skills mix and apply it to the asset-based model.

However, we need to think about all that very carefully. We do not want to risk enshrining something that would take away human judgment.

David Stewart

I presume that there is an issue of scale—that it must be much more difficult to use such technical tools in very small care homes.

Karen Hedge

The social care sector is very diverse. We have large corporate businesses to small individual-run providers. My panel colleagues also represent other providers, including those that deal with drug and alcohol abuse. That includes Scottish Care. We need to think about how to apply the tool in different settings and about whether different tools would be required. There would also be a requirement for training and development. There are so many different issues to think about, if that is the route that we choose to go down.

Katherine Wainwright

As a provider, Turning Point’s two registered care homes are specifically for substance abusing people. I point that out to highlight the fact that we should not assume that we are talking only about care of elderly people. The individual cases that Turning Point works with are really complex. The units that we run support 10 or 12 people, so their capacity is fairly small. They are supported by other services that we provide; they do not stand in isolation. There is some staff enrichment and movement of staff and skills between services. Care homes do not stand alone—they are part of a greater network within provider units.

10:15  

David Stewart

Committee members visit care homes across our patches. On recent visits in the Highlands and Islands, one of the issues that has been drawn to my attention is the increase in dementia and the effect that that has on staffing. The hard reality that is thrown back to me whenever I have raised the issue—without naming any establishments—is the chronic shortage of staff. I cannot speak for the organisations that I have visited, but I know that having sophisticated tools is all fine and well and makes sense from a financial point of view, but the reality is that trying to fill the rota week in and week out is the main problem that many managers face. Is that Turning Point’s experience?

Katherine Wainwright

Absolutely. At any point, we are running a staffing vacancy rate of between 7 per cent and 11 per cent—and we are pretty good at recruitment at Turning Point Scotland. There is a chronic requirement for staff, so it feels risky to make it more difficult for us to meet the base requirements.

Alison Christie

CCPS, along with the human resources voluntary sector forum, carries out an annual benchmarking survey that looks at a range of workforce issues. Questions are always asked about recruitment and retention. In the 2017-18 survey, 93 per cent of providers stated that recruitment is difficult or very difficult, which was an increase from 87.5 per cent in the previous year. That finding is also supported by the Scottish Government commissioned survey for 2016, which looked at the social services workforce in Scotland and stated that the majority of providers found recruitment challenging either regularly or occasionally.

Andrew Strong

I want to comment on the future threat to the social care sector from Brexit. BBC research that came out this morning says that there are 26,000 people from the European Union working in health, social care and public administration. We should see that wider context as being important in terms of the social care sector. A lot of those people work in the sector, so the ability to carry on business as usual beyond March next year could be threatened by that.

Karen Hedge

It is also worth having a look at the Scottish Social Services Council’s “Scottish Social Service Sector: Report on 2017 Workforce Data”, which was published last month. I draw members’ attention to the fact that, with regard to the recruitment and retention crisis that the sector currently faces, the data report cites a stability index of 77.1 per cent. That means that about a quarter of staff roles are changing in a year. Our research at Scottish Care also shows that more people leave within six months of entering the sector than stay. Put those two facts together with increased demand, and it is clear that we currently face a huge crisis.

Others have alluded to the vacancy rate in their services. I want to highlight the fact that, for nurses in particular, the vacancy rate is currently sitting at 32 per cent. That situation cannot continue. I do not know whether the committee is aware of last week’s headline news that 19 care homes have closed this year because they cannot recruit nurses.

Brian Whittle (South Scotland) (Con)

We have heard evidence and received written submissions suggesting that the national health service in the UK and in Scotland is actually very efficient but that that efficiency is in itself making the system more fragile. Does that apply in the care home sector as well? Are we starting to work right at the boundaries of what we would term safe staffing?

The Convener

That is a challenging question. How fragile is the care home sector or, to put it another way, how robust are staffing arrangements currently?

Karen Hedge

I would merely reiterate the statistics that we have just described. We are struggling to recruit staff, so when efficiencies are made, that is often where they are made, because we are already at the bottom line in terms of resource for providing the service. There is nowhere else that we can lose funds. In addition to the 32 per cent vacancy rate for nurses, you will see that there has been a growth in agency nurse provision of 18 per cent in the past year. The fact that there are more nursing agencies does not mean that there are more nurses. Actually, some of our providers have to spend up to £1,200 a night to get a nurse. “Efficiency” is not really the word that I would use in this context.

Katherine Wainwright

Providers are trying to be more creative and dynamic and use multidisciplinary teams—that is the counterbalance to the staffing crisis.

Mark Hazelwood

The bill’s ambition is to create a framework that spans diverse settings, multiple professions, integrated services and teamworking. That is good, but I am not clear that we have evidence-based approaches in which to ground it at this stage. There is a risk that, in trying to create that framework, we create rigidities and end up with a tool that is not sufficiently flexible, which will potentially become an obstacle to the integration and innovation that Katherine Wainwright mentioned, which are the responses that the sector has when it faces the workforce pressures and recruitment issues that Karen Hedge has described. That is one of the risks and potential unintended consequences of the bill.

Brian Whittle

With that in mind, will the bill support the sustainability of the sector in terms of quality and safety? My colleague Dave Stewart alluded to the different sizes of care homes. Can tools be applicable across the whole sector?

In relation to the tension between numbers and service, are we talking about the wrong thing? Are we talking about numbers when we should be talking about service?

Karen Hedge

Actually, we should be talking about the people who access care and support and making sure that we deliver care that is responsive to them and led by them. When we start to use tools, we apply a prescriptive set of skills to the person, which does not necessarily take into account their individuality.

Sorry, but I have forgotten the other aspect of your question.

Brian Whittle

It was about whether tools are applicable across the sector, and it followed on from Dave Stewart’s line of questioning. Does that in itself create tension?

Karen Hedge

To go back to the question about multidisciplinary teams and innovation, in our current setting, the tools do not apply across the sector, and that will need to be taken into account.

Alison Christie

One of our concerns was whether there could be a standardised tool that would suffice across the diverse range of services. On speaking to the bill team, we found that that was unlikely and that multiple tools will probably have to be developed, which brings its own challenges. Someone asked how many people do workforce planning. Our benchmarking survey found that only 23 per cent of respondents use workforce planning tools. When the tools are developed, we will have the issues and challenges of people having to be trained in their use, and that will be perhaps not just for single tools but for the multiple tools that one organisation will have to use. That brings me on to the point that there is no clear indication of how any training will be resourced.

Bob Doris

It is helpful to understand the concerns around the bill. At the outset, Karen Hedge said that there are concerns about the current tool, which is the IoRN tool—I will be dashed if I can explain the acronym. I have listened carefully to all the challenges. Any tool or tools that are developed will have to be suitably flexible and take into account the varying needs and the diversity of the sector. However, with all those caveats, if we can get it right, will it be positive for the sector?

The Convener

That is about workforce planning tools in principle, assuming that they are the right ones.

Karen Hedge

There are positivities in having these tools, such as transparency and the offering of guidance, and for those reasons, Scottish Care would support having them. However, they cannot be the be-all and end-all; human judgment still needs to be a significant factor that can override them.

We need to bear in mind the fact that the landscape is changing. We have not yet discussed—and I am not sure whether the committee discussed it last week either—the opportunities that changes in technology offer; they allow our staff to just be. Care homes are not clinical settings—they are, by definition, someone’s home—and if you try to apply something that has been created for a clinical setting to somebody’s personal place, you start to enter what is quite a grey area.

Bob Doris

It might be helpful if I reword things slightly just before Mr Hazelwood comes in. Karen Hedge talked about constraints and the fact that, even when you use these diagnostic tools to work out the skills mix and the workload in any one place, there must be on-the-ground judgment. Would it be helpful to have these diagnostic tools for what the head count, the skills mix and the workload should look like, as long as you have a degree of flexibility on the ground and the ability to make the final judgment, given that you know your local care home setting best?

Mark Hazelwood

I will come back to that but, even if we assume that we have a series of perfect tools, I think that there are still issues to address. In any well-managed service, there must be consideration of how to match the workforce to the service’s needs and, as we have heard, there is an increasing need to personalise that process in order to achieve individual outcomes for individual people. That must be part of the process of running a good service.

The question is whether that is best done through making it a statutory requirement. There are issues about the statutory context into which such a tool is placed. As we have pointed out in our submission, there is a lack of clarity about how the duty on authorities that commission services to have regard to the duties and principles placed on care service providers will play out in practice when commissioners are trying to balance quality, safety and affordability.

That brings us back to the wider pressures on the sector that we have already talked about. The IJBs are, as commissioners, under great financial pressure, but the fact is that, even when service providers have a financial envelope sufficient to fund the workforce levels that are required to deliver the service, the labour market that they are going out into simply does not have sufficient people to meet those needs. There are significant concerns that, if Brexit proceeds, which in all likelihood it will, those pressures will be severely exacerbated.

The Convener

Does anyone else have an opinion on those points or, indeed, on Bob Doris’s question whether tools are, in and of themselves, potentially useful or simply the wrong way to approach the issues that you face?

Katherine Wainwright

I find it hard to imagine them being particularly helpful in this context. I do not see them fitting particularly well and, until we have reached a position where the resourcing and the availability of nurses and social care workers are much improved, I cannot see how useful they might be.

Bob Doris

Finally, convener, I think that it is important to point out that, given the concerns that have been raised, the power in part 3 is for the Care Inspectorate to develop rather than implement a tool. That is an important distinction, because it might not be able to get it right.

Going back to the point that Mark Hazelwood made about the recruitment and retention of staff—and Karen Hedge said something similar—I note that one power that the Government is not taking in part 3 is the power to report on staffing levels. Does that seem a bit odd to you? Should there be, as part of this, national reporting of staffing levels so that we get a national picture and can see what is happening across the sector and the country? Would that be helpful, or would it just cause administrative difficulties for individual care homes in the sector?

Andrew Strong

We would like to see something like that. Whether that works for providers is another question. The people we have spoken to would like more transparency about the pressures that social care and health services are facing.

10:30  

Karen Hedge

I want to come in on that point. The SSSC already collates some workforce data, as do Scottish Care and the CCPS. There are other means of getting hold of the data, although a national picture might well be helpful in planning for the future.

Sandra White (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

I want to go back to the basics of why we are here. We have had evidence from other professionals and we are taking evidence today from you and others. The point is to look at both health and care—that is important; this is the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill. What I am hearing from the panel and others is that there are so many different aspects to the bill. It seems to be based on nursing at the top and then it works its way down. The panel may not think that, but it is certainly what has been fed back to me.

The complication is that there are so many different sectors. There is the private sector, the council sector, care homes and so on. Panel members can answer me honestly about whether they have been involved enough in the bill. The bill applies the same general duties on all providers, yet they not only provide different levels of care but are completely different organisations. Will the bill succeed in creating coherence by integrating legislation and practice between health and social care?

Mark Hazelwood

Even if we stay close to the core, as Sandra White has described it, of the consistent application of nurse workforce planning tools, there are some challenges and complexities that are not reflected in the bill.

For example, the voluntary hospice sector is a major provider of in-patient specialist palliative care provision in Scotland. Most of the care that hospices provide is in people’s homes. Among the broad range of services that hospices provide, however, are in-patient services and several of the healthcare services that are listed in new section 12IC of the National Health Service (Scotland) Act 1978 as inserted by the bill, which proposes the application of a common method. The locations listed in the table in that section do not clearly equate to hospices. They seem to be predicated entirely on NHS settings.

We need to understand that complexity better, even before we get into the wider orbit of the huge diversity of health and care settings that other colleagues have spoken about. There should not be a blanket assumption that tools that have been developed primarily in and for the NHS can necessarily be applied without adaptation to other healthcare settings, such as voluntary hospices.

Karen Hedge

The bill in itself does not add anything to integration. There is already work to develop new models of care. The chief nursing officer’s directorate recently had a meeting that drew on examples of local changes in looking at how nurses can potentially work peripatetically and at things such as enablement programmes.

If anything, the bill might create a barrier between the two sectors, because of the potential for nursing staff in particular to move into the NHS from the independent and third sectors without terms and conditions being a difficulty. Where we already have a workforce in crisis, that is a problem.

We need to focus on new models of care and linked career pathways, looking at multidisciplinary teams and other opportunities that we are already considering.

Keith Brown (Clackmannanshire and Dunblane) (SNP)

I am aware that four panel members have mentioned the impact of Brexit, especially in relation to recruitment and retention. Vacancy rates of 32 per cent were mentioned and there has been a substantial increase in vacancies in the past year. I was stunned to hear that the cost for an agency nurse is £1,200 a night—I wonder how much of that goes to the nurse.

I know that it is not as simple as considering only the impact of those staff who are from the EU potentially leaving because of Brexit; there will be other issues to consider as well. However, can any of the panel members give us an idea of the impact on the vacancy rate of EU staff leaving over the past year or even the past two years?

The Convener

This is in the context of what is in the bill and the workforce planning proposals.

Mark Hazelwood

I do not have the statistics in front of me, but I will happily submit something after the meeting, because I know that there is a growing body of evidence about the impact of the prospect of Brexit. Also, some of the evidence that has been published by the Government in Westminster on economic projections raises concerns as well.

The Convener

Thank you. That is helpful.

Keith Brown

Whether the situation is due to Brexit or other recruitment and retention issues, bearing in mind what has been said about being able to apply professional judgment, which it is possible to do with the current tools that are used by nurses, could one of the benefits be that you could point to an objective, evidence-based statutory process and say to commissioners, “This is what we require in terms of staff”? That might help in relation to Mark Hazelwood’s point about commissioners being aware of their obligations as well. You could point to these tools and say, “We need to have this,” and everyone would be in the same boat; you could take that back to commissioners.

Karen Hedge

That is one of the reasons why we have been looking at this as part of the national care home contract negotiations. Scottish Care, COSLA—which will be appearing in the second evidence session today—and Scotland Excel are involved in the conversation, with the proviso that the tools act as a guide and not as a prescribed formula.

There are advantages but, as Mark Hazelwood mentioned earlier, the fact that commissioners are not included in the bill is a huge oversight. We can see what happened with the Scottish living wage. There is a requirement to pay it—quite rightly, because we should be paying our staff and valuing them—but if that funding does not come down to the providers, they are put in quite a sticky position when it comes to being able to pay that money out. I would hate it if the bill created that same potential drain on resource.

Mark Hazelwood

This is a related point—it will be very important as the bill proceeds that there is some clear linkage between the development of the models and the regulatory framework. That is also where the relationship with the commissioners comes in, because it ends up being very difficult if there is an expectation on the part of the regulator that the provider will meet a certain set of workforce requirements but there is not adequate resource to meet that in the commissioning process. The comeback in that position is often at the level of the provider, who may suffer because of poor ratings from the regulator. That is what I was talking about when I mentioned the question of which duties are placed on the commissioning authorities in those circumstances.

The Convener

That is understood.

Alison Christie

On average, 77 per cent of the income of CCPS members relates to publicly funded services, so it is a huge concern for CCPS members that there is no duty placed on commissioners.

The Convener

That is an important point—thank you.

Miles Briggs (Lothian) (Con)

To follow on from Keith Brown’s question, I want to look at workforce planning and training. The national workforce plan is now in three parts. What feedback have you had with regard to future training and the college sector? It is quite clear that the care crisis and the staff crisis did not start with Brexit; they have been building up over many years now. What future projections on staff recruitment are you looking to meet? Are you concerned that an unintended consequence of the bill having two speeds, with the care sector very much in the slow lane, is that staff might be poached to address problems in the acute sector?

Karen Hedge

My answer to your final question is yes, absolutely. One of the risks of the bill is the unintended consequence of the sector being resource driven. If you are trying to address staffing numbers, that is where you put all your resource. If the health aspect of the bill is implemented first, resource will go first into getting people employed in that sector. That means that we are likely to lose staff and, given the figures that were quoted earlier, that is a real concern.

Alison Christie

A further concern for CCPS members is that, as a very small proportion of members have care homes, we are third in line for any resources. If resources initially go to health and then to care homes, services that deliver community support will be underresourced.

Katherine Wainwright

We are concerned that we would have to divert staff from one service to another to focus on care homes.

Miles Briggs

Is it fair to say that the college sector is not meeting demand? The Scottish Government is trying to fulfil its childcare policy, and I know from conversations that I have had in Edinburgh, which has half of all delayed discharges, that many potential students are being encouraged to go into childcare. My concern is that it will not be possible to meet future demand for adult care and that by encouraging people to choose different pathways that will never take them into a career in adult care, we are actively creating unintended consequences. Does the panel have any views on that?

Alison Christie

There are long-standing difficulties in getting people into careers in adult social care. We are quite optimistic that the national health and social care workforce plan and the national marketing campaign will address some of those challenges, but there is a long way to go to make adult social care attractive to people. CCPS and the voluntary sector have a recruitment working group, and since May we have been trying to get 10 people into an employability programme. We are targeting long-term unemployed people who face multiple barriers to employment, who do not see care as an attractive career prospect. There are many challenges to be addressed beyond the bill.

Katherine Wainwright

It is about long-term education about careers in social care. Such an approach, which does not exist at the moment, should start at the very beginning, at school, with young people seeing a career in social care as an option. Work by the joint voluntary sector working group on recruitment has shown that, despite being offered enticements, folk are not choosing social care as a career. It is really difficult.

Karen Hedge

My colleagues Katharine Ross and Paul O’Reilly can put something in writing for the committee about the issue. However, I can tell you that there are concerns about the way in which training is put in place, whether that is through Scottish vocational qualification models or apprenticeships. Part of the problem is that the median age of the workforce is 48. There have been regulatory changes leading to an increased requirement for more qualifications. People often come into the sector without qualifications and with dual caring commitments, and we know that they access training between 10 pm and 1 am. There is a whole host of concerns about that. If it would be helpful, Katharine Ross or Paul O’Reilly could put something in writing.

The Convener

That would be helpful. Thank you.

A number of the panel members have commented on the potential for the bill to skew attention towards resources. Let us look at the other side of the coin. Does the bill assist in increasing a focus on outcomes for individuals? If not, perhaps we should hear about that as well. What is the view of panel members on the outcomes focus in the bill?

10:45  

Katherine Wainwright

I do not see an outcomes focus in the bill as it stands.

Mark Hazelwood

We already have the health and social care standards, which provide a nice framework for a focus on outcomes.

Andrew Strong

I agree. I would like to see more reference in the bill to how people who use health and social care regularly can be involved in and consulted on the issues. The bill refers to who is to be consulted in the development of the tools, but it would be legitimate to extend that to people with long-term conditions or disabilities.

Alison Christie

I agree with what everyone has said. The bill is not outcomes focused.

Karen Hedge

I echo that.

The Convener

Thank you—that is clear.

David Torrance

With the Care Inspectorate being both the regulator of registered care services in Scotland and the scrutiny and improvement body for social work, is it the appropriate body to lead on the development of staffing methodologies for the care home sector?

Karen Hedge

The Care Inspectorate is very experienced in this area, and I believe that it should be involved. We have a close working relationship with the Care Inspectorate, as we need to have. That has resulted in the majority of care homes in Scotland having a “good” or “very good” rating.

However, I do not think that it should develop staffing methodologies in isolation. Collaboration is not the same as co-production. The tools need to be fit for purpose and easy to use. If our staff are running from place to place—and the future projections on staffing shortages suggest that that is highly likely to happen—they need to be able to use the tools quickly and easily. If tools are to be produced, the Care Inspectorate can lead, but they must be co-produced.

Andrew Strong

The national care standards were developed in co-production with providers, people who use the services and other bodies. The Care Inspectorate should see the value of doing that and are likely to take development forward in that way. We would be supportive of that, but with the caveat, as Karen Hedge said, that it is done in co-production, particularly with people who receive support and use services and with providers.

David Torrance

Will the bill change the relationships between the Care Inspectorate, commissioners and providers? Will there be any conflict of interest?

The Convener

Does anyone have a view? What is the potential impact?

Karen Hedge

I alluded to our relationship with the Care Inspectorate, which I would like to continue. Although there are concerns about the risk of creating a resource-driven service in which all the resources have to go into staffing as opposed to outcomes, I do not see the relationship changing in any great way, because we already co-produce things and work together in a way that is based on outcomes. On reviewing the submissions to the committee, my only concern was that we in Scottish Care have an asset-based model but the Care Commission refers to dependency tools. That is an area that we could explore; it is the only area where I could see us coming up against each other.

Alison Christie

I do not think that relationships will change, but I can see the potential for conflict. If the Care Inspectorate develops the tools and regulates against them but there is no duty on commissioners to meet the requirements that the tools evidence, conflict could arise between the Care Inspectorate, the provider and the commissioner.

Mark Hazelwood

This is not a direct answer to the question, but some voluntary sector hospices have dual regulation at present, in that some of their services are regulated by the Care Inspectorate but the bulk are inspected and regulated by Healthcare Improvement Scotland. There is a degree of complexity in the area. HIS does not have the same inspection and regulatory relationship with NHS services that it has with independent healthcare providers such as hospices.

When we come to the detail of how it is all going to work, we would need to ensure that there is an appropriate way of taking up whatever models are developed—some of that is specified in the bill in terms of types of healthcare service and types of setting—so that that does not feed into Healthcare Improvement Scotland’s regulatory processes in a way that hinders or has negative outcomes for the provision of services by independent hospices.

David Torrance

My next question is about recruitment, especially of nurses. As was mentioned earlier, there is a 32 per cent vacancy rate and an 18 per cent growth in the use of agency nurses. Can the bill in any way affect the recruitment and retention of nursing staff in the sector?

Karen Hedge

It very much will, because things will happen in a progressive manner from one sector to the next—from health to social care—so there is the potential consequence that social care will lose staff to the health sector. Other than that, the bill in itself cannot magically create nurses, as I keep saying. Although a lot of work is going on around that, such as increasing the number of student nursing places and introducing new models of care, the bill itself will not create more nurses.

Alison Christie

There is another unintended consequence. If a service cannot find the staff that the tools require it to have, what happens to that service? The risk is that it will have to close.

The Convener

Is there a risk that the Care Inspectorate might report that a particular provider is not delivering against the workforce levels that are set out in or deduced from the tool, although it could be doing a good job in every other respect? That service is at risk of attracting a negative inspection report, with potentially serious consequences.

Mark Hazelwood

That might be a risk. I can imagine a circumstance in which that happens despite the fact that the provider is delivering on outcomes that are important for its clients.

The Convener

The bill, having no outcomes focus, will potentially be in conflict with a provider’s outcomes-focused practices or policies. Is that essentially the point?

Katherine Wainwright

Yes, that is the point.

Karen Hedge

We are in a positive position because of the recent changes to the Care Inspectorate’s methodology, and it would be good to see where that takes us. That outcomes-focused approach is creating conditions for innovation and improvement, so to bring in what the bill proposes alongside that seems completely contradictory.

The Convener

Are you saying that this is the wrong time?

Karen Hedge

Maybe, yes. The bill is fixing things in statute and freezing them in time, as opposed to offering an opportunity for innovation and change.

The Convener

The bill’s financial and policy memorandums say that it does not inevitably follow that tools will be devised for care homes, hospices and other settings that are not specifically identified in the bill. Do the witnesses feel that there is a logic to the bill that will drive the development of those tools? Is there a risk there? If we create the mechanism to devise tools, does it follow that tools will be devised?

Karen Hedge

We were already looking at developing some sort of tool under the national care home contract, but that will be used very much as a guide and a way of offering transparency in commissioning. It has to be flexible, opt-in and not burdensome. Legislation is not needed to make that happen, and could limit where we go with it.

The Convener

If legislation comes forward, would you want to see the tool that you are developing put in place, rather than something borrowed from the NHS?

Karen Hedge

It would need to be developed for the sector and co-produced by those of us who work in the sector.

Brian Whittle

Should or could the bill cover all care homes? It seems to me that we are talking about only the part of the sector that cares for the elderly but, as has already been indicated, there is much more to the sector than that. Can we develop tools that deliver to the sector?

Katherine Wainwright

We would need to look at having multiple tools; we would certainly need a range of options, not just one, and they would have to be quite flexible. I cannot see how one tool will be able to deal with the dynamic of the sector or the range of services that are being delivered.

Brian Whittle

Is there scope or room in the bill to set out the training that is required to deliver those tools on the ground? Surely that knowledge will have to be applied to—or cascaded down to—the care sector.

Katherine Wainwright

I do not see that provided for in the bill. Any training in a tool would have to be cascaded down through organisations. In any case, the tool would have to be applied correctly for it to work, and it would be quite dangerous if it were applied without training. Training would certainly be required, and we would need to ensure that all our services had capacity in that respect.

The Convener

Bob Doris has a final question.

Bob Doris

Given the evidence that we have heard, it is evident that, if the tool is to be brought in, there will have to be a huge amount of reassurance, a lot of co-production and flexibility to allow for justifiable variation on the ground. However, a really interesting issue raised in our discussion has been the training of nurses and social care staff. If this—perhaps imperfect—tool comes in, should there be an automatic triggering of an annual review of nursing training places in the further and higher education sectors, based on the data that comes out? It is not enough to say, “Here’s a diagnostic tool that indicates how you might deliver the workforce and the skills mix on the ground.” Is the next step for the Scottish Government to use that data annually to tweak and develop nursing training places in FE and university provision? I know that there are issues with getting people to fill posts in the first place, but once we get them, do we then have to look at how we might have an impact on training?

Katherine Wainwright

Absolutely. If the tool comes in and it produces valuable data, we should definitely use that for national workforce planning as well as workforce planning on an individual, service and regional basis. We need to look at the whole picture.

However, I should point out that things do not move that quickly. For example, although we might see a need for nurses in the sector very quickly and although more nurses might be trained, the nurses who are used in our settings are usually quite experienced and do not usually come straight out of university. It is a very responsible job, with two nurses perhaps working together, or a nurse working solo. There will therefore be a timescale delay in that respect, and we need to think about those timescales as well as using any data that is produced.

The Convener

As members have no more questions, I thank our witnesses for what has been a very helpful evidence session. We have certainly gleaned some useful information from it.

We will briefly adjourn before resuming with our next panel.

10:58 Meeting suspended.  

11:04 On resuming—  

The Convener

We resume the meeting with our second panel of witnesses. I welcome to the committee John Wood, the chief officer for health and social care at COSLA; Stuart Bain, HR business partner for the Fife health and social care partnership, representing the Society of Personnel and Development Scotland; Dr Jane Kellock, head of social work strategy and development at Social Work Scotland; David Williams, chief officer of Glasgow city health and social care partnership; and Eddie Fraser, director of East Ayrshire health and social care partnership. Thank you for attending this morning. We have about an hour for this evidence session.

I start with a question that I asked the witnesses on the previous panel. How far do you believe that this bill is focused on outcomes for users of services?

John Wood (Convention of Scottish Local Authorities)

As I hope is clear from our evidence, COSLA does not support the bill as it stands. One reason for that is that we see the bill as focusing on inputs rather than outcomes. Although the bill does not specify staffing numbers, it appears that the bill and the tools are heading in that direction.

Reflecting on the previous session, there is nothing in the bill or the supporting policy memorandum that demonstrates that outcomes are at the heart of the intention of the bill.

Stuart Bain (Society of Personnel and Development Scotland)

To echo what John Wood has said, our concerns are around the qualitative rather than quantitative issues, particularly for the Care Inspectorate. Auditors, by their very nature, will audit whatever they are asked to audit. If that involves counting heads, that is what they will do. It is easier to count heads than to measure quality.

There is an imbalance between the objective of high-quality care services that we would like to see and the excessive focus on tools to measure capacity, which do not always capture the whole picture or the qualitative outputs that would be of interest.

Dr Jane Kellock (Social Work Scotland)

I agree with the previous speakers and those at the earlier session today.

We are already in a primary legislative environment on integration in which partners are working towards more outcome-focused approaches and looking at innovation across the sectors. The social care sector is currently adequately regulated to allow for scrutiny over our processes and procedures. This bill does not lend itself to an outcome-based approach in the current integrated context.

David Williams (Glasgow City Health and Social Care Partnership)

The Public Bodies (Joint Working) (Scotland) Act 2014 clearly sets out nine national health and wellbeing outcomes that integration authorities are expected to work towards achieving. It is significant that that legislation is explicitly about outcomes for individuals and communities. There is real potential that this bill will militate against the delivery of those outcomes, because, as colleagues have indicated, it is very process oriented.

Eddie Fraser (East Ayrshire Health and Social Care Partnership)

In line with my colleagues, I echo that the policy direction has been about shifting choice and control to individuals, through more self-directed support and self-management. There is a concern that, if we go down the line of regulation, particularly around one profession, that will take away from the policy direction and innovation that we have been working towards.

The health and social care workforce plan that has already been agreed between the Scottish Government and COSLA gives a sound basis of responsibilities for what needs to be taken forward.

The Convener

There is a clear view in relation to outcomes. Is there any respect in which the bill as it stands could assist with workforce planning, at a local, service or national level? If not, are there other legislative provisions that might assist in addressing the workforce issues faced by the services that panel members represent?

David Williams

Through legislation, policy direction and infrastructure, a sufficient framework is in place for integration authorities and health and social care partnerships, which have lead responsibility for commissioning health and social care provision—not in acute hospital settings, but certainly in terms of community and some in-patient provision.

That infrastructure and framework is already in place and sufficient to enable the level of innovation that my colleague Mr Fraser alluded to. Integration of health and social care is intended to transform the planning, delivery, receipt and experience of health and social care services across Scotland. Any legislation, including this bill, should be about enabling the process rather than making it more challenging.

Eddie Fraser

There are a number of workforce tools out there, particularly the nursing workforce tool. It is interesting that the tool was developed by the nursing profession, rather than being the result of regulation. No one is saying that there should not be a clear focus on safe staffing in our sector, but the bill seems to focus on a particular profession. In this new integrated world, we work across the sector and outwith the services that we manage, into the third sector and people’s choices about self-directed support. Workforce tools that have been developed by the nursing profession give clarity and assurance. At the same time, though, the issue is how that cuts across the sector. It goes back to the fact that the vehicle for that can be the health and social care workforce plan.

Dr Kellock

The Public Bodies (Joint Working) (Scotland) Act 2014 is still relatively new and it would be fair to say that the integration joint boards and health and social care partnerships are feeling their way in this context.

The focus should be very much on outcomes, self-direction and working in collaboration with service users to redesign services in an innovative way. The bill does not lend itself well to that agenda and is, at the very least, premature in relation to furthering the concept of integration.

As has been mentioned, there are some gaps. A lot of the focus is on NHS services, which could have the unintended consequence of skewing the focus on to the NHS, to the detriment of social care.

One of the gaps that Social Work Scotland has found in the bill is that it covers regulated social care services and not social work services in the wider context. The bill does not include public protection services that are on the ground, working in highly complex situations in communities across Scotland. Our real concern is that the resource implications of the bill will be focused primarily on health, secondly on social care, and not at all on social work.

Stuart Bain

I draw attention to the regulatory framework that local authorities in particular work under, with safeguarding addressed through the excellent protection of vulnerable groups legislation; the work that the SSSC does to ensure that workers are properly regulated and qualified, and receive the correct levels of continuing professional development; and the inspection regime under the Care Inspectorate, which in my experience tends to focus on qualitative issues. Those safeguards are there and should not be ignored.

John Wood

The question was whether the bill or other legislation gives us what we need with regard to workforce planning. Part of the answer should be to look towards the national workforce plan, which is co-owned by COSLA and the Scottish Government and is obviously a non-legislative piece of work.

If we are talking about strategic workforce planning, it is safe to say that legislation does not offer any clear benefits with regard to where recruitment and retention are under pressure in the labour market. Our attention might be better diverted to some of the softer approaches in the national workforce plan and the benefits that that could bring.

11:15  

The Convener

David Stewart would like to follow up on Jane Kellock’s response, particularly in regard to social work.

David Stewart

Social work was my first job, many years ago. I am particularly interested in the exclusion of non-regulated social work staff. Some of my questions have already been covered, but perhaps Dr Jane Kellock could address the issues around the Public Bodies (Joint Working) (Scotland) Act 2014, which she referred to. Is that exclusion not contrary to the 2014 act?

Dr Kellock

When we look at integration, we are looking at the potential to have non-regulated social work services. The staff are regulated in terms of the SSSC, but the service that they provide is not one of the services that the Care Inspectorate regulates. At the moment, local authorities and the NHS are looking across the board at where front-line statutory services can come together and work in a more integrated manner to improve outcomes for service users. As it stands, the bill separates out social care from health. There is no sense that there is any future proofing around what any new models of support might look like, either on the care side of the equation or in the front-line public protection part of the social work and health business. The bill does not reflect what the integration authorities’ role is about.

David Stewart

You are saying that there is a bit of muddled architecture in terms of the legislative hold on what we are talking about.

Dr Kellock

Yes, and Social Work Scotland has taken a nuanced and pragmatic approach. We oppose the bill as it stands, but if it goes ahead, we would wish to see social work services included in it, not excluded.

David Stewart

Would other members of the panel like to contribute?

Eddie Fraser

In relation to social work services being included, we need to point out how complex an issue it is. Social workers work as part of a team around people—around a child, a family or an older person—so the context of regulating social work depends on the local context in which they are working. If local social workers do not have a multidisciplinary team around them, you need a lot more of them. If you have adequate teams around a child or a community, you might need less social work. That is where it becomes difficult. How do you regulate the local context? It is about how we look at the whole team and the local context—not just social work or nursing, but the totality. Some of that can be outwith our realm and might involve teachers and others responding in local communities.

David Stewart

Panel members are expressing concerns in different ways. There were some hints from Jane Kellock about how the legislation could be improved. Do the witnesses have suggestions about that? Obviously, the bill can be amended at future stages, so how might it be improved? Considering that is our job, as members of this committee.

The Convener

That is a very general question, so succinct answers from witnesses would be appreciated.

David Williams

I will have a go at that one. From my perspective, less is more—that is my response to the comments that Mr Fraser has just made about the bill.

The arrangements that often need to be put in place to protect children or vulnerable adults or in relation to multi-agency public protection arrangements—MAPPA—for individuals who present risk in communities are unique and complex, and it is therefore difficult to legislate for staffing arrangements around them. That is regardless of the sophistication or otherwise of workforce tools. If Parliament is minded to proceed with it, the bill needs to have at its heart flexibility, responsiveness and professional judgment, as opposed to something that could become a mechanistic tick-box response.

Stuart Bain

There should definitely be a focus on quality rather than quantity, and a recognition that local conditions are relevant to staffing decisions and should be reflected in everything. Finally, workers should be included, with regard to consultation on staffing arrangements and worker wellbeing, which is also important.

John Wood

We did not think that the bill should cover social care in the first place. Our board members were keen for me to express that to the committee.

I reiterate the point about professional responsibility not being reflected in the bill. If we are looking at improvements, that would be an area for attention. I am not sure what “local context” refers to when it is listed in the bill as something to consider. It would be important for the tool developed as a result of the bill to take into account the challenges in workforce supply. We have touched on that this morning and will do so again later. If the bill and the tool do not take into consideration that it is difficult to recruit people into roles, the first hurdle will be a real challenge.

Sandra White

I want to ask about staffing; I am concerned about what I have heard. Like others on the committee, I see that my constituency case load is about social work, care homes and bed blocking. We heard in evidence at the committee last week that the bill was nurse—or RCN—led. They wanted a tool to prevent bed blocking by showing that more nurses were needed. Has the bill gone far enough? It is a good idea if it works that way, but have social work and social care been involved enough in how it develops? It sounds great at the top—have this tool, and if you are short you can have more nurses and reduce bed blocking—but has anything been done at the lower end, where people are getting care, in the community and care homes? Has your sector been involved enough?

John Wood

The fundamental point is that, before the bill was introduced to Parliament, and the policy was announced, we were not aware of any appetite for such legislation. We have had conversations with officials since the announcement of a safer staffing bill, but the appetite was not there beforehand to co-produce the bill. We have received good assurances that the tools will be co-produced with the Care Inspectorate and we will hold the Government to that, but the bill itself has not been co-produced.

David Williams

If we think back to the integration agenda and the beginnings of the bill, the perceived wisdom was that it was there to address the issues of bed blocking and delayed discharge. It is proving to be much more than that—I emphasise that point strongly.

Health and social care partnerships have been asked to give significant attention to delayed discharge. Across the country, they are responding differently to the issues and needs in their locality in how they expedite and improve the position in relation to delayed discharges. The innovation and creativity that come from the bill and the integration arrangements will facilitate that, and the picture has improved; there have been significant reductions in bed days lost in the acute hospital sector across the country as a consequence.

Sandra White asked whether, if we had more of X, Y and Z, we would be able to improve on our performance again. The answer is yes. That is particularly true in the community, where there are increasing levels of frailty and acuity of need among significant numbers of the population, who could be better supported to remain in their own homes. However, the bill will not necessarily assist with that, because that comes back to people’s unique circumstances—their individual needs—and how the array of support around that individual can be better brought to bear to improve the outcomes for that individual.

Stuart Bain

I can offer some anecdotal experience from my health and social care partnership. The fact that we could be flexible has reduced delayed discharge. We were able to shift social workers from a community setting to working in hospitals to help with the identification of need. We were then able to change some of the focus in care homes, where we have enablement bed arrangements—people move into our care homes for a brief period to get back on their feet and able to care for themselves. Our focus with care at home has also changed and we have moved to an enablement model, with short-term intervention carers, to help people to go back to independent living and move out of hospital.

That flexibility has enabled us to be quite successful in the past 18 months in reducing the amount of delayed discharge. That is an illustration of what David Williams was talking about.

Eddie Fraser

I want to focus on two areas. First, we are very successful at getting people home appropriately, so delayed discharge is not a huge challenge for us; our challenge is the number of people attending hospital and being admitted to hospital. Our investment over the next couple of years will be in the community to prevent people from going into hospital in the first place. From the money for primary care and additional money for intermediate care, we will invest £10 million in rehabilitation over the next two years, to support people at home, rather than them having to attend hospital.

Secondly, we have talked about capacity in care homes to support people with complex needs and their discharge, but John Wood and I spoke at an event a few weeks ago about nurses in the care home sector and it is well known that there is a real challenge in recruiting and retaining nurses in care homes. It is such a problem that at times the Care Inspectorate has had to go in and do bespoke work with care homes, to work out what nurses have to do and what senior social care workers can contribute.

Given that such flexibility is required in relation to issues such as staffing in care homes, we need to be very careful that the legislation does not cut across that. We need to ensure that care homes can continue to operate effectively.

11:30  

Sandra White

I am interested in what you said about how difficult it is for care homes to get nurses. The previous panel said that most nurses who work in care homes are 40, 45 or 50 and over and are very experienced. Is that right? The RCN and others told the committee that there is a move to get nurses through university and bring them into the sector. How will that affect the sector? Is it more difficult to recruit older, more experienced nurses?

Eddie Fraser

Yes, it tends to be more difficult. Our community-roster staff and staff in care homes often work unsupervised—indeed, they are often on their own. They need a whole level of experience if they are to be able to do that. Our senior nurses in care homes are also often the managers of the care homes. Many of them come up through the hospital system and then come across to the sector; they have grown in the protected environment of the hospital.

Our partnership is about to take on nine graduate nurses and we will work with them, in partnership with general practitioner practice nurses and community nurses, to develop a younger cohort of nurses—by “younger” I mean newly qualified. You are right about the age profile of not just our care home nurses but our community nursing staff.

Bob Doris

The take-home message from the previous panel, which was made up of social care providers, was that if a tool is brought in it will need to allow for flexibility and professional judgment, and the message that I have heard from David Williams and Eddie Fraser is that a tool must not be a barrier to innovation, reform and restructuring—Eddie Fraser was just talking about that kind of activity.

When my constituents think about safe staffing levels, they probably think about hospital wards and care homes for the frail elderly, so they are thinking about patients with multimorbidities, Alzheimer’s and so on, but there is a bigger picture, which Dr Kellock clearly described.

I did not put this question to Scottish Care, but I will put it to Mr Wood, Mr Williams or Mr Fraser. If I were to ask Scottish Care whether it is content that the national care home contract suitably remunerates care homes in the third sector, on an equitable basis in relation to the care homes that local authorities run, in the context of safe staffing levels and all the outcomes that we want, would it say that it was happy?

The Convener

I am not sure that we should ask other people to speak on behalf of Scottish Care; its representative has just left us. There is a more general question to be asked about—

Bob Doris

Well, let me ask it in another way. I know, from local care home providers and other care home providers who have contacted me over the years, that providers have issues with the national care home contract. They do not believe that it is necessarily equitable for third sector providers—that is what they have said—and they believe that preferential treatment is given to local authority care homes. How do I know whether that is accurate? I do not.

We know that negotiation goes on between COSLA, the Scottish Government and Scottish Care. That brings us back to the proposed workforce tool. How do we get transparency into a system without some form of diagnostic tool that can take into account the workforce, the skills mix and the workload? I get that it must also take into account the individual circumstances in each care home, but in a way such a tool means that I, as a politician, can say, “Yes, there is transparency; I can see that we are financially remunerating third sector care homes properly.” How can we do that without having a robust, agreed, statutory tool?

The Convener

Does anyone want to respond, in the context of the bill that is before us?

John Wood

We are live to the interplay between the bill and the national care home contract, as my colleagues at Scottish Care would say that they are. Questions about the rate that the national care home contract produces might be for another day, but it is safe to say that we are working closely with Scottish Care to reform the contract and to arrive at a rate for next year and onwards that is evidence based and sustainable. We think that we got a settlement along those lines for this year and that that will be the case from next year, too.

On how we get transparency on staffing levels and the funding that follows from that, while the rates within the national care home contract are a specific issue, there has been a conversation about developing a capacity or capability tool as part of reform of the contract. However, that has happened in isolation from the bill. I do not think that that necessarily needs to change, but it is important that when, further down the line, the Care Inspectorate works with partners across the sector to develop tools, that work is informed by the care home sector and perhaps the national care home contract. The two need to be aware of each other.

David Williams

I just want to reiterate my earlier comment that the legislative and regulatory framework for the provision of care in care home environments, particularly in this instance, is already in place through the Care Inspectorate and the standards for care that the Parliament sets. That framework applies in exactly the same way to the private care home sector, the voluntary care home sector and the local authority-provided care home sector. There is no difference in that respect.

The Convener

Will the bill make any difference to how commissioners—for example, local authorities and integration authorities—commission care and services from the different sectors?

Eddie Fraser

As has been pointed out in a number of submissions, if we go down the route of regulating through legislation certain parts of our nursing workforce—say, those in adult care homes—but not others, that might skew commissioning. We would have to commission for those areas, and there might be other areas of our business that were not regulated and which we could not commission for. That would be a real risk for us, because among those areas might be some that I mentioned earlier that deal with the prevention agenda and help to stop people needing certain services. Complex issues arise from looking at only one part of the issue.

On pay, John Wood made an important point about the national care home contract, but it is also important that we continue to reflect the recent good work on the Scottish living wage and ensure that we can recruit and retain people in social care jobs, particularly in care homes, and can provide continuity of care for tenants. That has been a real challenge for us. The change that we have seen in that respect has, I think, been positive.

David Williams

A number of the submissions express a lot of concern about the financial viability of provision if the legislation goes ahead with insufficient funding from either the commissioning bodies or central Government. It strikes me that, if we in integration authorities are to be tasked with commissioning innovation and services that are changed and transformed, we would rather do that by design—as a result of something that has been well thought out and well planned—than as a consequence of business failure.

Brian Whittle

I note that in the evidence that we have taken from panels on this bill, the terms “innovation” and “flexibility” are continually being brought to the table—it certainly did not take long for those words to arrive in this discussion. Given the recognition of national workforce pressures and the need to rely on a degree of flexibility and innovation, I have to wonder where the bill sits with regard to continuing to deliver all of that.

I also want to ask specifically about the third sector. SCVO has stated that 40,500 people in the third sector work in social care with a huge variety of organisations of different sizes. Does the bill take that, and the possible ramifications of that, into account?

I realise that I have just asked you a lot of questions.

Dr Kellock

It is difficult to see how the bill could take account of all the different types of service provision across the third sector and the public sector in any meaningful way that is not already covered by existing legislation.

Eddie Fraser

Because the majority of our third sector operations are out there in the community, I would say that, at the moment, the bill does not encompass a lot of the work that we commission from the third sector. I recognise that there are some third sector organisations that are still in the care home business, but the vast majority of them operate in the community—they work with people in their own homes—so I think that the bill will have a limited impact on the third sector.

Brian Whittle

Does the bill have the potential to reduce the need for agency staff? That is a key issue. Does the financial memorandum take into account the potential requirement for extra staffing to comply with the bill?

The Convener

Two questions have been asked: the first is whether the bill will increase or reduce the need for agency staff, and the second is about its wider financial implications.

Stuart Bain

At the moment, we already try very hard not to use agency staff. That is driven by the fact that it costs us more to use agency staff rather than by better workforce planning. We do not use agency staff unless we absolutely have to.

The use of agency staff is driven by two things: local market conditions and the kind of work that we are able to offer. The issue of local market conditions has been talked about all morning, so I do not need to go back into that. As far as the work that we can offer is concerned, if we are seeking someone for a couple of shifts or to cover a single night shift, it does not amount to a job for someone. Although we have a pool of casual workers whom we can call on, it is quite an insecure form of work and does not suit many people. People might prefer to register with an agency, because they know that that will enable them to pick up work from a variety of providers, which then means that they are not available for permanent employment by us or anyone else.

That is an inevitable consequence of the way in which care is configured. Care is not delivered in nice, 9-to-5 packages that suit everybody; it depends on the needs of the service user. We have to deliver care at different times, and that does not necessarily suit people’s working patterns. That is what drives the use of agency workers, rather than an inability to plan for the workload per se. As an HR professional, I am very keen on workforce planning and think that it is a good thing to do, but it is not what drives the use of agency staff.

Using casual workers has a bad name when it comes to employment practice and using agency workers has a bad name when it comes to expense, but we use such workers not because we have not thought about it; we use them because the need drives it.

John Wood

In response to the first question, I reiterate Stuart Bain’s point that, in and of itself, the use of agency staff is not necessarily a bad thing. As for whether the bill will reduce our dependency on agency staff, we do not know. I do not know whether evidence has been presented to suggest that it will have an impact on the use of agency staff. I am not shrugging off the question; I simply think that we need to look seriously at whether the bill will add value in that regard. From what we can see, there is no evidence to suggest that it will help to reduce our dependency—if it is a dependency—on agency staff.

On the second question, we are concerned about the financial implications. The previous cabinet secretary made a welcome commitment that the Scottish Government would meet any additional financial burdens. Our concern is that we do not know what those additional burdens will be, but we know that they will relate not simply to the fact that the statutory tool might result in a need for more staff.

The need to train service managers and workforce planners in the use of the tools will create a resource demand, which could be significant given the number of providers that are involved; and once people are trained in the use of the tools, maintaining that strategic capacity will be another resource demand on commissioners.

11:45  

The Convener

Does David Williams wish to contribute?

David Williams

I would only repeat what the previous speakers have said.

Keith Brown

It is pretty clear from COSLA’s submission and from what has been said today that COSLA opposes the bill and cannot identify benefits that will arise from it. Social Work Scotland’s responses today suggest that its position is similar, but its submission suggested areas for amendment. Does Social Work Scotland think that the bill can be improved or that it is not worth doing that?

Dr Kellock

The first point of our position is similar to COSLA’s, as we do not support primary legislation for the proposed purpose. As we have said, sufficient legislation is in place through secondary legislation, and there are the new standards and workforce planning guidance, all of which support safe and effective staffing. That is Social Work Scotland’s main position. However, it is fair to say that we will take a pragmatic approach if the bill is passed.

The main concern that our submission raises is that the exclusion of social work services from the bill could result in the unintended consequence of inequity in resource allocation. Focus and activity could be diverted to numbers for staffing up, and to pursuit of tools that might or might not be effective in the context that we are discussing, which includes community contexts, rather than focus and activity being on the requirement to develop approaches that meet the requirements of the existing legislation on integration and SDS. The bill crosses over the main purpose of the existing legislation, which lends itself well to our pursuing a more outcomes-focused approach and perhaps moving more towards a community social work approach, along with our partners in the public and independent sectors.

The Convener

In short, you would rather not have the bill, but if the bill were to be passed, you would prefer the approach to be even handed.

Dr Kellock

Indeed.

Miles Briggs

I am interested in the unintended consequences that your submissions describe, which we have touched on. East Ayrshire health and social care partnership’s submission makes the point that implementation of the bill could drive

“savings in ... areas to move to areas which are covered by the Bill.”

Will you expand on that? Glasgow city health and social care partnership’s submission raised the concern that

“the legislation will add another process and pressure on the system”.

Will you expand on how those unintended consequences will affect your areas?

Eddie Fraser

I touched on the specific point earlier. If one part of our workforce—nursing—is regulated, we will require to invest to address that, which could skew what we do to work as a team with our allied health professionals and social care staff, and it could affect the amount that we invest in the third sector for our community connector link workers. If one part of the business is regulated and we are required to invest in that, we invest in it; we do not see alternatives.

When we recently recruited for our intermediate care and rehabilitation service, we were flexible, because a range of professionals can support people, as long as they work as part of a team. That involved considering the available workforce to make an impact now, and thinking about the balance between nurses, physios, occupational therapists and some of the senior social care workers, whom we are bringing together. Our concern is that, if one part is regulated, we will be required to do that, which will reduce flexibility in the rest of the multidisciplinary team. That is the specific point that we were trying to make.

David Williams

Another point is that the emphasis in the bill is substantially on the high-cost and intensive provision, which in essence means hospital and residential care. As Eddie Fraser has just highlighted, if the investment needs to be in those areas, that is counterproductive and counterintuitive, given the expected general direction of travel for integration authorities, which is to shift the balance of care and to support more people in the community. Perversely, we will end up taking money and resources from more upstream provision in the community in order to continue to sustain high-cost intensive and institutionalised forms of care.

On the point about other processes and pressures, our experience is that if we are required to do something, we inevitably need to be able to demonstrate that we are delivering it, which requires that processes and procedures be put in place. Resources will probably be required to count our delivery of the required levels of staffing, both in directly provided provision in the council side of the business in health and social care, and in the commissioned and procured services for which we are responsible. That is a bureaucratic burden that we could do without.

Miles Briggs

From what you have said, it seems that you believe that the bill could destabilise or go against the spirit of what we are trying to achieve on health and social care integration—on which we have built consensus—two years into that process.

David Williams

In short, the answer is yes. As colleagues have intimated, for a range of reasons, there is potential to stifle innovation and creativity. There is a requirement and expectation that integration authorities will deliver on transformation, but that cannot happen if there is a top-down stipulation that we must do X, Y and Z to deliver something that is required by legislation. As I said, resource allocation might be focused in a way that is counterproductive to the general direction of travel.

Dr Kellock

We agree with that position; Social Work Scotland shares those concerns.

The Convener

David Williams mentioned the potential to inhibit innovation and flexibility. Do other witnesses wish to comment on the risk of stifling innovation?

Eddie Fraser

I will speak about innovation in the care home sector. We are doing joint work with the Care Inspectorate on physical activity, which is resulting in more integration of care home residents in their communities. Staff and volunteers go out with residents in the communities. One of my concerns about the bill is that it could stifle that. Will the need to look at the number of carers who are in the building prevent us from doing some of that?

In the care home sector, we are becoming much more innovative and thoughtful around self-directed support. It is not as though people just go into a care home and live out their lives there—they have an active life in the home and integrate more into communities. It is not that we do not think that there should be safe staffing in every element of health and social care; it is about the manager on the day being able to have control and say that it is fine for one member of staff to go down the street with somebody because the rest of the care home is stable at that point. That is the type of innovation that is going on in the sector, and we need to be careful that legislation does not cut across that.

Dr Kellock

I absolutely agree with that. The Public Bodies (Joint Working) (Scotland) Act 2014 and the Social Care (Self-directed Support) (Scotland) Act 2013 are both about long-term and fundamental change in what we do in the sector, and the approach for which they provide needs time to bed in. We are still in the early days of understanding what those acts mean for us, particularly given the complex conditions at the moment—people have talked about demographics, the implications of Brexit, workforce availability and so on. The bill is premature, in the context of legislation that is already in place.

David Torrance

Budgets are under constant pressure. Are the anticipated costs of the bill to public bodies, the third sector and businesses realistic? I am thinking in particular about the costs of tool development and staff training.

Stuart Bain

There is an opportunity cost to any activity that we undertake. If care home managers are using a tool, they are not doing something else. Equally, if we ask our admin or HR people to do something, the task will take time from something else that they might be doing, be that working on safeguarding, better recruitment or whatever. Members should not underestimate the size of the task: when something takes a couple of weeks out of even just one person’s working year, that means that something else is not being done.

The Convener

If no one else wants to come in on the costings, I will ask a final question.

Is risk a different concept in the context of care than it is in health? Is that a challenge, and does the bill do anything to support appropriate judgment and the taking on of risk?

Dr Kellock

Risk is certainly a different concept when we are talking about care. We are talking about different settings: the approach in a ward setting in the NHS is very different from the approach in the community, where people live out their lives. People in the community have to be able to take on some level of risk, in a managed way. As the bill is drafted, it does nothing to reassure me that we will be able meaningfully to take account of that.

Eddie Fraser

When we talk about risk in relation to social care, the phrase that comes to mind immediately is “risk enablement”. How do we support people to live out their lives and do the things that they want to do? Sometimes that involves risk. That might mean that a person in a care home is encouraged to walk across the room to get their newspaper, rather than have it handed to them. It might mean enabling someone with dementia to live longer in their own home, where there might be risks, rather than move to a care home. Moving to hospital or a care home is not risk neutral, of course. The question is how we enable people to take on the level of risk that they are capable of taking on. In the context of what we in social care are charged to do, it is about risk enablement.

The Convener

Will the bill impact on that in any way?

Eddie Fraser

It will do so only in that the proposed approach to what we do is more rigid.

David Williams

We need to be careful that the bill will not create the false expectation that we are removing risk, as a consequence of—potentially—putting more staff in place. Eddie Fraser gave the example of the elderly person who is encouraged to cross a room to pick up a newspaper. Such enablement needs to be encouraged and supported. However, the care home could have any number of staff and the person might still fall. It is about how we allow people to live their lives. We need to be careful not to try to do away with risk by legislating.

The Convener

We have a final supplementary from David Stewart.

David Stewart

This will be just a minor and, arguably, simplistic point. Does any panel member draw an inference from the fact that the bill title was originally paraphrased as the ‘safe staffing bill’? I see that the word ‘safe’ has now been removed. I am not sure whether Government lawyers have had a role in that. Do panel members think that there are any implications from the change of name?

12:00  

Eddie Fraser

That reflects what David Williams was saying, to be perfectly honest.

David Williams

I appreciate the change of name, but I guess that the perspective that is still out there is that it is—and will be—considered the “safe staffing legislation”. An element of that is already in play, regardless of what the final title might be.

The Convener

Our final, final question is from Bob Doris.

Bob Doris

In the last session, we were asked about the IoRN tool for working out what staffing would look like, and some concerns were expressed about it. I take fully on board the points that all the witnesses made about their significant concerns on aspects of the bill. However, there was a feeling that the IoRN tool has some deficiencies. Is there a need for a new diagnostic tool and for partnership with care providers and others anyway, irrespective of the bill?

Stuart Bain

I will make a simple anecdotal point. In preparation for the meeting, I spoke to our manager who looks after care homes in Fife about how they assess staffing levels. She highlighted that they use IoRN and a Fife Council tool called the CPAT—carer patient assessment tool. The tools are good at assessing physical need and addressing staffing levels in relation to that. However, they are not so good at assessing need in relation to cognitive behaviour. As we are seeing increasingly frail residents coming into our care homes, that is more and more important. The tool does not capture everything that we need to be concerned about.

The Convener

The last word goes to John Wood.

John Wood

I do not have a professional view on the IoRN tool, with which I am not familiar. However, conversations between officials are going on to look at how either IoRN could be improved or something else might be developed. I do not think that that is imminent: it will be months or years down the line.

The Convener

I thank all our witnesses for another very helpful session. We will adjourn briefly and resume in a few minutes, when we will hear from the cabinet secretary.

12:02 Meeting suspended.  

12:08 On resuming—  

18 September 2018

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Third meeting transcript

The Convener (Lewis Macdonald)

Good morning and welcome to the 24th meeting in 2018 of the Health and Sport Committee. I ask everyone to ensure that mobile phones are set to silent. If you are using electronic devices for social media purposes, please do not film or record proceedings; Parliament will do that for us. Apologies have been received from Miles Briggs and David Torrance.

We move swiftly on to our first item of business, which is another evidence session on the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill. Today’s session will focus on those who regulate, register and oversee the training of social care staff. I welcome to the committee Gordon Paterson, who is chief inspector of adult services at the Care Inspectorate; Phillip Gillespie, who is director of development and innovation at the Scottish Social Services Council; Ann Gow, who is director of nursing, midwifery and allied health professionals at Healthcare Improvement Scotland; and Joy Atterbury, who is a member of the health and medical law sub-committee of the Law Society of Scotland.

I will begin with a general question about the bill, given some of the evidence that the committee has heard so far. The bill covers both health and social care, which have different cultures and different regulatory arrangements, of which you are all, in one way or another, very much aware. Do you accept the view, as set out in the policy memorandum, that the bill has the potential to help bring the regulation of the two sectors closer together? Will the bill make it easier to promote the integration of the two sectors, as laid out in the wider policy objectives?

Who would like to start on those general points about the drawing together of health and social care?

Gordon Paterson (Care Inspectorate)

I am happy to start. Thank you for the opportunity to come along today and provide evidence.

The Care Inspectorate is acutely aware that the quality of care services is critically influenced by high-quality staffing. As the bill has evolved, we have taken a clear position of support for what it seeks to achieve, and we believe that it will achieve its policy objectives.

The social care sector is already regulated, and we believe that the bill as it is currently drafted will enhance and strengthen our existing powers. We believe that it will bring greater focus to the way in which providers are able to determine the optimum skills mix and the optimum numbers of staff to deliver high-quality care. We are very content with the proposition that the process should begin with care homes for adults and, in the first instance—as the policy and financial memoranda indicate—with care homes for older people. We are content, too, that the bill seeks to adopt an enabling approach to allow the Care Inspectorate to work in collaboration with the care sector and with people who experience care. We think that it will bring greater transparency and consistency to the way in which care providers determine the optimum staffing mix for the delivery of high-quality care.

With regard to the bill’s contribution to levelling some of the distinctions that currently exist between health and social care, we think that the fact that it is based on a general set of principles that apply to both health and registered care services is important. Regulation 15 of the Social Care and Social Work Improvement Scotland (Requirements for Care Services) Regulations 2011 sets out the condition that providers should have in place adequate numbers of “suitably qualified” staff. We understand that the bill applies that to health services as it currently applies to social care. We see the bill as providing and adding value through that development.

Phillip Gillespie (Scottish Social Services Council)

Thank you for the opportunity to give evidence this morning.

We believe that there is an effective link between sustainable staffing levels and quality of care, and that the bill offers the opportunity to ensure that staff are appropriately skilled and deployed in the right places at the right time. The bill supports continued progress towards outcome-focused health and social care scrutiny, which we believe is enhanced by the health and social care standards and the new Care Inspectorate methodology.

We welcome the bill’s policy intention on collaborative working across the health and social care system, and its intention to enable a more

“rigorous, evidence-based approach to ... staffing requirements”

for employers. The bill takes account of the needs of service users and is inclusive to that effect, in that it provides for reliance on professional judgment and ultimately creates a safer environment for service users and staff.

We welcome the initial focus on care homes, which provides for a consistent approach that can be applied across integration with new and changing service models and multidisciplinary teams. As a workforce regulator, we welcome the prominence that is given to workforce planning; we publish workforce data on skills and qualifications that can enhance and support workforce and workload planning more generally.

Ann Gow (Healthcare Improvement Scotland)

Healthcare Improvement Scotland welcomes the bill and its guiding principle of providing safe and high-quality services. We also welcome the focus on transparency and on the needs of both service users and staff. We specifically welcome the duty to ensure the use of suitably qualified staff at all times, although we acknowledge that the common staffing method as laid out in the bill does not entirely support that, and we are currently working with the policy team to look at how we ensure that the next iteration of the bill responds to dynamic day-to-day staffing needs in the national health service.

We acknowledge and fully support the use of a triangulated approach, rather than simply the use of a tool, in the common staffing method. In the committee’s previous evidence sessions on the bill, which I watched, there was a lot of focus on the tool and the numbers, but the triangulation of quality outcomes with the views of patients and staff will enable boards, at the end of the process, to come to a decision on which staff are needed for specific services with specific local needs, and to put in place governance around that. Having previously been a senior nurse in territorial boards, I have used the tool for nursing and found it very successful, and I think that we can use a similar method to assure and improve services across the NHS.

We welcome the pivotal role for Healthcare Improvement Scotland in implementing this key piece of legislation, and we believe that it will be a key driver in assuring both service users and staff across both sectors that care is safe, effective and person centred. Our role is outlined further in the policy and financial memoranda. We are being given powers similar to those of the Care Inspectorate—the roles should mirror each other, and we believe that the bill will provide vital regulation to allow us to work better together across the health and social care sectors. That is important from the point of view of patients and service users and of staff. It really should not matter where in the social sector people are looked after: they should be entitled to good care and high-quality outcomes, and to an assurance that the right levels of staff will be in place to look after them.

Overall, HIS welcomes the legislation. We feel that it fits with and supports our functions and that it will provide real benefits for staff and patients alike.

The Convener

You used an interesting phrase when you spoke about the further work that you felt was necessary on the common staffing method: you said that you were looking forward to the “next iteration” of the bill. Do you think that a significant change in the bill is required in order to achieve that objective, or would you look to secondary legislation?

Ann Gow

I would leave it to the policy team and legal colleagues to decide what needs to be in the bill and what needs to be in guidance. As I understand it, the common staffing method as outlined in the bill will give us an establishment. It might say that, if we have between 25 and 30 patients in each ward, we need between 28 and 30 nurses. That is how things have worked until now. However, that would not tell us how to deploy those nurses or provide any assurance around that. That approach will now extend to other staff groups. Further provisions could be either in the bill or in guidance. As I said, we are currently working with the policy team to ensure that the method provides not only for sufficient people on the roster, but for sufficient people at all times who are adequately trained to look after people or provide care in the social sector.

Joy Atterbury (Law Society of Scotland)

Good morning. The Law Society of Scotland is grateful for the opportunity to be here. My substantive role is as head of litigation at the NHS central legal office, but I am here today as a member of the Law Society’s health and medical law sub-committee. Our remit is to look at developments in law and policy in the health and medical law field in the interests of both the public and the profession. You have already heard from the bodies that represent health professionals, and they have submitted written evidence. As a Law Society committee, we have looked at the potential legal effects of the bill.

The aim of the bill is clearly to provide a statutory basis for appropriate staffing in health and care settings. The guiding principles are set out; however, they are very general and multifactorial, and they recognise the need to balance competing priorities. The real point of the bill is to pave the way for the later introduction of regulations that will set out how appropriate staffing is to be achieved and specify the creation of the model and the frequency with which bodies will have to use it.

The policy memorandum refers to a

“policy intention … to enable a rigorous, evidence-based approach to decision making relating to staffing requirements”,

but the bill does not show us what the model is going to look at. As a result, we feel that the bill raises for consideration during this period of scrutiny a series of questions that may be regarded as significant. They relate to whether the policy objective, which we absolutely accept is laudable, will be achieved. The issues include the bureaucratic burden; the financial resource implications; whether a single tool could deal with geographic and cultural variation across Scotland; and the impact on training needs, not only locally in the use of the tool but at a national level with regard to the availability of training places to enable staff to meet the bill’s requirements.

We also considered the mechanisms for oversight that might be proposed. Would they be restricted to the reporting mechanisms that are contained in proposed new section 12IE of the National Health Service (Scotland) Act 1978, or is it intended that there will be sanctions in the event of non-compliance? Is it intended that any perceived failure to comply with the guiding principles should form the basis for challenge by way of judicial review or provide support for allegations of breach of duty within civil litigation? The bill will stand or fall by the efficacy and robustness of the tools that will be imposed as a consequence of the powers that it sets out, and there is a danger of inflexibility if those tools cannot adapt to changing or unusual circumstances.

Having considered the bill without sight of the regulations, we concluded that effective scrutiny of it by the professions, the public and the committee will be extremely challenging, and we think that there would be considerable merit in undertaking more detailed scrutiny and further consultation once the regulations are in place.

Emma Harper (South Scotland) (SNP)

The overarching aim of the bill is to use evidence-based workforce planning tools that will allow us to build and develop healthcare, which is evolving all the time. I am interested to hear about the positives of the bill, and about what is missing and may need to be added.

Ann Gow

With regard to workforce planning and the evidence base, the bill starts from a very positive place. Of course, I have a bias, as I am a nurse, but I have chaired the development of the community nursing tool so I have fairly intimate knowledge of how such tools have been developed and of the work that has been done in nursing over the past 10 to 12 years. The tools are based on current workload, which is based on the needs of the patient population that the nurses and midwives who use the tools are looking after—they take into account the whole workload. As I said earlier, the triangulation with quality outcomes is also very positive and will allow boards and integration joint boards to be flexible in how they use the tools and the numbers.

10:15  

That is all very positive but, as I said, there are gaps around dynamic day-to-day management. For instance, what does someone do when they come on shift and a couple of people are off sick? What happens in an acute hospital during a very busy period in the middle of the winter? How do we provide cover if someone on a night shift goes off? How do we provide assurance that people will have adequately trained staff to look after them 24 hours a day, seven days a week, in health and care services? As I said, we are doing a bit of work with the policy team, as part of a wider group, because we recognise that there is a gap in the bill and in the guidance. There are other gaps that relate to tools for the care sector and for the wider health sector, such as multidisciplinary tools and tools that cover non-nursing and midwifery disciplines.

Emma Harper

The policy memorandum mentions that nursing has had the tools for 10 years—they have already been implemented, which is a great place to start. There are more health employees, or nurses, than allied health professionals. The whole process will allow other tools to be developed for allied health professionals, so as we move forward we will develop and include other tools in regulations. Is that not how we will manage it?

Ann Gow

Yes, there is a process for the inclusion of other tools; I am talking about what is in the bill as it stands. Having listened to the committee’s previous evidence sessions, I believe that there is an overemphasis on the existing tools and on the methodology to date. Things might change depending on the evidence base, so we need a bit more flexibility. Nurses and doctors are mentioned, but we need to emphasise more strongly other disciplines and groups in the NHS, such as allied health professionals and pharmacists, who are also critical to the safety of, and the quality of care for, people in our sector.

The Convener

Either Phillip Gillespie or Gordon Paterson can comment from a care sector point of view.

Phillip Gillespie

The social services sector in particular is quite a diverse sector with a lot of different employers and organisations of different sizes. The tools can help to start to align them to the national health and social care standards, because they focus on what matters to the individual. From our perspective, the tools fit nicely with our codes of practice on the values, behaviours, skills and competencies that workers are required to have in delivering care. There is good alignment between the development of tools and standards in the bill and our codes of practice. Given the diversity of our sector, we have to be absolutely flexible with regard to the different types of tools that are required in different settings. The process needs to be sector led, driven by the sector’s needs and supported by the SSSC and the Care Inspectorate.

The Convener

Alex Cole-Hamilton has a brief supplementary.

Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD)

Good morning. Ann Gow, in her opening remarks and in her answer to Emma Harper, talked about the skills mix and said that there might be a gap in the legislation in that regard. We are very good at defining the tools and the appropriate or optimum staff capacity numbers, but do we need to amend the bill to ensure that there is an appropriate blend of training in the staff cohort?

Ann Gow

Yes—the wording could be amended slightly to make that more overt. The tools came from a specific place 12 years ago—they were developed because of things that had happened or were discovered in large-scale reviews. In Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust, for instance, there was a strong link between harm to patients and nursing numbers. The evidence shows that, when nursing numbers in particular are low, there is greater harm to patients. Mortality and morbidity go up, people fall more and it is not recognised that people are getting sicker. That is where the tools came from; it was very much about harm prevention.

The bill goes a step beyond that to look at quality of care overall and the general wellbeing of both staff and patients, which requires a much more multidisciplinary approach. Having listened to what other people have said about the bill, I think that it possibly does not describe that approach in the way that it should. It could be reworded—I will leave that to my legal colleagues.

The Convener

Does Gordon Paterson have a view?

Gordon Paterson

I want to supplement that answer and respond to Emma Harper’s question. It is important to recognise that the bill articulates the need for “safe and high-quality services”, which is not simply about keeping people safe by prescribing minimum numbers of staff. As Phillip Gillespie indicated, high-quality services are defined—as they should be—by the new health and care standards. When we work with the sector to look at the development of tools, we will not merely be asking what the minimum number of staff should be to keep people safe. We will look at the mix of staff, including who should perform which roles and who is deployed to do which tasks with which objectives, and those objectives should be about our ambition to meet the health and care standards. They should be about ensuring that people who use care services have good lives, rather than simply being provided with good services. Those people should not be defined by what they lack—they should instead be seen as people with assets, gifts, experience and ambitions.

When we describe “high-quality services” with regard to our care home population, we mean that people should experience community connectedness and should be included in their local communities and be supported to live good lives. We very much welcome the fact that the bill refers to “high-quality services” and that its provisions are linked to the health and care standards.

David Stewart (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)

I thank the panel for their contributions today. Most of my questions are about Healthcare Improvement Scotland, so I am afraid that Ann Gow is in the hot seat, but I would welcome contributions from any other panel members. Ann, can you explain and amplify HIS’s role in monitoring staffing levels?

Ann Gow

To date, our role in monitoring has been via our inspection regime. As we develop our quality-of-care approach to assurance and scrutiny, about which the committee heard when it was doing work on clinical governance, the bill, with the tools and the common staffing method, will add for us the ability to look generally at the quality outcomes within a board or a system and align them with the use of the common staffing method. It will enable us to triangulate some of those outcomes with the views of staff and patients, so that what happens in the development of the tools mirrors what happens in the service. We can then come up with some sort of conclusion, which we can publish and make publicly available, on the balance between staffing, skill mix, quality outcomes and the views of patients and staff in a very general sense.

In addition, if we have to do specific thematic inspections, the bill will allow us to do a much deeper dive into staffing and the effect that it has on a particular area. That would include SAERs—significant adverse event reviews, for those who are not aware of the term—as well as maternity services and cancer services. It will allow us to align workforce numbers, the workforce skill mix—if we get the tools right—and quality outcomes, and it will give us an extra piece of the jigsaw so that we can provide the necessary open and transparent public assurance.

David Stewart

You touched on staffing tools. As you will know from watching our previous evidence sessions, we have heard a lot of evidence about tools. One of the issues that has come up in oral and written evidence concerns the difficulty of trying to get a tool or tools that would work for both NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde and NHS Western Isles. Is that a fair comment on the previous evidence that we have taken?

Ann Gow

I have worked with the tools, and because they are based on current workload and involve professional judgment, they should be variable enough to use in NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde and in NHS Orkney. There is enough there in that respect.

A lot of people have been focusing only on the number, which on its own would not give us that variability, but the professional judgment and quality-outcome parts of the triangulated method allow for local variability. I am thinking of areas in which I have had professional oversight in the past. For example, for a chemotherapy ward with an out-patient department, the tool would give an average number for a ward of that size. However, because I know that I am running an out-patient department at the same time, my professional judgment would allow me to say that I need an extra five staff in the mornings when out-patients are coming in. That approach should allow for variation across different population groups. Wards certainly vary in size and quality outcomes, as do community teams, but the triangulated method should allow for variability across the board. It remains to be seen whether the same method will work for joint and integrated tools, but that is a piece of work that we could carry out in the future.

David Stewart

Am I right in thinking that HIS is the main organisation for developing and scrutinising the various tools that are available across Scotland?

Ann Gow

We will be at some point in the future, depending on what is in the bill.

David Stewart

So I will be right in the future, but I am not currently right.

Ann Gow

Yes—at the moment, we are scrutinising workforce as part of the overall approach to quality. Development of the tool currently sits with the workforce team, which sits within the chief nursing officer directorate.

David Stewart

Apart from health boards, who are your stakeholders in developing tools?

Ann Gow

In the development of tools, health boards are obviously stakeholders, as are other employers or managers of IJBs, in addition to patients, staff groups and unions. In the future, the Care Inspectorate will also be a stakeholder, given our duty to co-operate with it in the joint development of tools within the integration space.

David Stewart

I have a final question. Again, as I understand it, HIS is a key scrutiny body for healthcare.

Ann Gow

Yes.

David Stewart

How can the public be reassured, first, that staffing is adequate across Scotland, and secondly, that they have some role in the process? In other words, what consultation has there been specifically on the type of tool that we are using across Scotland?

Ann Gow

Your question about consultation on the tools that we currently use across Scotland is probably more for the existing team. I cannot give you a detailed answer on that.

With regard to transparency for the public on the work of Healthcare Improvement Scotland and what we hope to do in the future in scrutinising the tools, we publish reports, and we ask service users about the quality of their services as part of our quality-of-care reviews, our Healthcare Environment Inspectorate inspections and other inspections. In the bill or the policy memorandum—I cannot remember which—there is an obligation on boards to report annually on whether they have used the tools. Again, we believe that that will provide for more public scrutiny on whether staffing levels are right and whether adequate attention has been paid to them.

David Stewart

I did say that that was my final question, but I have a final final question. Obviously the public is very interested in this area—I will rephrase my question slightly. In my understanding, certainly from casework in my region, many constituents will be interested not in management tools but in knowing that if they, or their granny or auntie or uncle, go into a care home or hospital setting, it will be adequately staffed. All the committee members find that staffing levels come up in casework—there are complaints about staffing, and we all know about the wider picture. Given what you have observed in your role in HIS, is that a reasonable observation?

Ann Gow

Yes, it is a reasonable observation. In my role in HIS, and previously as a nurse in the system, I have found that people look first at the quality of the outcomes and the care that they have received. If those elements are not right, they start to unpick the process and ask whether enough staff were looking after them or their relative. In other systems, and in some units in the NHS in Scotland, staffing numbers are published on ward doors—they show the levels that patients can expect today and what they should be able to expect in general. It is not in the bill, and we have not looked at it, but as part of our excellence-in-care approach, making available to the public information on what we should and do have is an option, and some boards are working towards that.

10:30  

Brian Whittle (South Scotland) (Con)

I am interested in the current situation. In particular, how does the Care Inspectorate assess whether a provider has appropriate staffing? What support do you give to providers in relation to staff planning?

Gordon Paterson

That links to Mr Stewart’s question about our role in monitoring staffing methods. There are approximately 832 care homes for older people in Scotland, and we inspect them at least once every year—often twice and, in some situations, three or four times.

We inspect for outcomes. We are concerned about how people’s lives and wellbeing are being enhanced by the experience of living with the service. We recognise that the bill and the tools are not about outcomes, but we are sensitive to the relationship between inputs, processes, resources, outputs and outcomes. We see the tools as an input, we see the application of those tools as a process, and we see the determination that they bring as an output in terms of the number of staff working to do various tasks at various levels with various skills.

The bill in itself will not guarantee outcomes, but it will contribute to that chain, which is probably only as strong as its weakest link. We view the outcomes in relation to how people experience care, which we pick up through our inspection activity. We know that having large numbers of staff does not guarantee outcomes, but not having any staff guarantees poor outcomes. There are balances to be struck and judgments to be made about what makes a difference and what contributes to good care.

We think that the bill and the validated tools, which do not currently exist in the care home sector, will add value and contribute to improved outcomes. We see the provisions working closely with other developments that are under way. For example, we are involved in work with Scottish Care and the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities on a dependency tool, which is a means of assessing the level of dependence—I would prefer to say “independence” or “interdependence”—of people living in care homes. However, that does not lend itself to making determinations on how many staff are needed to meet the aggregated needs of a care home population. We see the tool as part of a package or raft of measures that will contribute towards improved outcomes for people.

Brian Whittle

We all agree that positive outcomes are the most important thing that you have highlighted. As you said, when the Care Inspectorate goes in, it considers outcomes. I presume that if the outcomes are not up to standard, you work your way back. I am interested in how you feel the bill and the way in which you assess things will enhance and improve that process.

Gordon Paterson

We think that the tools, once they are developed, will bring consistency and transparency, and that they will add something to the measures that are available to care home providers to ensure that they are providing good-quality care. When it comes to cases in which we identify failings, under section 44 of the Public Services Reform (Scotland) Act 2010, the Care Inspectorate has a statutory duty on further improvement. We do not take the view that we are led only by compliance; we think about how we can support improvement, how we can advise and how we can co-ordinate the improvement activities of others so that the quality of care improves.

We have that commitment and that obligation, and we very much see our inspection activity as providing a diagnostic. Beyond that, it is our responsibility to ensure that improvement is made, either by ourselves—we have the improvement support team—by the IJB, by the provider or by those who commission the services.

Only in extreme circumstances would we take the ultimate sanction of proposing to cancel a care home’s registration. Our initial steps are always about making the situation better, even if a service is highly performing, and showcasing what is working well, so that those in the rest of the sector can benefit and learn from that in order to improve their services.

We also have enforcement action, which involves setting out requirements where there has been a breach of a regulation, or, potentially, applying for an improvement notice, which gives a care provider notice that we might seek to withdraw their registration if they do not achieve improvements within a set timescale. A raft of measures is available to us.

On the bill, we would commend a tool that adds value to care providers and enables them to better understand the needs of their residents and how those might best be met through a combination of different methods in relation to skill mix and staffing.

Brian Whittle

Given the Care Inspectorate’s role in that sort of continuous improvement, is legislation required to get to that end goal?

Gordon Paterson

We think that the proposed legislation will strengthen and enhance that role and give greater focus to the importance of having appropriate staffing. We think that the tools, once they are developed, will be an enabler. We are keen that the bill should be framed in such a way that it does not prescribe.

The tool, like any tool, should be fit to do the job that it is required to do and should add value when it is deployed by people who have the competence and skills to use it. We are very keen that it should be seen as something that will support the sector in developing effective staffing models.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I will follow on from Brian Whittle’s questioning to the Care Inspectorate; I then have a broader question for the rest of the panel.

It is fair to say that Gordon Paterson’s organisation has been on a bit of a journey with the bill. In your original response to the Scottish Government consultation, you talked about the anxieties that your organisation had about a further statutory requirement on the care sector, but it seems that your position has moved a bit. In your joint submission with the SSSC, you say that you welcome the bill. What has changed to bring you on board?

Gordon Paterson

Our position has evolved as the proposals have evolved. The original consultation discussed the application of existing tools to social care. By that, we understood that the nursing tools would be imposed on the social care sector. We were not confident that there was an understanding, in the consultation exercise, of the complexity and diversity of the social care sector.

We have become content with where the bill has settled, in so far as care services are already regulated but the proposals would enhance that regulatory power, and we see enormous potential in the narrowing down of the definition of “care service” to care homes for adults and older people. We have revised our position as the Scottish Government has developed its proposition.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I will turn to my broader question. The committee has great concerns—we have had them since Parliament first sat after the election—about the pressures on the integration agenda and the fact that silos are still very much in our care landscape. Are you content that the bill does nothing to compound that silo culture? Does it offer an opportunity to break down the walls?

Phillip Gillespie

I welcome the opportunity. I said earlier that models of care are changing and becoming more integrated. They lend themselves well to multidisciplinary teams. The nature of the care system is changing, and the bill offers a more consistent approach. If the tone of the bill is right, it is about involving employers and organisations in developing the tools that work for them, with local variation.

The focus on care homes is really important, because there are huge dependency levels in care homes. That is variable, and the tools will offer flexibility to understand the levels of need in care homes and respond accordingly. The public would expect that in relation to safety, too.

Ann Gow

The key lies in the close working relationship between the Care Inspectorate and HIS, with both organisations’ implicit understanding of both health and social care. On the idea of giving the development of the tools entirely to one or other organisation, Gordon Paterson’s feedback on earlier iterations of the bill and the wording and language that were used—the proposals were written very much from an NHS perspective—gives us a bit of an insight into how important it is to have people who understand the culture and the language that is used in each agency, and then to bring things together on the front line, ensuring that we get the right numbers and the right skills mix of staff.

I think that the bill will enhance such an approach and enhance care. If we get it right and ensure that it focuses on good-quality care, which is the term that we generally use in the NHS, and on good outcomes, which is the focus in social care, the bill will enable much more and much better front-line working.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I see that you are also responsible for AHPs in HIS. Is that right?

Ann Gow

Yes.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

Are you concerned about their slight absence from the bill?

Ann Gow

This is not just about AHPs. We need to start to discuss multidisciplinary teams within the NHS, as well as multidisciplinary and multisector teams when it comes to IJBs, the care sector and elsewhere.

I can see where the proposals have come from. To go back to one of my earlier answers, the tools initially came from areas where it was safety critical to get minimum numbers of nurses—and doctors, according to the next thinking—to reduce harm. If we are talking about quality of care, quality outcomes and wellbeing for staff and patients, then not just AHPs but all staff groups need to be considered within the NHS and the integrated context. One of the changes to the bill that is perhaps required is to have wording that reflects that and gives us the flexibility to ensure that we have the right skill mix of staff, depending on which setting we are working in.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

Do you think that the bill can be amended to cover the concerns of AHPs and the multidisciplinary workforce that you describe?

Ann Gow

Yes.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I look forward to working with you on that.

The Convener

Will Joy Atterbury comment from the Law Society’s point of view? At the beginning, you talked about the need to know what is going to be in regulations in order to have full scrutiny. What is your view of the bill? Clearly, there is scope for amendment. How much amendment do you think it requires in order to be fit for scrutiny, quite apart from being fit for purpose?

Joy Atterbury

Our difficulty is that the bill is stand alone. I am not aware of that ever happening before. If we had had a set of draft regulations to go with it at this stage, it would have been very much easier to answer the questions that have been raised with us. To be fair, most of the questions have been reflected by colleagues on the panel.

The whole issue of competing priorities and implications for multidisciplinary teams and professionals allied to health had occurred to us. If there is an opportunity to introduce that issue into the bill, then a number of the concerns that colleagues have expressed could be resolved and we would not have the gap in understanding that will continue to exist until the regulations are drafted.

The Convener

That is helpful. Thank you very much.

Will Phillip Gillespie talk about the current role of the SSSC and the extent to which you anticipate having a role in the development of workforce tools as they are applied to the social care sector?

Phillip Gillespie

We hold considerable intelligence on the social services sector workforce. More than 100,000 workers are registered with us. We hold a wide range of information about skills and competencies, where they are and where they are employed. Our role in supporting the national workforce plan is to provide data for planners at local level, so that they can do integrated planning. We also publish official statistics on the number of mental health officers and on workforce skills, so we have a rich library of information that we can lend to support workforce planning more generally. We are doing work under the national workforce plan, which goes in tandem with the bill.

The Convener

To what extent do you foresee having an active role in developing tools for the care sector?

Phillip Gillespie

We would certainly want to be a key partner in that regard, working alongside the Care Inspectorate. That was outlined in our submission. We see ourselves having a key role.

10:45  

Sandra White (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

I thank everyone on the panel for their evidence. I want to pick up on something that Phillip Gillespie said. The committee has read that the Scottish Social Services Council desires to take a key role, along with the Care Inspectorate. It is unfortunate that the SSSC is not really mentioned in the bill. Is that an oversight? Should that be changed, considering what Phillip just said about starting to work together to ensure that staffing is safe and appropriate?

Phillip Gillespie

I welcome the prominence that is given to workforce planning and workload planning. We have a key role, which needs to be enhanced within the bill. We already have powers under the Regulation of Care (Scotland) Act 2001 for workforce planning. We would like those powers to be enhanced, as we are a key contributor to workforce planning and workload planning in supporting employers and working with the Care Inspectorate.

Sandra White

I see you nodding your head, Mr Paterson—I assume that you are in agreement.

Gordon Paterson

Absolutely. We have made representations to the bill team on the matter. We think that the bill should explicitly refer to the SSSC as being among the partners with which we would collaborate on the development of tools. If that does not come about through amendment, it might well be articulated in the regulations and guidance that follow.

Sandra White

I want to go further on how the bill could—and, I hope, will—work in relation to the SSSC. How will the bill as introduced help to balance the duties of the SSSC regarding regulation, registration and that type of thing? Mr Gillespie mentioned the diverse workforce in social care and spoke about motivation and how some people want to spend their career. We know that people who work in social care are often over 45. How will the bill affect what you are doing just now? Will it enhance it? Should there be changes?

Phillip Gillespie

I think that it will complement the work that is being done on national workforce planning. We are leading on the development of career pathways for social services so that people can plot a career in care and, potentially, a career in health. There have been attempts to integrate some of those pathways.

As part of our function, we investigate fitness-to-practise cases and potential staffing issues. We share that intelligence with the Care Inspectorate. We have a body of evidence that will be helpful to employers. Ultimately, the data that we hold on the workforce and its diversity will support workforce planners and IJBs at a local level.

Sandra White

To go further on that point, if the SSSC is a stakeholder and that is specified in the bill or its subordinate legislation, I assume that others—including you, Ms Gow—will work towards providing for training and so on, because the development of the social care workforce is an issue. How will the bill help to do that? Will it be helpful in that respect?

Phillip Gillespie

It will give employers an overview of the skills that people have and the qualifications that they are working towards. As you know, the people who are registered with us either have a qualification or are working towards a qualification. That intelligence will be helpful to employers in considering what they need to do and how they should plan to ensure that they have the right people with the right qualifications and skills to carry out the job. We have that information, which we can share with employers with regard to their workforce planning.

Sandra White

I have a question for all the panel—I am sorry to have kept asking questions of Mr Gillespie. Brexit is looming on the horizon, and we are potentially facing shortages of social care staff. What outcome will there be if Brexit happens and the bill goes through? Do you have any thoughts on that, in particular on the lack of staff?

The Convener

We will not have a debate on Brexit, but—

Sandra White

It is part of my question.

The Convener

If there are aspects of the bill that are affected by it, the panel should feel free to comment.

Gordon Paterson

It is important that we recognise the significant staffing crisis in social care at the moment, which will no doubt be compounded by Brexit when—if—it happens. It says in paragraph 80 of the financial memorandum to the bill:

“this legislation is not intended to address”

the wider recruitment challenges. That does not mean that those are not important but, as Phillip Gillespie said, work is going on elsewhere in relation to the national health and social care workforce plan that seeks to address some of those challenges or mitigate the risks.

For us, the bill will potentially identify the challenge. It will potentially identify a shortage in some areas of the workforce. It might not do that, however. It might identify that there are more effective ways of using the staff that we have at the moment to work to grade or at a different level and deliver good care through different configurations and arrangements.

The committee might be interested in work that we did a couple of years ago with 40 care providers in Scotland, which were struggling to recruit nurses. They were overreliant on agency nurses, which was costing a significant amount of money and not providing good continuity of care. We worked with 40 care homes that were looking to reconfigure their staffing approach by reducing nursing, bringing in peripatetic nursing and nursing assistants, upskilling senior carers, reconfiguring how they provided nursing overnight and examining how community nurses could inreach. That might not necessarily be provided by the care homes themselves. We worked with the care homes and tried to enable innovation, recognising that safety and good quality of care must be maintained. They were able to reconfigure. We required them to have arrangements in place to discuss their proposals with the local commissioners, as well as quality indicators and measures to determine whether or not they were effective.

A year later, we went back to inspect those 40 care homes. The grades of four of them were lower after we inspected, nine of them had improved and 27 remained the same. Four out of any 40 care services’ grades would change over the course of a year—they would deteriorate. However, the care providers were able to look differently at how they configured their existing staff, to be innovative, to bring forward solutions, to engage with partners and to develop an approach that recognised the importance of nursing but acknowledged how scarce that resource was, such that the resource was used only on tasks that needed to be done by a nurse.

Only 40 care homes sought to do that with us. We would like to create the conditions in which all care homes can have a tool that allows them to do that in a more consistent way and deliver outputs relating to the numbers they need, as well as outcomes for ensuring that people are getting good care.

Sandra White

The panel members can just nod your heads or whatever in response to this question. Do you think that the bill will include that? Will it enhance the innovation that Gordon Paterson described?

Gordon Paterson

I think so—by designing, co-producing and collaborating with Scottish Care, COSLA, organisations in the sector, care providers, SSSC and HIS, as we did when we developed the care standards jointly with HIS on behalf of the Government. That means having a real collaborative approach. We think that we will be able to develop a tool that will add value and that people will want to use. Greater consistency and transparency will be brought about by using a validated tool. We will be clearer—linking back to your question about workforce planning—about where the staffing pressures are. That work can be taken elsewhere as regards workforce developments nationally.

Ann Gow

As Gordon Paterson said, the bill does not compel employers to have a specific number of staff; it encourages them to do some of the redesign work to ensure that services are safe and of high quality. If we get the workforce tools right across the whole multidisciplinary sector, that should give us the information on a deep dive into workload that will allow us to ensure that we have the right people with the right skills in the right place and to make the most of our workforce in future.

Whether that is affected by Brexit or by population changes, as people get older and we have fewer and fewer young people coming into each sector, the bill should allow us to become more efficient in the use of our workforce as it stands.

Emma Harper

Just to reiterate, the policy memorandum uses the words,

“multi-agency working across a range of professionals and staff groups.”

It refers to the

“ability to redesign and innovate”,

using

“multi-disciplinary and multi-agency teams”.

That is all in the policy memorandum: it specifically considers

“the emergence of local multi-disciplinary teams”,

so that those from

“both health and social care backgrounds”

are able to develop tools together.

I am aware that different urban accident and emergency units, urban med-surg units and even care homes might use different staff to do different things. Some A and E units might have more nurses or doctors than others. Is not the purpose to have a standardised and evidence-based approach to staffing, which can be flexible between urban and rural settings, so that we can have a proper basis for developing guidance on safe staffing?

Ann Gow

I think that the bill will enhance some things, for instance in relation to the multidisciplinary issues that the IJBs are dealing with at the moment, and which we have dealt with in both sectors. It is about developing the tools in the right way. If we are developing a multidisciplinary tool for a multidisciplinary team, that relates to safety and quality of outcome for the people who use the service. What can only a social worker do under the regulations that they use? What can only a nurse do? What can only a doctor do? Then, what are the bits that we can blur around the edges? What can support services do?

It should not matter whether someone lives in a rural or an urban area: their right to safe care should be the same. The key will be in local flexibility and in ensuring that people are using their small number of highly qualified staff to do the bits that only they can do.

Keith Brown (Clackmannanshire and Dunblane) (SNP)

I thank the panel for their contributions. It has been really useful to hear general support, and to hear examples of where you are not content with the bill and your constructive suggestions for it.

Many previous panellists have mentioned the interests of patients. For the first time, Ann Gow has mentioned the views of patients. How can the views of patients be taken into account, either in the development of the tools or in the implementation of the bill?

Ann Gow

Again, as I said, we have not been responsible for tools up to now, but that would certainly be our intent. Within Healthcare Improvement Scotland we have the Scottish health council and a network of external advisers, who come from various patient groups. As we are developing tools, it will be our intention to ensure that patients and staff are involved in the development of the tools and to consult people within services as we offer assurance and improvements in how the tools are used.

Gordon Paterson

Andrew Strong, who gave evidence to the committee last week on behalf of the Health and Social Care Alliance Scotland, commended the work that the Care Inspectorate and Healthcare Improvement Scotland have done in developing the national health and social care standards. We can very much see how the same collaborative approach could be brought to the development of staffing methodologies.

That involves having a high-level stakeholder group and engaging with the sector. It involves organisations that represent people who experience care and use services, as well as those people themselves, collectively coming together to determine what is needed and how it can best be brought into effect. We would very much take the collaborative approach that we adopted in the context of developing the care and health standards with Healthcare Improvement Scotland, which has been commended.

There are other examples. One of the criticisms that the committee has heard—or one of the cautions that the committee has been asked to consider—concerns the extent to which a regulator would be marking its own homework if it were to design tools and then inspect against them. We have done that—we do that all the time. We do not think that it is a conflict of interest; we think that it is about our interest in ensuring that care is good.

Jointly with the SSSC, we have developed national guidance about safer recruitment—it is about how to recruit in a way that ensures that people are going through the disclosure process, and in a way that builds in balances and checks. We have brought that guidance to the market, and it is now universally used and accepted as a good practice guide. When we come to inspect, we can tell people, “If you aren’t aware of good practice, here’s a guide. Maybe you need to think about that in improving your services.” We do not see a conflict there.

11:00  

The Convener

I take you back to Keith Brown’s question: how will you ensure that the views of those who use services are included in the development of tools?

Gordon Paterson

We will do that through the tool development process, by engaging with people directly and involving those who represent them. We do that all the time when we go in to inspect services: we speak to people who use services, and we speak to carers. We have recently developed a new methodology, which is about inspecting through the lens of the new care and health standards; it significantly shifts the focus of our activity towards people’s actual experience of care rather than policies and procedures.

The Convener

I thank our witnesses for their evidence this morning, which is much appreciated. No doubt we will hear from you all again as the bill process continues.

11:01 Meeting suspended.  

11:04 On resuming—  

The Convener

I welcome this morning’s second panel of witnesses: Karen Wilson, director of nursing, midwifery and allied health professions, NHS Education for Scotland; Joyce Thompson, chair of the British Dietetic Association Scotland board, and dietetic consultant in public health nutrition, NHS Tayside; Dr Tony Axon, national officer Scotland, the Society and College of Radiographers; and Tracey Dalling, regional organiser for local government, Unison Scotland.

I will begin with the same question that I asked at the start of the previous evidence session. Broadly speaking, the policy memorandum proposes that the bill can help to bring together the different regulatory systems that apply to health and social care and help to cross some of those bridges. Do you believe that that is right and do you think that the changes in the regulatory regime that the bill introduces will help with the process of the integration of health and social care?

Karen Wilson (NHS Education for Scotland)

I am speaking on behalf of NHS Education for Scotland, which is a national health board with a crucial role in the education, training and development of Scotland’s healthcare staff. NES has been involved in supporting nursing and midwifery workforce planning since 2008, with the co-production and publication of the first edition of the “Nursing and Midwifery Workload and Workforce Planning Toolkit”. I have the learning toolkit with me today.

We are currently contributing to the national programme through membership of the steering group and by chairing the education and training sub-group. Although NES stands for NHS Education for Scotland, we have been working very closely with the Scottish Social Services Council and other care providers outwith the NHS to ensure that when we produce educational or development materials they are suitable for all health and care professionals. We will be producing things to support the bill, to ensure that it is suitable for health and care.

Joyce Thompson (British Dietetic Association Scotland)

I am here on behalf of the British Dietetic Association Scotland board. For those people who are less familiar with dietetics, I will say a few words about it. It is one of the allied health professions and—unusually—we are a nutrition body that is statutorily regulated. Our function is to translate everything to do with food and nutrition into practical guidance for people. As autonomous practitioners, we are able to assess, diagnose and treat nutrition and diet problems, at both the individual level and the population level.

As we said in our written response, the BDA welcomes the bill’s aim to provide safe and high-quality services. Like the previous witnesses, I want to highlight that we are one of the allied health professions and we want consideration to be given to the development of the tools and the application of the methodologies in relation to professions beyond nursing.

Dr Tony Axon (Society and College of Radiographers)

Radiographers are mainly hospital based, which makes it slightly difficult to answer the question, as we are not really in the social care sphere. We are keen to see the development of the tools to work with radiographers and other allied health professionals. We support the principles of the bill.

Tracey Dalling (Unison Scotland)

My contribution spans all of the workforce, no matter where or in what setting they are delivering care. In answer to your question about bringing together the different regulatory systems, I am not sure that the bill will do that. The regulatory systems are the regulatory systems. Some of the workforce is not covered by the systems and will not be until 2020—I am thinking specifically of home care, which is personal care that is delivered within the client’s house. Each regulatory body will have its own arrangements for the assessment of an individual’s fitness to practice.

The integration element is critical in terms of service delivery and contract compliance. We know from our experience of workers delivering social care in a home setting that contract compliance is threadbare, in relation to pay for the individuals and in relation to some of the practices, such as 15-minute visits and a lack of general equipment and time to deliver the service.

I am not sure whether the bill itself will deliver on those issues, particularly as most of them fall under part 3, which is not really prescriptive. However, it is certainly a move in the right direction.

Brian Whittle

As I did with the last panel, I want to examine what is currently in play. In terms of training and continuing professional development, what consideration is given to issues covering patient safety?

Karen Wilson

In relation to the implementation of the workload and workforce planning tools, there is a learning toolkit for people who are actively using that methodology. Within the current nursing and midwifery workforce, that would largely be the senior charge nurses and their equivalents out in the community, who would use the community tools. There is a development process for people who are going to be using the tools. We recognise that, in the case of nursing and midwifery, the senior charge nurses and their equivalents are the linchpins for the delivery of safe and effective care to patients.

We are considering how we can refresh the previous process that we had, which was called leading better care and was specifically focused on ensuring safe and quality care for patients in clinical settings. As I have said, we intend to ensure that all of our educational resources are suitable for health and care, so, as the tools develop, we will produce tools that help to support staff to understand and use the methodologies effectively.

Brian Whittle

Does the bill enhance that process? As I asked the previous panel, is legislation required to enhance the process or are you already on that journey?

Karen Wilson

To a certain extent, we are already on that journey. However, as has been said in various fora, application is a bit patchy. That is where the bill comes in. The bill supports consistency, and that is its key strength, as far as I am concerned.

Brian Whittle

On access to training, will the implementation of the bill put more pressure on the training element?

Karen Wilson

Yes. Infrastructure is already being introduced to support the implementation of the bill, so we are already seeing stronger infrastructure to support the training and development of staff. What is important is that people are given the time and space to undertake the training. The training is available, and the legislative process can bring a greater prioritisation to it. That is an added strength.

Dr Axon

Radiographers are degree-level staff, but they need to be trained in hospitals to get greater expertise and move up in the system. They are also regulated by the Health and Care Professions Council and are required to do a certain amount of continuing professional development every year in order to carry on under that regulation.

We often see that people are not able to take part in training because there is a lack of time, due to the pressure in relation to the rota and waiting lists. Adding in that time is important. If these tools are applied to our staff, they are much more likely to have the time to do the training.

Brian Whittle

The idea of what constitutes safety and risk across professions seems to vary. Are there different views on that, and does the bill account for differing definitions?

11:15  

Dr Axon

That is part of the reason why we want an extension of the tools to our practitioners. We are dealing with radiation and giving radiation to members of the public, and we want to ensure that our staff are not overworked and are on rotas that are not too long. There are still rotas of 16 hours in hospitals. We see the extension of those tools as helping with safety and ensuring that staff do not work for too long and get proper rest.

Tracey Dalling

There is a variety of measurement tools out there. That is fine if all that you want to do is measure for statistical purposes, but if you want to ensure compliance we need to go back to the regulatory framework and questions about who is responsible for compliance. A large chunk of the social care network is not governed by any form of regulation, so it will be down to the employer to undertake that role. That will vary and the 32 local authorities will have different continuing professional development tools and measures. There could, theoretically, be thousands among the private care providers. Our experience would say that that theory cannot be proven.

Our experience would also say that there is very little by way of continuing professional development and staff training. As Dr Axon said, it is often the thing that costs the most and is dispensed with when there are other funding pressures, and I am not sure that the bill builds in that compliance element. It may have the framework for it, but I am not sure that it is there on compliance.

Joyce Thompson

To answer Brian Whittle’s question on safety, I would reflect on the fact that the bill is also about high-quality services, and I certainly do not want to lose sight of that. It is another reason why it would be good if the bill was extended to other professions and also took a multidisciplinary or multi-agency approach. Dietetics has historically been a demand-led service, and the reality is that, continuing on that premise, there are more people in need of dietetic intervention than there will ever be capacity to deliver for. To truly get upstream, not just from a preventative point of view but from an early intervention perspective, dietitians are currently working in partnership with other professions to redesign pathways that stretch across systems. My reason for bringing up that example is that it shows that there is a need and an opportunity for professions to extend their scope of practice. That includes the need to look specifically at safety, which enhances the requirement for a multidisciplinary approach.

The Convener

The next question is from Sandra White.

Sandra White

Thank you, Presiding Officer. I am sorry, convener. I gave you the wrong title. I must be dreaming, or maybe I am elevating you to greatness.

I thank the witnesses for their evidence. I was pleased to hear Karen Wilson mention learning toolkits, because witnesses have mentioned in submissions that they felt that people were not trained up or educated enough in using the tools. As the bill progresses, should there be assessment of where staff need more training and education to use the tools properly? Could that be part and parcel of the bill?

Karen Wilson

Absolutely. The more that we prepare senior charge nurses and their equivalents in the community to understand the importance of safe staffing, the better the service will be. As I said, infrastructure is now being put in place because of that. One of the problems before was that, if areas used the tools, they used them once a year, and you cannot remain competent in something if you do it only once a year.

I think that having the infrastructure there and running the tools really regularly over the whole of the health system will mean that expertise will build up and people will become much more confident about the methodology and the information behind it.

Sandra White

Tracey Dalling mentioned the social care workforce, non-compliance and different practices in different local authorities. Will the workforce be getting trained in the tools as well, or will it just be the management level?

Tracey Dalling

I imagine that it would be the management level. It is hard to say at this stage, but that is what I would anticipate.

Sandra White

Okay. Can I take it a wee bit further? Various professions will be involved. It is not just coming from the top; it is going right out into the communities. What bodies will be developing the tools and the new methodologies? Who should be involved? Should it be the professions or the sector regulators? Should everyone be involved or do you need to stop at some level?

Karen Wilson

Certainly, my knowledge about the development of the workload tools is that when you are developing a new tool, you work with the people who are working with the clients or the patients. It is really important that ground-level staff—the people who are in direct contact with the clients or the patients—provide evidence about what the workload is, because nobody knows the workload better than the people who are delivering the service. It is important to involve the right staff for the right levels of decision making.

Tracey Dalling

I completely agree—it needs to be from the ground up. These tools are a long time in development because they have to be evidence based, so you have to involve the people who are providing the services.

One of my concerns is about the procurement element. When you are procuring a service, who do you involve in developing the tool? Some of the services are well established, but a whole range of social care services are procured every day of the week, based on particular needs, so whoever is involved will have to be able to cover the entire social care setting, particularly in homes.

Sandra White

I am not saying that it necessarily needs to be in the bill, but does there need to be something on that in guidance? My concern is that although the management level and professionals might be involved, things might not filter down to the workforce on the ground. I do not know how you would word that guidance, and I do not know whether there should be a requirement for adequate time to look at whether the new tools are being developed. Should there be some sort of guidance on timescales and the fact that all the workforce should be included?

Joyce Thompson

A timescale would be very helpful. As you will note from some of the comments that I have made so far, although we are supportive of the bill, we have concerns about some of the smaller professions. History shows that frequently there is a focus on the bigger professions and it takes a long time for the needs of the smaller professions to be addressed. I would like to see something that would ensure that there are almost parallel workstreams in addition to a multidisciplinary approach.

Dr Axon

As I said, we certainly support the development of tools for other professions. The advantage of the tools is that they are not just about looking at the numbers of people whom you are treating, which is what tends to happen at the moment.

The professional voice must be considered. The process has to involve the professionals, and the decisions on the tools need to be taken at a reasonably low level, not at department level.

On timescales, there has been some talk about how long it is taking for some of the tools to be developed, but a lot of the tools are already sitting there. It is just a matter of revising them to fit other professions or a matter of creating multidisciplinary tools. However, it would be useful to have some of those points in the bill or certainly in the guidance.

Tracey Dalling

The existing tools are used in an acute or building setting. It is much easier to manage workforce planning in a building. That is why it is helpful that the bill suggests that the social care element starts in care homes. Where it becomes far more complex is when it is out in the community, in people’s homes.

Sandra White

I absolutely agree that everyone should be included. Should we have a timescale for reviewing the tools as they are introduced, to ensure that they are fit for purpose?

Tracey Dalling

Absolutely. There will be an opportunity to review the existing tools before we extend to anything beyond what we already have. Therein lies the problem: the provision of care has changed, and the question is whether the current tools are still fit for purpose. They might be, but that needs to be tested.

Emma Harper

Good morning, everybody, and thanks for being here. I welcome the generally positive approach to the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill that we have heard this morning.

The existing tools are under review as the other tools are being developed. We have talked about training and continuing professional development, and there is a lot of crossover work—for example, physios and radiographers might perform similar tasks to those that nurses perform. A standardised approach can be assigned to different job descriptions, whereby the same cannula training is done by radiographers and nurses. Similarly, there are national LearnPro or e-learning modules on hand-washing and infection-control measures. There is a standard approach that can be accessed, and as we introduce the training, all the local authorities should have access to community LearnPro and acute care LearnPro. I assume that that is the way to move forward so that we are not reinventing the wheel.

I take Tracey Dalling’s point that the bill has to start somewhere and that we should look at the health and care setting before looking at the individual workers in social care. I would be interested to hear further thoughts on training and development and how we ensure a standard approach.

Karen Wilson

We are looking at how we can modernise the toolkit and make it available for everybody. One platform is LearnPro, and NES is working with social care to implement the Turas Learn platform across the whole sector. We are making information available via social media apps and so on to make it easier for people, especially the members of the workforce whom we are talking about. How do they get access to learning resources when they are working in someone’s home? We are working on putting the existing resource in place and making it available for everyone.

Tracey Dalling

I completely agree. It would be great to have a single platform to which everyone had access, but a single training platform does not exist in local government. There is a range of variations on that theme that different local authorities have bought themselves or bought into as part of a consortium. To the best of my knowledge—COSLA would probably be able to say more than I can—there is no single platform within local authorities. That does not mean that such a platform cannot be part of the broader integration discussion that needs to take place.

Brian Whittle

Looking at the complexity of the health and social care landscape, I wonder what the best approach to workforce planning would be, given the multidisciplinary needs within the sector, to achieve whole-system viability. Will the bill enable that sort of thinking and planning?

Joyce Thompson

That is a very good question, which reflects some of our concerns as a professional body. The bill needs to be strengthened if it is to truly apply that whole-system approach.

Within the dietetic profession, we are increasingly trying to address nutrition issues from a whole-system perspective. The example that I use frequently is that almost half the Scottish population has an issue with nutrition, be it overnutrition, undernutrition or a condition that requires therapeutic dietetic intervention, such as a food allergy.

11:30  

As I said earlier, historically our profession has been demand led. That means that whoever manages to get through our door gets our support. However, the reality is that there is a much bigger population out there that requires that support.

We have some examples in which we have taken that whole-system approach, one of which is coeliac disease, which affects a significant proportion of the population. It requires an assessment of symptoms, a diagnosis and dietetic intervention. A gluten-free diet is the primary intervention. Over a period of time, we have tested and subsequently completely redesigned that approach on a Scotland-wide basis, such that there is now greater assurance that people who experience symptoms are assessed, are diagnosed, receive dietetic intervention and get access to a gluten-free diet and prescribed gluten-free products in a much more cost-effective way. That has required a whole-system approach. It has involved dietitians, but also general practitioners, consultant gastroenterologists, specialist nurses and community pharmacists.

It was not until we sat down with all those disciplines and individuals who experience the condition that we could look back and reflect on a much better way of doing things, which involves that whole-system approach. If you applied a workforce tool specifically to dietetics, it would not answer the question as to what number of dietitians and what expertise and experience in dietetics are required in order to address that area of nutrition need, unless you took that whole-system, multidisciplinary approach.

Dr Axon

Workforce planning takes place at present. The bill proposes that it be put into legislation so that, we hope, it is done better and staffing—safe staffing—is increased. There would be a slight problem with the bill if it applied only to nurses and midwives, there was too much emphasis on them and their numbers were funded because the tools applied to them. We believe that the tools need to be applied across the system.

On diagnostics, it does not matter how many nurses we have if we do not know what is wrong with the patient, so diagnostics are crucial to the patient journey. That is obviously crucial for cancer treatment and radiotherapy as well. We need to have the right numbers in order to make sure that we get through the waiting lists, plus enough people in accident and emergency departments to make sure that diagnoses are taken through.

Tracey Dalling

One of the benefits of having the integration joint boards is that we can take a more holistic look at workforce planning across the social care setting, rather than just in a local authority sense or an NHS sense. I am keen that the bill delivers that multidisciplinary approach and that we do not continue to do things in silos, because that is not serving us well.

It would be remiss of me not to say, although the bill cannot provide for this—well, maybe it could, if you wanted it to—that we will never have enough staff in the social care setting unless we address pay. The recruitment and retention of staff is a huge problem that has been thrown up time and again. When we do workforce planning, we analyse the ageing workforce that we have, particularly in social care. Certainly in more rural communities, we know how many people live in the local authority setting and how many people work in social care, and the percentages are enormous. People do not travel well to provide that service; they want to do it in their own community. However, they are ageing, and sometimes Tesco opens a new store and pays its staff more than home care workers are paid. In addition, the career pathways can seem limited. Those issues will not go away simply because we have a measuring tool. All that it will do, probably, is throw the issues into sharper focus.

Karen Wilson

On a more general note, there is no doubt that consistent application of a common staffing method will improve workforce planning. If that common staffing method is interdisciplinary, multidisciplinary or even—as it is at the moment in most cases—unidisciplinary, it improves workforce planning and provides more data on which to base workforce planning. Going forward, I think that that is the right direction of travel.

Brian Whittle

To take that a little further, I think that the bill raises a dilemma. It has a reasonable lack of prescriptiveness, if that is a word. Will that be useful in achieving an integrated way of developing the workforce, or does it need to be more prescriptive than it currently is?

Karen Wilson

I do not think so. The strength of the current methodology, as Ann Gow said, is that it takes account of professional judgment and quality issues, because it is possible to have a slightly different staffing level—even a better staffing level—and poorer quality. There is definitely something to be said for leaving it loose enough to have professional judgment on quality, rather than defining a ratio or a number or making it too tight. That is important for me.

Dr Axon

When I looked at the bill, I was a little bit surprised at how prescriptive the table in proposed new section 12IC of the National Health Service (Scotland) Act 1978 was. I would have thought that that would be something that you would normally see in a schedule. I realise that section 12IC(3) says that ministers can use regulations to change it, but the table seems quite prescriptive, while at the same time the bill is saying that multidisciplinary tools can apply to the professions.

The Convener

If Karen Wilson is right and you need to be able to resort to professional judgment, which might produce a different outcome from simply applying the tool, is the tool therefore necessary at all?

Karen Wilson

It does provide a basic methodology that, if consistently and regularly applied, could provide a much sounder basis for doing things in a certain way. Otherwise, it would just be down to professional judgment, which might work, but we have had professional judgment for a long time and we feel that the workload measurement tools are an improvement, because there is a rationale and an evidence base behind them. I think that the strength of the approach lies in the merging of both aspects, rather than relying on one or the other.

The Convener

If that is the case, is there a risk that, because the bill is coming in at a point when we have workforce tools in a number of areas, but mostly in nursing and midwifery, that could skew the allocation of resources or of time and effort away from other sectors into those sectors where such tools are already used?

Joyce Thompson

There is a risk of that, unless due regard is given to the other groups in the NHS.

Tracey Dalling

The bill is designed to go beyond the NHS, so we need to extend beyond that. We have staffing tools that prescribe staff ratios, particularly in the early years setting. We know how many early years practitioners we have for whatever number of children. It is arguable that we could be prescriptive. The difficulty will be in coming up with something that allows that to happen without losing the professional view about what is appropriate; we could get wedded to something that is simply about numbers, not about quality. It is a very difficult question to answer, but it can be done.

Dr Axon

At the moment, we are not using the tools in our profession, so it tends to come down to an argument about numbers. The advantage of the tools is that the professional view is added into that. A scan does not simply take so many minutes for each person who comes through the door—we know that we need to allow extra time in some cases. For example, scanning takes longer in a children’s department, because children will not stand still in front of the machine or they might not be happy on the table. Scanning tends to be easier with adults. Knowing the different positions is useful.

In areas such as rural and satellite settings, there is often a small number of staff, so you need to allow for the fact that, if someone goes off sick, that will account for a greater proportion of the staff. It is important to have a professional view rather than just to say that you only require so many staff; because of that, I spend a lot of time at the moment arguing about how many staff are needed on rotas.

The Convener

In answer to an earlier question, the issue was mentioned of where in a team the responsibility would lie for running the tools. Do panel members see any risks with the way that the tools are currently applied, and might be applied under the bill’s provisions, whereby responsibility for quite significant staffing issues is seen to rest with somebody in a relatively junior or supervisory role, such as a charge nurse or the equivalent, rather than with management, which might have wider consequences and implications?

Tracey Dalling

It is less about who runs the tool and more about whether it is run using an ideal standard or taking into account the reality of the situation, and that will come down to frequency. You might have an ideal standard of operating across the year, but you might hit a winter pressure or a flu epidemic. Would we launch the tool back into that setting to re-establish staffing levels based on what was actually happening? Would a reactionary or a planned approach be taken?

If the people who operate the tools understand them and are perfectly capable and competent in their job, it is less about them and more about the stage at which we run the tools and how frequently we do it. There is also the question of whether we are trying to deal with the realities or to deliver some kind of ideal standard.

Karen Wilson

We certainly believe that it is important to empower the person in charge at the front line to operate the measurement tools and be responsible for that. There is enough evidence to suggest that the culture of the clinical area, as it is in our case, is dictated by that person. Therefore, giving them more power and education, and allowing them to be in charge and be the linchpin, is vitally important. We think that the responsibility sits at the right level.

Obviously, a discussion will take place further up the hierarchy, and it is important to make sure that clinical managers completely understand the tools and how to apply them. There is a hierarchical thing, but it is important that front-line leaders are given that leadership role.

Dr Axon

I was going to say similar things. It needs to be possible for the professional view to be implemented, but the bill puts the emphasis on the health board, so the management level in the hierarchy has to look at it, too.

The Convener

Are there any unintended potential consequences of the bill that we have not yet touched on and which committee members should be aware of?

Karen Wilson

I want to mention—this might be part of what Brian Whittle was getting at—that it is important to make sure that the tools allow people time to do CPD. That is the predictable absence in the case of the current tools. It is really important that we get it right for staff, and consider whether there is enough time for CPD or whether it gets eaten away by other things such as sickness absence.

Joyce Thompson

I echo that point. Again, although professions such as dietetics have an important direct patient-facing role, the magnitude of the nutrition issue means that dietitians have an important role supporting others in delivery of care at the earliest point to ensure that people get the right nutrition intervention at the right time and in the right place. One would caution that a workforce planning tool should not look only at patient-facing activity.

11:45  

Dr Axon

As was mentioned earlier, there is concern that resources will be taken away from other areas if the tools apply only to nursing and midwifery. That seemed to happen to some extent in Wales when the Nurse Staffing Levels (Wales) Act 2016 was introduced there.

Another concern is that if the tools are not correctly done, there might be issues around people’s ideas about the maximum number of members of staff or how many members of staff there should be.

Tracey Dalling

The escalation and enforcement element is not as clear as we would like it to be. We would like more clarity about where the responsibility lies. Is it with the integration joint board? Is it with employers? Where does the buck stop?

Brian Whittle

I want to pick up on the idea of resource management and where the bill and the tools currently sit in relation to that. Who is ultimately responsible for that? What are the repercussions of falling short of what the tools suggest is a safe staffing level? Does that lead us down a dark path?

Tracey Dalling

Individuals are free to make reports to the Care Inspectorate, and it is free to inspect and take whatever enforcement action it feels is necessary, and to continue to monitor the situation until it is safe. However, there is a critical question to be answered. The bill concerns staffing, so who picks up that issue? Is it the IJB in a social care setting and the health board in an acute care setting? Certainly, Unison is aware of thousands of people who work for small employers. Does the responsibility sit with those employers or does it sit with the IJB, because it commissioned those employers to deliver services?

Dr Axon

At the moment, we can see well how staffing levels are very much driven by finances. There is an interesting question about resource management. The duty will be on the board, but whether it can reach the right staffing levels depends on the money that the board receives from the Government. There is an issue with the financial memorandum in that regard. It talks about how much it might cost to introduce the tools, but it does not talk about how many more members of staff would be needed if the tools were to be applied appropriately.

Karen Wilson

It is clear that, for the NHS, the buck stops with the board. There is an important issue about resource versus quality. It is important to put as much emphasis on the quality of care as you put on the number of members of staff. This morning, HIS made it quite clear that what is important is the big picture, which involves safety, the quality of care and the number of staff.

David Stewart

My questions are around accountability and responsibility. They are directed mainly to Unison, and I draw members’ attention to the fact that I am a member of Unison.

Unison’s submission makes the interesting suggestion that the staffing bill might be ignored. It says that you are concerned about shortage of staff, lack of enforcement and constrained resources. Will the bill resolve any of those factors?

Tracey Dalling

It comes back to the point about compliance. From Unison’s experience, there is the example of what happened when the Scottish living wage was applied in the social care setting. Money was released by the Scottish Government for that; it came to IJBs and was then released to various service providers. However, we are still pursuing those providers to pay their employees. The money is sitting with the providers and has not been passed on appropriately.

This could be a parallel situation. It worries me that we could have another piece of legislation that could be ignored—we have had the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 for decades and we still have employers who ignore it. It is about compliance. If we are putting something in place and looking for adherence to it, we need to know who is responsible for that adherence and—frankly—what the penalties are for non-compliance.

David Stewart

At a simplistic level, everyone in this room wants to see better staffing levels and better care, but what is your assessment of what the world of care provision and staffing provision would look like if the bill were to be enacted?

Tracey Dalling

I am not sure that it would look different to how it looks now, to be honest. I do not think that the bill is a panacea. We are desperately short of staff. They are not well paid: they are low-paid workers who live in their local communities. I am not sure where we will get people from to work in social care. Perhaps it would look better if it was a safer environment, with more people providing the service, who were better paid and better supported and trained and they knew that when things went wrong, there was a degree of enforcement. Perhaps if we pieced all those parts of the puzzle together, it would look better. However, I cannot see the bill in itself making an enormous change to the social care setting.

David Stewart

The Americans have a line, “Where’s the beef?” when they are trying to verify whether there is real substance to something. Are there elements of that? Certainly, some of our witnesses—not all—suggested that we do not need legislation to have workforce tools because they are internal management issues.

Tracey Dalling

I agree. I will never say that you should not legislate for something if I firmly believe that that something is the right thing to do, but it must come with an element of enforcement. I am going over the same ground here. Legislation might give us that if it is couched in the right way. However, colleagues are absolutely correct; you do not need legislation to introduce workforce planning tools.

David Stewart

There are existing provisions across the public sector and beyond for whistleblowing, which everyone supports. Let us take a future scenario in which care sector staff are upset about staffing rotas, for example. Will the bill do anything to empower staff to come forward to the appropriate agency and say, “This is not good enough—this is putting patients at risk”?

Tracey Dalling

The bill as it is currently written will not do that. It does not include enforcement. The required degree of comfort for people to come forward is not there.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I would like to pick up on David Stewart’s line of questioning about the impact on staff. When we introduce tools, we are telling staff, “This is how things ought to be done.” I am concerned that that communication flow goes only in one direction. Are panel members confident that the bill will build in mechanisms to allow staff who know their onions in their day-to-day work to provide information on and suggest meaningful changes to how the tools operate?

Karen Wilson

When we first introduced the tools for nursing and midwifery, that empowered charge nurses. It gave them information that they did not have before, a methodology that they did not have before, and a language with which to talk to the clinical nurse managers and beyond, up to the nurse directors. To that extent, consistent tools can help.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I will ask about the corollary: how responsive will the strata of tools be to suggestions for change coming up from ground-level staff?

Karen Wilson

Again—I apologise to my colleagues for going on about nursing and midwifery—the nurse directors are really interested in the outcome of running the nursing and midwifery tools. It matters in relation to the quality and safety of clinical care delivery, so where the tools are available, they are used.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

Are you content that a feedback loop is built into the bill to allow the tools to be nuanced and changed based on practice and their application on the ground?

Karen Wilson

As colleagues have said, I am not sure whether the bill has the teeth that it needs.

Tracey Dalling

It comes back to governance. Different employers have different arrangements on staff engagement. We have asked the question about how far down the level of staff engagement in using the tools will be. I am not convinced that in a social care setting engagement will go right down. We could miss a trick by not having that level of engagement.

The bill encourages employers to seek views, but I think that the wording needs to be stronger than that. There needs to be absolute engagement at all levels of the organisation, particularly with the front-line staff. They know their onions and should be engaged in the process. Even if they do not use the tools, there should be a mechanism to elicit their view of what is happening so that they can engage in the process.

Joyce Thompson

I agree with those comments. A key thing that we have learned over the past few years is that we cannot “do to”; we have to “do with”. That means that everyone, irrespective of profession, grade or whatever, should be engaged in the process. Engagement in the development, testing and application of the tools is essential. Not all dietetic services consist only of dietitians, and not all dietitians are in a dietetic service. Dietitians sit in different places in organisations, which puts different types of pressures on those individuals, and it is important that that is taken into consideration.

Dr Axon

There is a professional element to the tools—it is not just about the numbers. Sections of the bill relate to training, the consultation of staff and so on, and it would be helpful if professional bodies were included in the bill.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

That is useful.

Keith Brown

I am interested in Unison’s approach. In Unison’s written submission, it was unable to identify any strengths in parts 2 and 3 of the bill, and it raised a number of other concerns, including pay, which we have discussed a fair bit. I should say that I speak as a former shop steward and branch officer for Unison.

On pay, I am not sure how the Scottish Government could have enforced compliance on the living wage, because it does not have the legal power to do so. Tracey Dalling said that she fears that implementation of the bill’s provisions will throw into sharper focus the issue of pay, particularly in relation to recruitment. Is that not a good thing? If the various tools in the bill set out a particular standard that is backed up by professional judgment, and if that demonstrates that there is a shortfall in the current staffing, would there not be pressure on the system to enforce higher levels of pay, greater recruitment and adequate staffing?

Tracey Dalling

Absolutely. However, I am not sure where we would get the bodies and money from to address that shortfall. That point is linked largely with workforce planning. We are seriously short of people who see care—not nursing but care—as a career. Young people are not coming into the profession, because they do not see it as a profession or a career, and they certainly think that, as things stand, they will never make more than the living wage or thereabouts. Therefore, there is a cultural aspect to the issue.

The bill’s provisions and the staffing tools might well throw the issue of pay into sharp focus because we will see the issue in stark terms rather than through anecdotal evidence, as we see it now. A range of things will need to happen to address the problems that the bill will throw up.

12:00  

Dr Axon

Retention is crucial. It varies from year to year, but the vacancy rate for radiographers is about 4 per cent. There is also a cap on the number of people who can be trained, because trainees need to go through the hospital system and there is a limited number of spaces.

In hospital and NHS settings, there has just been a change to the pay scales. I was heavily involved in developing the new pay scales, which might help with retention. If there is not so much pressure on staff to cover for other people, that will certainly help with retention. At the moment, a lot of people are going off on sick leave with stress because of the pressures to cover rotas and do weekend and overnight work. If we manage to increase the numbers of staff and make the workplace better, that will help to keep people in post.

Emma Harper

I do not think that Karen Wilson needs to apologise for talking about the nursing tools, because they have existed for 10 years and we can build on them. How can the panel engage in the future development of the tools that will apply to the multidisciplinary teams, including the community care, care in the home and acute care teams? You are all articulating well the need for a multidisciplinary approach, so will you engage in the development of the tools for your disciplines? Will there be a pigeon-holed or a multidisciplinary approach?

Dr Axon

The simple answer is that we want to engage in the development of the tools. I have already spoken to some of my colleagues who use the tools and who are looking at how they could be moved across to other areas. It might be slightly easier for radiographers, because, in the main, they tend to be employed in hospitals and deal with waiting lists and A and E departments, which is quite similar to nursing roles. As Emma Harper said, some of the training modules would apply to radiographers. Therefore, there might be an easier gain for radiographers, whereas there might be more difficulties for other colleagues and professionals. However, we are certainly looking to engage in the development of the tools.

Joyce Thompson

We would welcome the opportunity to engage in the development of the tools, particularly from a multidisciplinary perspective. In order for us to do so, that engagement needs to be made an explicit priority. Appropriate resources will also be needed to support the development of the tools.

The Convener

I thank our witnesses for a very useful session.

12:02 Meeting suspended.  

12:04 On resuming—  

25 September 2018

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Fourth meeting transcript

The Convener (Lewis Macdonald)

Welcome to the 25th meeting in 2018 of the Health and Sport Committee. I ask everyone in the room to ensure that their mobile phones are on silent. Although you may use mobile devices for social media purposes, please do not record or photograph the proceedings.

Apologies have been received from Miles Briggs.

The first item on our agenda is the final evidence session on the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill at stage 1. I am delighted to welcome Jeane Freeman to the committee for the first time in her role as Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport. She is accompanied by Fiona McQueen, chief nursing officer; Diane Murray, associate chief nursing officer; Louise Kay, safe staffing bill team leader; and Ailsa Garland, principal legal officer. Welcome to you all.

I invite Jeane Freeman to make an opening statement.

The Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport (Jeane Freeman)

Thank you very much for the opportunity to talk about the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill and to answer the committee’s questions.

The bill’s aim is to provide a statutory basis for the provision of appropriate staffing in health and social care settings. That matters because in our national health service we focus all our work on meeting the triple aim of healthcare that is safe, effective and person centred, and all the evidence tells us that the provision of high-quality care requires the right people in the right place with the right skills at the right time to ensure the best health and care outcomes for those who need our services.

Our policy intention with the bill is to enable a rigorous, evidence-based approach to decision making on staffing that is safe and effective, takes account of the health and care needs of patients and service users, assists the exercise of professional judgment and promotes a safe environment. That means that we need to understand the workload that is generated in any given setting and circumstance and therefore the skills that are required and the staff mix that will provide them.

My intention is that the bill will put in place a framework to support the systematic identification of the workload needed to improve outcomes and deliver high-quality care. I know that each and every profession contributes to the delivery of positive outcomes for service users. Therefore, I have taken the decision to apply the legislation across all staff groups delivering health and social care services. In taking that broader approach, the bill achieves legislative coherence across the health and social care landscape. That coherence is demanded by the integrated approach that we are taking to health and social care, which rests on the important recognition of value across all staff groups. Providing that assurance for staff and service users is the right thing to do.

In taking that approach across health and care services, we have the advantage of having learned from the existing workload tools and methodology that were developed for nurses and midwives. The development of the tools has been an innovative, evidence-based and, importantly, professionally led approach. That has led to their use in the Welsh legislation on safe staffing and in the development of workload tools that are used by NHS England.

Even though we are starting from that positive position, it is not my intention that the current suite of tools will remain unchanged. It is imperative that they continue to be reviewed and renewed to effectively support multidisciplinary approaches to the delivery of care. The tools are important, but they are only one part of the much broader common staffing methodology and requirements that the bill sets out.

The bill puts in place a process that should be applied consistently across health and social care. It ensures that we use an evidence base to assess the workload that staff face and move away from a reliance on subjective assessments. However, critically, that is combined with staff using their professional judgment to tailor workload assessments to reflect the dynamics of their service and to take their local context into account when deciding how to staff services to deliver high-quality services. That local context will fluctuate, and it requires a common and consistent workload and staffing methodology as well as linked training, so that staff are equipped with the skills to make those assessments. That will have a positive impact on staff, on services and, importantly, on the care that is provided.

Health boards and care service providers and their staff have the shared responsibility to openly and transparently determine how best to ensure that we continue to provide safe and effective services. However, I would expect to see real-time adjustments made to take account of workload changes and more appropriate movement of staff to acknowledge more effectively the acuity and dependence of service users; substantive posts used, rather than bank and agency staffing; staff understanding how staffing numbers are decided; and staff knowing how to raise concerns and being confident that their concerns will be dealt with appropriately.

The bill does not explicitly define outcomes—nor should it. Our health and care standards and quality measures already define the outcomes that we want to see. In addition to those improvements, the effective application of the legislation will support the wider workforce planning process. If services can clearly identify the workload that is required to meet service users’ needs, it will be easier for them to do workforce planning based on that evidence. When local workforce plans are based on better evidence, provided by the consistent application of a common methodology, we will have more robust information to inform national workforce planning and supply.

In developing the bill’s provisions, we have listened carefully to those who deliver the services; we have also listened carefully to the evidence sessions that the committee has held. We will continue to engage with stakeholders and consider their views. As always, I will give full and careful consideration to all proposals to strengthen and improve the bill in the weeks ahead and to the committee’s own carefully considered views.

The Convener

Thank you very much, cabinet secretary—that gives us a good opening for our discussions.

You talked about the placing in legislation of existing common staffing methods and about enabling better workforce planning methodologies to be developed. Do you regard one or other of those as the principal objective, or do you suggest that they are of equal weight?

Jeane Freeman

They are interlinked. The common methodology is critical, but so are the tools to apply that methodology in order to understand the workload and the skills mix. As I said, that is all important evidence—an evidence base—for making assessments and decisions, but the application of professional judgment is critical to that. I do not think that you can strip out any area and still get as good a result as you will get if you put them all together.

The Convener

The committee has heard the suggestion that the developments, desirable though they may be, do not require legislation. For example, the use of some of the existing tools has been mandatory for the past five years. Is there any reason why you do not simply enforce what health boards are mandated to provide, rather than introduce primary legislation?

Jeane Freeman

As you will understand from some of the information that the committee has gathered, the tools might be mandatory, but there is no consistency with regard to their application. We need to be able to ensure consistency of application, not only in health settings but in social care. Given our direction of travel in terms of the integration of health and social care and how we provide healthcare in secondary and acute settings, it is right that we apply the methodology to determine workload and, from that, work out the right staffing mix to meet that workload and demand across all those settings. The ability to do that requires a statutory underpinning that ensures consistency of approach, because there will be a consistent legislative requirement that ensures that the relevant bodies work in that way.

Of course, the important part of all of this is transparency. Colleagues around the table with more recent experience of the health sector than I have will recall the days when ward charge nurses or sisters used to call each other to swap staff around. That might or might not have worked in those circumstances, but it was hardly transparent and it did not necessarily allow a consistent assessment of workload, based on an assessment of acuity, patient need and so on.

Setting out the system in legislation means that everyone knows what is expected, how to apply the process and how to make decisions based on that process. Further, the important point for the Government is that that gives us better and more robust evidence on which to do our workforce planning.

The Convener

There is a suggestion in some of the evidence that the committee has heard that any inconsistency in the application of the tools that are already mandatory might be because the tools are of different levels of value and usefulness in the eyes of the practitioners whose job it is to evaluate and apply them. Therefore, it might be that the issue is one that perhaps might be best addressed through management. In other words, if something that is mandatory seems not to be working for various reasons, is that not a matter to resolve in discussion, in light of people’s management responsibilities, rather than by putting on a statutory basis tools that are clearly not 100 per cent satisfactory in the eyes of those who apply them?

Jeane Freeman

People might argue that they did not use the tools because they were not satisfactory, but I do not have a great deal of patience with that, I have to say. That seems to be a proxy for “Cannae be bothered”, and that will not do. If people have a genuine view that the tools require improvement, there are plenty of opportunities to bring forward those propositions to me or the colleagues who are with me today. The tools are constantly reviewed and developed as we go along.

Although a requirement might be mandatory, it might not necessarily be followed because other pressures might get in the way. If we make the requirement a statutory one, everyone, including our health boards and their chairs, who are directly accountable to me, will understand that they have an obligation to ensure that that approach is taken consistently, across the board and social care providers, and also between boards. That will give all of us a much sounder basis for making decisions, based on workload, about what our workforce needs are and what the right skills mix is in any given circumstance.

The other advantage of that approach, which is a result of a particular facet of the tools, is that there is a capacity to be dynamic and to measure things in real time. As we know, circumstances around a cohort of patients or care home residents can change from one day to the next in acute hospitals and from one week to the next in social care. You need to be able to flex your resource in order to meet that workload demand.

The Convener

Would it be fair to conclude that at least part of the purpose of the bill is to enforce a mandatory approach that has not been properly applied thus far?

10:15  

Jeane Freeman

It is fair to say that part of the purpose of the bill is to ensure that we have a statutory framework that is well understood and therefore consistently applied across our health and social care settings.

Brian Whittle (South Scotland) (Con)

We understand that there is a lack of consistency in the application of the tools across different health boards. If we are to ensure consistency, we must also ensure that there is consistency in the dissemination and implementation of training across the boards. Rather than there being that “Cannae be bothered” attitude, it is more likely that the training is not in place to ensure that people can deliver using the tools. If we pass legislation on using the tools, what will be different about the way in which you support training and disseminate information?

Jeane Freeman

I am not sure that I completely accept your premise that, where the current mandatory approach is not applied, that is because training is not available. However, I absolutely take the point that when the bill is passed—if it is passed—there should be a requirement to ensure that it is rolled out consistently, with support and information available to staff so that they know how to use the tools and apply the methodology, and what to expect when others are doing that and placing demands on them as staff. There is also a requirement for consistency of monitoring, to ensure that the work is being done across health and social care settings.

The role of Healthcare Improvement Scotland is critical in that regard, as is the role of NHS Education for Scotland, the education body, to ensure that we have a consistent planned programme of roll-out and training and that training is continuous so that as new staff come on board we are able to meet their training needs, too. Should the bill be passed, that will be covered in the guidance on the bill and in the programme of work that is carried out by the chief nursing officer and their colleagues.

Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD)

One of the things that the committee is concerned with is barriers to integration. I am not talking just about the metaconcept of integration as it appears in the Public Bodies (Joint Working) (Scotland) Act 2014, but about there being a streamlined, integrated health and social care service throughout our country.

One of the concerns that has been raised in several evidence sessions is who the bill does not cover. For example, the bill does not cover allied health professionals and certain aspects of social care, such as care at home. Are we risking the creation of yet more silos by not including those equally valid healthcare and social care professionals in their work settings?

Jeane Freeman

Mr Cole-Hamilton raises an important point. I am keen not only that we should break down some of the current barriers, but that we should not create additional barriers. I understand the concerns that he raises.

Fiona McQueen might have more to say about this but, when the developed tool is worked through in social care settings, it will include the skill sets that come from AHPs in many cases, so it is not entirely accurate to say that they are excluded. As one applies the assessment of workload and then considers the skillsets that are required to deliver against the detail of that workload, AHPs in particular will have a critical role to play. They are covered in that way.

The point about care at home is well made. I am not saying that, over time, the approach will never apply to that setting—in part, that is the concern underlying Mr Whittle’s question and some of the other issues that have been raised in the committee. We want to take a stage and planned approach to the issue.

In the health and social care setting and in the setting of care homes—unlike in the health setting, where the bulk of care is provided by the national health service—we have a large number of independent providers, and we want to properly engage them in the development of a methodology and set of tools that are appropriate for their setting. We then want to test that to demonstrate its value to their work and provision of care. We would then look to see whether we can move on with that once people are confident in the approach and can see its value.

At this point, it is arguably a step too far to include care at home, as there are issues that need to be teased out around self-directed support and other questions that need to be properly thought through. We need to ensure that stakeholders have the opportunity to bring forward the issues that they want to raise and work with us to resolve and find solutions to those. In my opinion, that is the direction of travel, but it is too early to put that in the primary legislation. Clearly, if we and others wanted to go in that direction in due course, that would come forward as secondary legislation, and appropriately so, so that Parliament could give it the right scrutiny at that stage.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I have a question about a slightly different issue. The rooting of the tools in statute will ensure their uniform application across the health service and social care, as you described. To my mind, a tool is something that we decide is best practice and then expect those at the front line to deploy. However, we know from the committee’s other inquiries that, actually, best practice sometimes germinates from the grass roots up. For example, wards find better ways of doing things and adapt to the particular situations that they face. How responsive will the toolkit be to grass-roots initiatives when people say, “We can do this better,” so that we can then apply that across the board and do it better?

Jeane Freeman

If you do not mind, I will pass at least part of your question to the chief nursing officer and the associate CNO, who have a greater understanding than I do of the origins and development of the core tools for nursing. However, I point out that although the tools are important, they are not all that the bill is about. The common staffing methodology is a critical element, of which the tools are part. I ask Ms McQueen to respond on the capacity and flexibility for the tools to be developed and new ideas to come forward.

Fiona McQueen (Scottish Government)

We have heard a lot of talk from staff about whether the tools are helpful, and some of that perhaps involves a lack of understanding. It is also about lack of transparency—people do the work and then think that they will get more or different staff, but it does not happen. The transparency that will come through the bill will help with that.

I absolutely expect there to be a professional-judgment element. The grass-roots staff know best how to deliver most effectively, and professional judgment should support that. If someone consistently says, “I’m not going to say that; I’m going to say this”, that would, through time, be built into the tool. In acute medicine at the moment, in a medical ward the tool is just a nursing tool. The grass-roots element is about also involving the occupational therapist, the speech and language therapist and the physiotherapist, because they are fundamental to the quality of care, to outcomes and to safety. It is about on-going openness and transparency, professional judgment and moving forward so that we do not say that something that we developed 18 years ago will continue for the next 18 years. It is about moving forward and having constant review.

Jeane Freeman

I can give an example of that. Yesterday, I was fortunate enough to be in Aberdeen to open the first of our major trauma centres. One of the distinctive features of the work of the Scottish trauma network is recognition of the importance of bringing in occupational therapy, physiotherapy and psychological therapy early in the rehabilitation of people who have suffered major trauma. The Aberdeen trauma centre has built into its model new posts that will provide that, and new posts that will provide co-ordination and casework-management functions in circumstances of high acuity that involve trauma.

My intuition is that what the centre has done makes sense and is certainly built on professional judgment, but a common methodology does not lie underneath what it has done. We will have four such centres. I hope that learning from Aberdeen will be picked up and used in the three other centres, but there is not a common basis on which they must do the work. Views might differ in other centres, and people might decide that a different approach is needed.

With our approach, we have a much more solid basis for deciding that there is evidence for doing something rather than just thinking, intuitively, that it is the right thing to do. Where there is commonality of service—major trauma, in this instance—we expect a range of skills to be delivered by different groups of professionals in order to meet particular patient needs.

Emma Harper (South Scotland) (SNP)

I suggest that the whole bill process will allow for the development of multidisciplinary and patient-pathway centred tools. As you described, when a trauma centre opens in one place, its evidence can inform the other centres. In that way, we can take an evidence-based approach to the whole system so that the tools can be developed and delivered in a way that works for the care sector as well as the acute sector. That is important. Can you confirm that the bill process allows for development of an evidence base that can work across the whole health and social care sector?

Jeane Freeman

That is absolutely right. It is important that the approach will also contribute to increased robustness in workforce planning at local level. If local plans are more robust and evidence based, we will be able to collate more robust evidence-based data at national level to help us to work on national workforce planning with increasing acuity.

Emma Harper

At the moment, there are no tools for work in care homes or care in the community. I assume that we will be informed by the evidence from the nursing and acute care tools, and that care homes will not be left behind.

Jeane Freeman

I will pass over to Diane Murray to give some of the detail.

The important thing about care homes is the work that we asked the Care Inspectorate to do to enable discussion with key stakeholders on development of the tools, so that they are appropriate for care homes. There will not be a rigid lift; the nursing tools that work in a health setting will not necessarily be applied to a care home. As we develop the tools, we will take into account the different circumstances in care home settings.

Diane Murray (Scottish Government)

That is absolutely right. We want to learn from the approach that we use to develop tools, but we do not want simply to import what we have done for nursing and midwifery to an acute adult setting, for example. Tools are developed with the people who know how to develop them and know what the workload and patient pathways are like. The developers use a reference group and look at particular models of care in a specific area.

As we heard earlier, the care in a care home should be about everything in the patient’s life and, most important, about making sure that they are as healthy and as well as they can be and that they are enabled. That is quite different. That is part of the evidence that we would be looking at.

10:30  

We would also look at care homes that deliver successful models of care in order that we understand what is in those models. We would look at research into best provision of care and best outcomes for people, and look for where the best practice sits.

As we work up a tool, we will look at acuity and dependency, which are quite different in care homes: it is not acuity in terms of the sick patient, but acuity in terms of how we support a person to stay as well and as healthy as possible.

As people move through the process and gather the evidence, they work out what the workload looks like and what skills, knowledge and expertise are needed around a person to make care as successful as possible. That could mean nursing care, AHPs, inreach from a district nursing team or an advanced nurse practitioner. Most important is that the tool will be developed for the service by the service and with the service.

The Care Inspectorate will have a lead role, but it will work with key partners including the Scottish Social Services Council and the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities. We know that the SSSC has a huge database of information on the workforce and on training, education and skills in the sector, so the work will be based very much within the sector. We might find that the key skill that we need in a care home is occupational therapy, but it would be for that sector to decide that for itself, with support from the methodology that we know works.

The Convener

The cabinet secretary has talked about some of the dynamic day-to-day staffing challenges that are faced on wards. The bill is clearly designed to assist with establishment workforce planning, if you like, at local level. Will it do anything for the dynamic decisions that need to be made every day?

Jeane Freeman

Yes. A consistent methodology, of which the tools are part, and ensuring through training, information and development that the methodology is widely understood and transparent, will allow what my colleagues described to me earlier, which is that across our healthcare and hospital settings, every day there will be what is generally called—it has different names—a huddle. That huddle could be at ward level, specialism level and so on. In the old days, it was about transfer reports from the night shift to the day shift and it was about the patients—how many there were and what was happening with each of them. The huddle is a version of that process, but it is also where people might raise the fact that they are short of a qualified nurse or a specialism. That shortage might well be acknowledged, but people are asked just to accommodate it.

What we would have happen in such circumstances is that people would bring evidence about why they need particular skills—acuity levels in their ward might have changed and the situation is different, so they need someone else, for example. That will allow proper deployment of staff between two situations in real time, and it will allow it to happen in a more transparent way because everyone will be working from the same starting point.

The approach in the bill is more transparent and allows for better decision making because it is evidence-based, with application of professional judgment. It also allows senior staff who are clinically led to flex their resources to meet changing circumstances every day. As we know, that happens a lot, particularly in the acute setting.

The Convener

The evidence that we have heard suggests that the tools are helpful in determining things from year to year, but not day to day. I am interested in how the bill will change provision in a way that makes a difference.

Fiona McQueen

The convener is absolutely right about the annual basis. As we know, workload has peaks and troughs, so as part of our ongoing work we will look at our approach. Whether we call it escalation or dynamic risk assessment, we will build in quick and easy, but open and transparent ways of ensuring that when staff are concerned that care cannot be delivered on that day-to-day basis, what is needed can be accommodated or moved.

However, we would also expect professional judgment to be applied. That will all be reviewed in a systematic way but we would, depending on the situation, expect judgments to be taken sometimes hour by hour and certainly shift by shift or section by section of the day, so that we can ensure a comprehensive approach across our services every day, rather than once a year.

David Stewart (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)

Thank you for coming along today, cabinet secretary. I also welcome your officials.

As other members have, I have sat through all the evidence sessions and read all the consultation reports. I think that everyone agrees that we want to see improvement in quality and in staffing, but what I struggle with—I am very happy to listen to your views, cabinet secretary—is how the bill will make a substantial difference, and be a real jump from what we have now to the brave new world of the future. Could you outline what the differences will be in quality of care and adequacy of staffing once the bill is passed?

Jeane Freeman

Thank you for that. I should start by saying that I am not promising a brave new world. Even if I were, the bill alone would not deliver it. The bill will be an important part of increasing our confidence that quality of care based on sound evidence is consistent across our health service. Our health service is, primarily, delivered by people; in those circumstances, as we all know, there will always be occasions when things are not perfect or do not work quite as planned. No legislation that I could introduce could guarantee that that would never happen.

With those clear commonsense caveats, I think that the bill provides two things. It provides for an approach that has been proved to work effectively to be consistently applied across our health service, and one that can be translated into and modified appropriately for our social care setting. That is the right thing to do, because we are moving strongly in the direction of health and social care integration. That consistency of application and, more importantly, the evidence that it produces will allow decision making to be more clearly scrutinised, not only at local level in a ward or care home, but at board level or even nationally. When board X says that it needs a certain number of nurses or AHPs, or that it wants to realign its skills mix in a particular area, it will have an evidence base that is consistent with board Y’s evidence base for a different set of propositions. It will mean that there is a process that we can better understand and that is more transparent, having appropriately involved all the staff who should be involved, rather than there simply being management decisions.

The whole approach is led by an increased understanding of the workload that is produced as a consequence of patient or service-user need. That workload tells us what staffing mix we ought to have. It is a transparent and open approach, therefore it can be challenged. Decisions that I might make, or that a charge nurse on a ward or a care home manager might make, will be open to challenge and scrutiny and will be evidence-based. That will allow us to set out our workforce needs, not only now, but for the years ahead.

That information will be produced directly from an understanding of what service user and patient needs require by way of workload. What the bill provides will make a substantial difference and significant grounding for work that we need to do nationally and locally.

David Stewart

You mentioned transparency, and I want to raise a further point about transparency and the empowerment of staff and patients.

I will give you a practical example. I know New Craigs psychiatric hospital in Inverness fairly well. I know some staff who work there and, in my previous life, I did my mental health officer training in the old New Craigs, so I have experience of that organisation. I know from the personal experience of staff who work there that there is an absolutely chronic staffing problem, which I have raised with the health board. I have visited key managers to discuss it.

If the staff wish to complain about the issue, we have the current procedures. What would they be able to do in relation to contacting HIS? I asked some of the key staff who were at last week’s evidence session about what the new regime would look like. What would the mechanisms be for staff and for patients if they were unhappy about inadequate staffing in that establishment?

Fiona McQueen

We would want to work with stakeholders to determine how we could do that most effectively, because staff will tell us that they are not quite sure what to do, or else they put something into the incident reporting system and either nothing happens or something happens three months later. It is something that we would work on with stakeholders, the colleges, HIS and staff.

For patients and service users, we would want to work with people to get something that is meaningful and practical and makes a difference.

David Stewart

Okay. I have a final question—

Jeane Freeman

Before you ask it, can I add to that? One of the things that the RCN said about the legislation is that it welcomes the provisions on escalation. The RCN obviously has a view about further strengthening of that and what that might look like. We are certainly open to further discussion with the RCN about situations such as the one that you have described and how staff can escalate their concerns about staffing levels that are needed to meet a workload demand when they believe that those concerns are not being properly listened to.

It is an important point—as is the earlier point about how we extend training and information and ensure that what is in the bill is implemented consistently—that we will give some further thought to.

David Stewart

I am sure that the cabinet secretary has a busy schedule, but I would certainly like to invite her to visit New Craigs, along with Fiona McQueen and her colleagues.

My final question is to do with looking at what we currently have and what we will have in the future. What recourse, other than the board’s own complaints procedures, could an individual pursue if there was a failure in service?

The cabinet secretary will be aware of the view of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. It does not feel that there is full transparency about what would happen if boards do not fulfil their duties under the bill. What does the bill provide that is new in relation to transparency?

Jeane Freeman

Could you just explain that a little bit more? Are you talking about what a patient might do or about what a staff member might do?

David Stewart

I am talking about both—I was lumping both together. It is important that we empower both staff and patients, because clearly, if there is a failure in the quality of service or a failure in staffing, that will impact on staff and on the quality of the experience that the patient gets.

10:45  

Jeane Freeman

This bill contains amendments to the National Health Service (Scotland) Act 1978, so it is linked to that act. The 1978 act gives a number of powers to ministers that we can exercise, which include the power of direction if we believe that a board is failing to adequately meet its statutory responsibilities.

That is at the upper end of the scale, if you like. In getting to that end, there are a number of steps. Patients, of course, have the opportunity to make complaints, and if a person thinks that a health board has not fully addressed their complaint, there is the Scottish Public Services Ombudsman. The stories on the Care Opinion website are important—although there are no direct sanctions in that regard, they are widely read and used by our boards, and I review the site regularly to see what people are saying about the care that they have received.

For staff, there is of course the formal grievance procedure. In addition, I am more than happy to consider anything that comes forward from the Royal College of Nursing and others about the escalation process. We also have the regular reviews that go on between my officials and boards. That includes the work of the Scottish partnership forum and the Scottish workforce and staff governance committee, as well as clinical reviews and the annual review of board performance that I and my fellow ministers conduct.

David Stewart

If there is a postcode lottery such as has been described to us in other contexts, whereby there is provision for treatment in one board area and not in another, will you have more central control to ensure that a board does what is laid down in legislation?

Jeane Freeman

I currently pick up on and pursue situations that are raised with me—as they often are by you or one of your colleagues—in which an individual is not receiving a treatment for reasons that I do not understand. Of course, no politician should start guddling around in clinical decisions—Lord help us, if we ever do so. However, there are circumstances in which what I expect boards to do is not necessarily being done consistently, either within a board area or between board areas. We pursue matters in those individual circumstances.

The Convener

On the same topic, if a provider in social care is unable to comply with the new statutory requirements, what will the consequences be?

Jeane Freeman

The Care Inspectorate has a number of powers that it can and does exercise to secure improvement, from putting in place an improvement notice right through to seeking a court-approved sanction to close a care home, if it thinks that the residents are at risk. We know that it exercises those powers. The Care Inspectorate will inspect on the basis of what is in legislation, should the Parliament agree to the bill.

Sandra White (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

My question probably takes us back to David Stewart’s initial question. I hope that you will forgive me, cabinet secretary; I have listened to all the evidence and it is becoming clearer to me what is happening with not just the tools but how the approach to staffing will drift down into the care sector—that is the issue that people have raised with me, to put it in a nutshell.

You talked about secondary legislation and translating and modifying approaches for the care sector. Is there a timescale for getting tools in place? There are tools in place for nursing in the hospital setting; when will the approach filter down to social care? Last week, the committee heard from AHPs, Unison and the Care Inspectorate that they are working together and looking forward to the tools being available, but no one knows whether there is a timescale for the approach filtering down to grass-roots level. I am interested in that and in how integration and what health boards do affect people in care homes. Can you give us a timescale, cabinet secretary?

Jeane Freeman

Fiona McQueen or Diane Murray might want to add to what I am about to say. The fact that bodies are working together as you described and looking forward to the bill becoming law gives us a significant indicator of how quickly we should be able to manage this. We are taking the proven, evidence-based methodology that is used in nursing and midwifery and, with those people’s direct involvement and the involvement of the Care Inspectorate, we are enabling those tools to be taken and modified for the care home setting, in a way that involves the organisations that are active in the care home setting.

As soon as that is achieved, the tools will be applied. In one sense, those organisations are the masters of that timescale, and will have been directly involved in developing and designing the tools. However, they are starting with a methodology and set of tools that have already been proved to work in a particular setting; they will then look at how to apply them in the care home setting.

That is the care home setting; that is not care at home. As I explained to Mr Cole-Hamilton, that is the direction that we would look to take for care at home, but the bill does not cover that—rightly so, because we are not yet ready to move there. Should we get to that point, it would be appropriate for that to come back as secondary legislation so that Parliament can give it due scrutiny.

Diane Murray

We have increased the infrastructure around this as part of the development of the bill. We have a process for the review and maintenance of the current tools and for taking forward evidence on where we feel that the development of new tools needs to go next. A national group is working on where we should go next and will come forward with proposals, based on its intelligence of the sectors that it is working with.

Fiona McQueen

For care homes, the timescale is right away; in other cases, it is with due regard to providers’ need and so on.

Jeane Freeman

If I can add further information in response not only to Ms White’s question but to Mr Whittle’s, the financial memorandum sets out the costs, which cover the development of the tool, including staff training and support for boards and others. We are planning all of that into what we have before us.

Sandra White

I raised the issue about the financial memorandum previously, and I am pleased to see that that information is there. I assume that this is a moving feast, and that there will be checks and balances as it moves along, so that things are transparent. The trade unions raised the issue of the variation between local authorities. As you have said, the bill does not include care at home, which you will be looking at in the future.

Can I put something into the mix, or maybe take something out of the mix? Obviously, Brexit is coming up and, as was mentioned in evidence, we have an ageing workforce. That is particularly the case in care homes, which can have more multifaceted nursing provision. How will that affect the bill? For all the tools, have you taken into consideration Brexit and the effect on care homes if the number of staff coming here is affected?

Jeane Freeman

I dearly wish that you could have taken that out of the mix—it would have been a significant help to all of us—but unfortunately you cannot and neither can I. Equally, putting it into the mix is a bit difficult too, because we do not know the circumstances that we will be in.

There is no doubt that if fewer European Union nationals are working in Scotland’s health or care settings or, even worse, if those who are currently here no longer want to remain, and return to their home countries, there will be significant difficulties in workforce numbers. That will be exposed in part by the application of a methodology and tools that provide evidence on workload demand. After that evidence is provided, professional judgment will be used, which will tell us what kind of skills mix we should have and where we should be getting it from.

If workplaces are struggling because some of the individuals who provided capacity in the past are no longer here, the difficulty is self-evident.

I firmly believe that no responsible Government would ever say that it is possible to mitigate all those risks completely, but part of what we are doing involves looking at how we grow our own, as it is described. For example, last week I visited Wishaw general hospital, which has developed its own theatre academy—as the Golden Jubilee national hospital has—in order to upskill its nursing staff. As the newly qualified trainees—we have seen a significant increase in student trainee numbers for six years in a row—come out ready for work, existing staff can be upskilled to take on additional roles. As part of the “grow our own” approach, there is on-going work with our further and higher education sector on articulation from college-based courses to higher education, and with young people before they leave school to ensure that they have done some foundation-level work in health and social care. That is all about increasing the number of individuals who look to health and social care as an opportunity.

Last night, as it happens, I was at the Prince’s Trust awards. The get into healthcare programme produced a couple of award winners, and we were able to talk about the new partnership with the Prince’s Trust that will give an additional 400 young people opportunities in health and social care. Through a range of actions, not only within my portfolio but across other Government portfolios, we are seeking to increase the opportunities for, and the throughput of, young people and others, including women returners, in health and social care. That is the right thing to do. Will it mitigate the difficulties that Brexit—whatever form it takes—will give us? No, it will not mitigate those difficulties completely, and there will be difficult decisions to make and issues to resolve once we know what we are dealing with.

The Convener

For the avoidance of doubt, can you confirm that there is nothing in the bill or in the financial memorandum that in any way helps employers who are faced with severe staff shortages in health or in care?

Fiona McQueen

Can I say something?

Jeane Freeman

Yes, absolutely—you can do so in a minute. The financial memorandum talks about the costs of implementing the bill, but—appropriately—it does not talk about the cost of employing staff. There is nothing in the bill in that context. I will bring in Fiona McQueen.

Fiona McQueen

I will leave Brexit to one side and come back to the point about older workers that Sandra White rightly raised. When we listen to staff, they talk about workload being difficult. We know that there is a real evidence base that shows that meaningful and fulfilling work is good for one’s health. Putting aside differences about the pension age, the reality is that meaningful work is good for people’s health. The bill will enable an appropriate assessment of workload so that, no matter what age someone is, they should be able to come in and do their job, and be fulfilled by and take pleasure in it rather than being exhausted. We will also be able to look at how we support the older worker to continue to work.

The cabinet secretary has spoken eloquently about the work that we are doing to widen access and to bring other people in. That will help, and I would expect it to make a difference to our older workforce, as we will able to keep them in employment because we will absolutely have in place safe and appropriate staffing that is commensurate with the workload that people are facing.

Sandra White

I was going to apply for a job, but you are fine—thank you very much. [Laughter.]

Brian Whittle

It is probably appropriate that I refer members to my entry in the register of members’ interests. I am still a director of a company that is developing a communication and collaboration platform and tools, including for the healthcare profession.

The Scottish standard time system piggybacks on the payroll platform. That is not unusual, but it means that we are basically bolting software tools on to a platform that was not initially designed for that purpose. The suitability of that platform has been questioned in the evidence that we have heard.

11:00  

What sequence of events led the Government to legislate for using tools that are—as we have heard—becoming outdated on a potentially unsuitable platform before we have a new bespoke platform and then reviewing and developing robust, workable tools for that specific platform?

Jeane Freeman

I will let Ms Murray take you through some of the detail on that. As Mr Whittle knows, one of the key pieces of advice that Audit Scotland always gives in relation to information technology and IT platforms is not to build something brand new, if at all possible. It advises us to consider what we have that works and see how it can be adapted or examine what proven, workable platforms there are on the shelf and see whether those can be adapted to meet our needs. Only if none of that works or if there is a gap should we build from new.

That is the approach that the Government takes. It is the approach that I took in my social security brief and that I will take in health.

I will ask Ms Murray to deal with the specific details of that.

Diane Murray

Mr Whittle will be aware that the SSTS—Scottish standard time system—platform is the NHS Scotland payment platform. The tools were put on to that platform because it was the most appropriate place for them at the time. When people know how to use the IT and how to put the information into SSTS, it is all fairly simple. I hope that the team was able to show members that earlier this morning.

As the committee is aware, we are going to procure an e-rostering system and that process will be completed by the end of 2018. When that system is in place, it will give us real-time information about our rosters, which will fit into the approach. We will then take a view on where the best place is to situate the tools, whether that continues to be on the SSTS platform, a new payroll system or a new platform that links with our electronic rostering. We need to understand the capabilities of each before we move towards making such a change.

The tools are capable of being revised and renewed as we go along. The tools can take into consideration the context of the service in which they are provided. The platform that they are on is a repository of that information and produces reports for us. When we better understand how that works as we go along, we will know the best place to situate the tools.

There has to be a link between the electronic rostering system and the tools platform. We will be absolutely clear about that in the procurement exercise to ensure that the systems can talk to and feed into each other. That work has not yet concluded. That is probably as much as I can say on that.

The first premise is to understand and be sure about what we need from any IT system and the next step is procurement.

Brian Whittle

Cabinet secretary, you are right to say that we should not build from scratch if we can avoid it and, in the health sector, there will be a platform that can be taken off the shelf and adapted, at the very least. However, when developing tools that will sit on the current platform, would not the best process be first to understand the platform on which they sit? Without question, you would develop a different tool for a different platform.

Diane Murray

We will have to do both. The tools that sit on that platform do so as we intended. However, if we develop something different that might sit within an integration joint board setting, we would have to consider the platform. That consideration is an important part of the process.

Brian Whittle

So you are in a procurement loop in which you are looking at the platform on which the new tools will sit.

Diane Murray

We are looking at the e-rostering platform, after which we will take a decision about whether to stay on the present site or to transfer over to that. As part of the procurement exercise, we will be asking about the ability of the platform to feed into our workload tools platform.

Brian Whittle

The financial memorandum refers to the work of the nursing and midwifery workload and workforce planning programme in developing the new tools. Will the programme include work on tools for other NHS staff groups and settings, as the financial memorandum indicates?

Diane Murray

As we said in relation to the care home setting, we will use the learning from that, but the work cannot take place in isolation from the staff who know how to undertake that work. If we were thinking about developing a multiprofession tool, we would bring together a clinical reference group that includes all the people who would use that tool. It would have to involve more than just nursing input.

The important part is the learning that takes place. Such learning is being taken forward in the Nurse Staffing Levels (Wales) Act 2016, in the tools that have been developed in some of the English settings and in some of the multiprofession tools. We know that that learning is robust, but we need to bring the evidence from the other services and the other professions into that process. Rather than throwing the baby out with the bath water, we need to be able to change and adapt, according to the requirements that we find.

Brian Whittle

In the context of multidisciplinary teams and multidisciplinary tools, we have had evidence from allied health professionals, who feel that there is a danger that a two-tier system might be created and that they might be left behind. When do you envisage bringing them into the development of the tools?

Jeane Freeman

As I said earlier, when the tools that have been developed are applied in the care setting or even the hospital setting, it might be the case that, as consideration is given to what the right skills mix is for the workload, allied health professionals will turn out to be the very people who have the skills that are required to meet that need. As we have described, the Care Inspectorate will enable work to be done to review the current tools and to look at how they need to be modified and applied to a care home setting. We expect a degree of AHPs’ expertise to be involved in that work to develop the tools that would be appropriate for a care home setting.

Keith Brown (Clackmannanshire and Dunblane) (SNP)

As a new member of the committee, from listening to the evidence sessions, the idea that I have in my mind is that what is proposed is a bit like intelligence-led policing, which the cabinet secretary will be familiar with from one of her previous roles. It is an evidence-based approach, but one that involves professional judgment.

In its evidence, Unison was concerned about staffing, as you would expect. I made the point that I would have thought that the bill would help, because if we continue to apply the tools and the common methodology, that will show where there is a requirement for increased staffing. I do not think that that is how Unison saw the bill, but that is how I see it.

Ms McQueen said that it had sometimes been the case that when existing tools were applied, that had led to an expectation that there would be increased staffing, only for people to be disappointed. Are you confident that that was because the evidence showed that additional staffing was not required? Do you think that the bill provides a tool that will help providers and commissioners of health and care services to recognise when there is a need for increased staffing?

Jeane Freeman

The short answer to that is yes. There are a couple of reasons for that. First, I mention in passing the point that I made earlier about escalation and how that works. Secondly, when we have a consistent methodology that produces evidence on the workload, to which professional judgment is applied, and that process takes place on a statutory basis, with Healthcare Improvement Scotland and the Care Inspectorate being required to look at whether that has been applied properly and acted on, we diminish the opportunities for people to be disappointed because they believe that they produced evidence that a set of skills was needed and it did not happen.

We also increase the likelihood that those who made the decision not to respond positively to the evidence have that decision very clearly scrutinised as to why they did not do that when the evidence was there and the professional judgment was applied. If people know that that is the basis on which they will be inspected and on which improvement notices will be put on their service, that will help them to understand the importance of not only consistently applying the methodology and the tools but acting on the results of that. I expect the situation to be significantly improved from the current one.

That does not mean that the passing of the legislation will guarantee that staff will not be disappointed. They may be disappointed, because they may nonetheless feel that the solution that is provided to them is not the one that they wanted. As long as that solution can be defended, in terms of the proper use of the evidence and clinical judgment in the circumstances and the local context, as I described earlier, that decision is fair. The most important thing is that the decision is clearly set out and understood.

That is my point about transparency. If I cast my mind back quite a long time, I can recall that part of the disappointment is feeling that decisions were made and nobody ever really explained why they were made. You did not know why ward A got the extra pair of hands and your ward did not. Was it just because the manager did not like you or liked someone else more? All sorts of possibilities run through your mind when you do not know transparently and clearly the basis on which a decision has been made. Of course, one of the things that the bill does is to address that.

David Torrance (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)

The cabinet secretary has touched on flexibility. Does the bill allow sufficient flexibility for changes in working practices and technology? How quickly will we be able to react and implement changes?

Jeane Freeman

In what sense?

David Torrance

I am talking about changes to working processes and technology, which have an effect on staff levels.

Fiona McQueen

There is absolutely flexibility in relation to changing working practices. Over the past 10 years or so, the changes in healthcare delivery have been dramatic and remarkable. There is no point in saying that we will just continue with the staffing that we needed 10 years ago. Developments in technology sometimes mean that more complex care can be carried out for people who are more ill or frail, for which we need more staff. Sometimes, technology means that no staff are needed because there is a technological solution. With the consistent, routine and regular application of the tools, with the use of professional judgment and by involving service users, patients and staff in moving forward, we will absolutely be able to embrace change. We know that the future will be different, so we would expect to see that change.

David Torrance

What mechanisms are in place to share good working practices across the NHS? Sometimes, management is slow to adapt or take change on board.

Jeane Freeman

That is a fair point. One important thing about the bill is that, because we are putting the approach on a statutory footing, it will become part of the work that Healthcare Improvement Scotland and the Care Inspectorate do in conducting inspections. They will rely less on the spread of good practice, because there will be a statutory requirement. I am not suggesting that we have statutory requirements in every area where we might want to spread good practice, but it takes us away from relying on the spreading of good practice. That is not to suggest that people do not want to pick up good practice, but other priorities get in the way, such as the work that they do day to day and statutory duties. Having a legislative framework will give what needs to happen greater robustness and force.

11:15  

The Convener

I seek clarity on some points. Is it still the intention that boards will be required to report on whether the tools have been properly applied rather than on the outcomes of the common staffing method for future staffing numbers?

Jeane Freeman

No. We will expect boards to report not only on the application of the tools but on the outcomes, and Healthcare Improvement Scotland will look at that in its inspections.

The Convener

Will Healthcare Improvement Scotland have the powers and the ultimate sanctions in parallel that we have heard are available to the Care Inspectorate, which can take significant measures when commitments are not fulfilled?

Jeane Freeman

In its inspection role, Healthcare Improvement Scotland has a number of powers, which it will continue to have. It also has an important improvement function so, when standards are not being met and duties are not being complied with, it has a responsibility to offer support to allow people to improve and meet standards or fulfil duties. If improvement does not happen, other steps can be taken.

The Convener

What would you expect a health board to do if it undertook the statutory obligations that are being created in the bill and could not meet all the requirements that were put on it as a consequence?

Jeane Freeman

If a board used the tools and applied professional judgment but could not fill the roles—I think that you are asking about that—I would expect it to speedily inform the Government of the situation, to discuss alternative solutions with us and to work with us to resolve the situation in the medium to longer term. I would also expect the Government’s health directorates to note the situation for workforce planning purposes and to take a view on whether it involved local circumstances or whether it was evidence of a trend for particular skills or a particular expertise.

Emma Harper

I have a couple of questions about care homes and the Care Inspectorate. Paragraphs 84 to 90 of the policy memorandum talk about the Care Inspectorate. Paragraph 84 says:

“the Bill sets out a mechanism to develop tools and a methodology for care homes for adults, in the first instance. The legislation does not seek to prescribe an approach to workload or workforce planning on the face of the Bill in care service settings, but rather to enable the development of suitable approaches for different settings”.

Concerns have been raised about the difficulty of recruiting staff for care homes. The comment has been made that

“we are already at the bottom line in terms of resource for providing the service.”—[Official Report, Health and Sport Committee, 18 September 2018; c 7.]

I am interested to know what efforts are under way to address the care sector’s concerns and the risks of consequences because of the recruitment challenges.

Jeane Freeman

I understand the care sector’s concerns, although it would be inaccurate to say that such concerns are evidence based across our entire country. In some parts, care homes are successfully recruiting at a significant level to meet their needs.

A number of initiatives are under way to ensure that staff are available for care homes. Some care homes work in clusters; for example, if they need allied health professionals, such as occupational or physical therapists, they can share that staff resource. At least one local authority has reorganised its services and, under its policy of no compulsory redundancies, has offered retraining opportunities for staff whom it still employs and who want to take up opportunities in care homes and childcare.

I spoke about initiatives with regard to the articulation between school, college and higher education. That work is focused on young people and adult returners. In local settings, there are often opportunities for women to return to work in a care home setting. Our application of the living wage to care home workers is an important element of making care home work attractive to people.

Would Fiona McQueen or Diane Murray like to add to that?

Fiona McQueen

My team leads on work with Government colleagues, Scottish Care, the Royal College of Nursing and other stakeholders to enhance—almost to define—the nursing contribution to care homes. We recognise that the area can be a challenge. There are some practical issues, for example around support for care workers in care homes to do nurse training, which has been done in the NHS for some time. There is also wider work to look at general support for care home staffing.

The Convener

I know that work is going ahead jointly with COSLA under part 2 of the national workforce plan. My final question to the cabinet secretary is simply whether she is satisfied that there is no contradiction between the requirements in the bill and the work that is already under way, and that there will be no disruption to that joint working?

Jeane Freeman

I am satisfied that there will be no disruption to that joint work, which is really important. Should the bill be passed, I am confident that it will contribute significantly to robust workforce planning across health and social care.

The Convener

I thank the cabinet secretary for attending with her officials. I suspend the meeting for two minutes to allow the panel to leave.

11:22 Meeting suspended.  

11:26 On resuming—  

2 October 2018

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11 September 2018

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18 September 2018

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25 September 2018

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2 October 2018

Health and Sport Committee Stage 1 report 

What is secondary legislation?

Secondary legislation is sometimes called 'subordinate' or 'delegated' legislation. It can be used to:

  • bring a section or sections of a law that’s already been passed, into force
  • give details of how a law will be applied
  • make changes to the law without a new Act having to be passed

An Act is a Bill that’s been approved by Parliament and given Royal Assent (formally approved).

Delegated Powers and Law Reform committee

This committee looks at the powers of this Bill to allow the Scottish Government or others to create 'secondary legislation' or regulations.

It met to discuss the Bill in public on:

11 December 2018:

Read the Stage 1 report by the Delegated Powers and Law Reform committee published on 25 September 2018.

Debate on the Bill

A debate for MSPs to discuss what the Bill aims to do and how it'll do it.

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Stage 1 debate on the Bill transcript

The Presiding Officer (Ken Macintosh)

The next item of business is a stage 1 debate on motion S5M-15055, in the name of Jeane Freeman, on the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill.

14:30  

The Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport (Jeane Freeman)

The people of Scotland rightly expect safe, effective and person-centred healthcare. Ensuring that we all have continuing and improved access to the right care at the right time has been the guiding principle of our approach to health and social care services, but that is a significant and complex task.

In common with users of healthcare systems elsewhere in the world, we are living longer but not yet healthier lives. That brings the challenge of more complex health conditions to more of our citizens. In meeting the increasing demand on our services, it is essential that we act to make sure that our whole system of health and care has the capacity, focus and workforce to address the needs of our changing society.

I have set out my expectations for improved mental health services, improved access through the waiting times improvement plan, and continuing pace in the reform of our health and social care services, underpinned by improvements in primary care. However, those improvements can be secured only through the hard work and dedication of our health and care staff.

There is a compelling argument that having sufficient staff working in a psychologically safe environment is integral to good patient outcomes. That is why we need to put in place measures to ensure that, at all times, we have evidence-based safe levels of staff.

The Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill is grounded in, and builds on, the excellent approach to workload planning that has been led by our nurses and midwives. The development of the staffing methodology and specialty-specific tools has been an innovative, evidence-based and—importantly—professional-led approach. The approach has led to the use of those tools in the Welsh legislation on safe staffing and in the development of workload tools that are used by NHS England. Recognising the value of such an approach, we made a manifesto commitment to secure it in legislation. This bill now goes further than that commitment, putting in place a framework to systematically identify the workload that is needed to improve outcomes and deliver high-quality care.

In developing the bill, we carried out two consultations and held 10 public events. My officials, my predecessor and I have worked with representatives of nurses, doctors, allied health professionals, health boards, local authorities, care service providers, professional bodies, trade unions and others to enable an approach that works in one part of our health and care system to spread across the whole system.

Throughout the process, we have worked hard to listen to ideas and views and to look at how we can make this work. I recognise that there can be competing interests, that our integration agenda is ambitious and that the approach that the bill encapsulates will require a significant cultural shift in our health and care organisations. We saw that reflected in the evidence that was taken by the Health and Sport Committee.

However, I believe that, throughout the process, it has also been clear that the bill is an opportunity. It is an opportunity to create a rigorous, evidence-based approach to decision making on staffing that takes account of patients’ and service users’ health and care needs. It will identify the workload that is required to meet those needs, assist the exercise of professional judgment and promote a safe environment.

The bill is an opportunity to ensure that the professional judgment of our staff who deliver health and social care is heard. It is also an opportunity to create transparency around staffing decisions—which will aid Healthcare Improvement Scotland and the Care Inspectorate in supporting improvement across our health and care services—and to give staff and patients the confidence that, at all times, decisions are made on staffing that support safe, effective and person-centred care.

Healthcare Improvement Scotland and the Care Inspectorate will play crucial roles in implementation of that approach. Both will be responsible for facilitating the development of staffing tools and methodologies in collaboration with the services that will use them. In doing so, they will identify, develop and implement continuous quality improvement rather than focus solely on compliance with minimum standards.

The matter of our giving HIS a specific function in the bill has been raised. I will lodge an amendment at stage 2 to make the role of HIS absolutely clear.

The bill puts in place a methodology and procedures to ensure that health boards and care service providers have appropriate staffing. The bill is not about nurses alone, nor is it about setting a minimum number of staff to deliver any particular service. It is founded on the innovative approach that our nurses and midwives have developed, which starts with a robust, evidence-based assessment of the care that the people using our services need and want. Only when we understand that can we be sure that we understand the workload we need, the skills that are necessary to meet it and what staff need to have in place to deliver that care to a high quality.

The voice of the professional must be heard as part of this process. The increased transparency that the bill requires will make obvious the workload that exists and the corresponding skills that are required to deliver high-quality care. That will assure health boards, HIS, the Care Inspectorate, health and care staff, professional bodies, trade unions, this Parliament, this cabinet secretary and, importantly, the public that we have the right staff with the right skills in place. I believe that that is exactly the right thing to do.

Monica Lennon (Central Scotland) (Lab)

I agree that it is important that staff be listened to. Recent figures reveal that, in the past three years, there have been 1 million days of stress-related absence in the national health service, not counting those in social care. What is the Scottish Government doing outwith the bill to address that situation and to make sure that the concerns that staff have now about safety and pressure in the workplace are being addressed in real time?

Jeane Freeman

I am grateful to Ms Lennon for raising the matter. I know that she has raised it before. Like her, I take stress-related absences—indeed, any absences in our health service—very seriously. Our boards are putting in place a number of measures relating to mental health support for staff. We need to recognise that not all stress arises from workplace issues; sometimes, it arises from personal or domestic issues that nonetheless impacts on an individual’s performance and enjoyment of their work. The measures that we are beginning to put in place across our health boards do not distinguish but simply ask how we can help staff. I am happy to give Ms Lennon more detail on that matter and to discuss further with her, if she wishes, how we might improve on that.

It is clear from my conversations with representatives of staff groups that the bill could be improved by placing a more explicit duty on health boards to ensure that there are clear mechanisms for day-to-day assessment of staff needs and clear routes for the professional voice to be heard in those assessments. I am pleased to confirm that I will lodge an amendment at stage 2 to include that duty.

The effective application of the legislation will also support the wider workforce planning processes. Providing that evidence-based information on workload at a local and service level will enhance the planning of workforce needs locally, regionally and nationally.

Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD)

Will the cabinet secretary give way?

Jeane Freeman

If the member does not mind, I will come back to him.

I know that each and every profession contributes to the delivery of positive outcomes for service users, which is why the legislation applies across all staff who deliver health and social care services. The general duty to ensure that there is appropriate staffing and the overarching principles will span all staff groups, not just nursing and midwifery. That will support multidisciplinary planning and service delivery and will mitigate the risk of unintentionally diverting resources to nursing and midwifery at the expense of any other staff group.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

Although the bill is worthy, it is nothing without adequate workforce planning underpinning it. We cannot legislate to make staffing safer and expect that just to happen. Can the cabinet secretary confirm that the move towards the methodologies and toolkits that are described in the bill will not see staff moved out of non-acute services to ensure that acute services are staffed safely?

Jeane Freeman

Yes, I can confirm that. As I am in the middle of explaining, as a legislative framework around a methodology, the bill applies to all staff groups across health and social care. To do anything other would, indeed, be to risk unintended consequences such as moving resource to one area at the expense of another.

Workforce planning is absolutely critical, but good workforce planning is based on sound evidence. As I will come on to say later, the bill is an important component of producing that sound evidence at a local and service level and will feed into the workforce planning of health boards and integration joint boards and, through them, into national workforce planning.

In taking a broader approach, the bill achieves the legislative coherence across the health and social care landscape that is demanded by integrated health and social care and that rests on the important recognition of value across all staff groups. As I have just said, it is another lever to join up services, support innovation and redesign and deliver sustainable high-quality care. In taking that broader approach, the bill will not be restrictive or prescriptive but will be appropriate and enabling for the social care sector. In particular, it will support the direction of travel that is set out in the co-produced part 2 of the national health and social care workforce plan. Any new tools and methodologies will be developed specifically for and by the professionals who will use them. The current suite of tools will not remain unchanged but will continue to be reviewed and renewed to effectively support multidisciplinary approaches to the delivery of care. Where appropriate, we are taking a multidisciplinary approach, and I will look to amend the bill at stage 2 to make that clear.

The Government is committed to ensuring that Scotland has the appropriate staffing for the delivery of safe, high-quality care. The bill will contribute to that aim by placing a duty on health boards and care services to ensure that appropriate numbers of suitably trained staff are in place to provide safe and high-quality care. It requires health boards to apply evidence-based and professional-led approaches to nursing and midwifery workforce planning. It promotes a continuing culture of transparency and engagement with staff, and it facilitates the future development of that approach across health and care settings, with tools being developed through partnership and taking account of the size and complexity of the services.

I believe that we can all agree that the framework that the bill offers to put in place the right number of staff in the right place at the right time and with the right skills is the right thing to do.

So far, I have addressed many of the issues that were raised by the Health and Sport Committee in its stage 1 report. I welcome the committee’s support for the general principles of the bill and I thank the committee members for their full consideration of the complexity of the approach, especially in the integrated landscape. In particular, I thank them for the view—which I assuredly share—that the professional voice must be heard at all levels.

I acknowledge that we are not all in agreement on every part of the bill, and I have welcomed the challenges and the constructive discussion that we have had so far. I commit to continuing to work with those who deliver health and social care, and with members on the committee and in the Parliament, to do all that we can to have the right statutory basis for the provision of appropriate staffing in health and care service settings

This is an ambitious piece of legislation that will provide a critical contribution to driving the necessary and important cultural and organisational change that we need to meet the challenges to and expectations of health and social care in Scotland—all with the paramount objective of providing improved, safe, effective and person-centred service and outcomes for people in Scotland.

I move,

That the Parliament agrees to the general principles of the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill.

The Presiding Officer

I call Lewis Macdonald to speak on behalf of the Health and Sport Committee, as its convener.

14:44  

Lewis Macdonald (North East Scotland) (Lab)

As convener of the Health and Sport Committee, I am pleased to report on stage 1 of the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill. Our report, which was agreed unanimously across all the parties, makes a number of what we hope are constructive suggestions to enhance the bill.

I thank all those who assisted the committee with our scrutiny, those who responded to our call for views and to our survey, those who gave oral evidence, and the many staff who participated in our plenary session at the NHS anniversary event in Glasgow in the summer. Many front-line health and care staff gave up time from their very busy schedules to engage with the committee. I record our thanks not only for their invaluable input, but—of course—for the very important work that they do.

The cabinet secretary responded to our report in writing yesterday. Her offer to keep the dialogue going is welcome, as are the commitments that she has made this afternoon on areas in which the Government intends to lodge amendments at stage 2. However, the response also indicated that the Government has yet to be persuaded on a number of areas and about a number of specific points that the committee made. However, persuasion is, of course, what committees are all about, so I will lay out some of the areas on which I hope that ministers will think again.

As the cabinet secretary said, the bill seeks to ensure more integrated workload and staff planning across health and social care. The question for the committee has been whether it will ensure that there are appropriate staffing levels to deliver high-quality care in health and social care settings. Part 1 establishes the guiding principles for staffing, which apply to the bill as a whole. The committee agrees that those principles should work to ensure equity and parity across all staff groups. Most of the evidence supported those guiding principles; few would argue with the aim of providing safe and high-quality services.

As has been said, the bill will replace existing methods for assessing the adequacy of staffing levels. Professional judgment is part of the current staffing methodology, but it is not yet part of the bill: the committee heard pleas that the input of professional judgment should be much more prominent in the bill. Workplace leaders are best placed to take decisions about staffing requirements on the day, and whether there are enough suitably qualified staff on duty to meet patient needs.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

Does Lewis Macdonald agree that the professional voice is important not only when it comes to safe staffing, and that the best ideas can stem from the ward and be disseminated outwards as best practice for the country?

Lewis Macdonald

I absolutely agree with that. It is fair to say that the committee’s approach to the bill and other things has been to seek the broadest possible input from professional groups. I hope that NHS management and the Government will take that approach, as we proceed with the bill. The committee agreed that the bill should reflect existing practice and give a prominent role to professional judgment.

We also concluded that the judgment of allied health professionals and social care workers, as well as that of nurses and midwives, should be considered. To achieve equity and parity across services, all staff groups that are involved in delivering care should be involved.

The Government’s policy memorandum says that

“high quality care requires the right people, in the right place, with the right skills at the right time to ensure the best health and care outcomes for service users and people experiencing care.”

We can all agree with that. Our report suggests that the bill should clarify the role of professional judgment, and strengthen the commitment to staff wellbeing in the provision of safe and high-quality services. I was therefore pleased to hear the cabinet secretary commit a few moments ago to lodging an amendment on that at stage 2. Many of our witnesses from the caring professions asked that those principles be made clear in the bill. In the committee’s view, such changes would not weaken the bill; they would strengthen it.

Although the Government believes that the bill will support the desirable outcome of increased integration of health and social care services by providing a consistent framework for staff planning across the sectors, we heard considerable evidence about concerns that the bill could inadvertently have the opposite effect. Some witnesses suggested that the bill risks separating healthcare from social care and of not including significant groups of staff. That could imply that different expectations will continue to apply to different parts of a system that, in other contexts, the Government—as we all do—says should be seen as a whole.

We also heard concerns that the bill is very much process focused, which is at odds with the priority of the integration agenda to provide better outcomes for patients. We were keen to ensure that the bill’s focus on process would not be at the expense of outcomes, so we stated our view that that should be in the general principles of the bill. The Government’s response, accompanying the cabinet secretary’s letter, said that including an outcomes focus in the general principles of the bill

“would represent unnecessary duplication.”

I was surprised to read that. I am sure that ministers will think further about it before stage 2.

Jeane Freeman also mentioned Healthcare Improvement Scotland, which is undertaking work, as part of its excellence-in-care approach, on provision of information on expected staffing levels and actual staffing levels by ward. That is now happening in some places: the committee agrees that it is a good idea to roll out that initiative nationwide. Again, we encourage the minister and the Government to consider whether that could be done.

Part 2 of the bill will apply the general principles to national health service staffing in particular. Health boards are already required to do workforce planning and to ensure provision of high quality care. To support those duties, a suite of 12 workforce planning tools has been developed over the period since 2004. The committee decided that we should survey health boards to find out about use of existing tools, and we discovered that their use is patchy. Boards have been subject to a mandatory requirement from the Scottish Government to use the tools since 2013, but that has clearly failed to have the desired effect.

The bill would replace a “mandatory requirement” with a “statutory requirement”: we asked the Government how that change would deliver compliance in the future. The cabinet secretary’s written response this week noted that

“a number of measures are already in place to monitor Health Boards’ compliance with their legal duties”,

and it suggests that no change to monitoring will therefore be required. It is difficult to square that with the current inconsistency in compliance, so it would be useful to hear more about how a statutory duty will differ in practice from a mandatory requirement.

Although the workforce planning tools have been in use for up to 14 years, the committee heard concerns about levels of training. Witnesses were keen that staff be given dedicated time to attend training, rather than being expected merely to acquire expertise as part of continuous professional development. Again, it would be useful to know whether the Government agrees with that.

Part 3 of the bill relates to staffing in care services. The policy memorandum notes that the purpose of including care services in the bill is to allow the sector to build on and strengthen existing statutory mechanisms, in order that it can create a cohesive framework across all health and social care settings. The bill provides a power for the Care Inspectorate to develop workforce planning tools for application in care settings for which a need is identified and agreed.

Much of the evidence that we heard on part 3 of the bill questioned whether the bill is actually necessary in social care services, which are provided in environments that are very different from hospital settings. We recognise that that must be factored in to development of any new tools, but we concluded that the care sector should not be treated differently from the NHS. In both, we should expect enough suitably qualified staff to be present to deliver high-quality services. Patients and their families will expect no less.

The Government made it clear to the committee that the staffing methodologies in the bill are not linked directly to national workforce planning, although the “National health and social care workforce plan” is mentioned throughout, and has been mentioned by the cabinet secretary this afternoon. Witnesses were concerned about how the outcomes of the bill could be achieved without a firmer link to wider national workforce planning. If there is insufficient skilled labour available nationally to fill vacancies, health boards and care services may be unable to meet the requirements of the bill. We need to know, and they need to know, what would follow, if that were to be the case.

One concern that was raised was the possible skewing of resources away from social care at a time when the planning tools exist only in the NHS. Staff and other resources might be concentrated in the acute sector in order to meet the statutory requirements in part 2 of the bill, while tools are still under development for social care under part 3.

A similar issue was raised by allied health professionals, who were concerned that directors of finance could be put in an invidious position when it comes to deciding priorities: funding going to the nursing side, for example, at the expense of AHPs and multidisciplinary working. We need to ensure that those fears are not realised by ensuring that the essential role of AHPs is reflected in the legislation, particularly for the early years before part 3 of the bill comes fully into effect. An amendment at stage 2, as was suggested by the cabinet secretary today, would be widely welcomed.

The committee unanimously supports the general principles of the bill, while seeking clarification on the issues that we have raised and a positive response to the concerns that we highlight in our report. Many of the witnesses to our stage 1 inquiry were looking for reassurance that the Government is listening to their concerns.

I hope that the cabinet secretary will reflect further on our report, this debate and the concerns that were raised by witnesses, so that the bill can be made better and stronger at stage 2.

14:55  

Miles Briggs (Lothian) (Con)

I thank all the organisations that provided extremely useful briefings ahead of today’s debate. The most valuable resource of any organisation is its people, and our Scottish NHS in no different. There are more than 162,000 NHS employees across Scotland, who work tirelessly day in and day out to deliver and support our health and social care services for the people of our country.

The question that they are asking is this: what will this bill do to help to support those people working in Scotland’s health and social care services? I and the members of the Health and Sport Committee have been asking questions about that from day 1. I hope that the committee’s report has been useful to the Government in trying to answer such questions—specifically, questions on the unintended consequences of the bill. For help to answer those, we need look no further than the Royal College of Nursing Scotland’s member survey on staffing.

When RCN Scotland carried out a survey of its members last year, it received 3,000 responses from care and support workers across Scotland, who delivered some very concerning responses. Fifty-one per cent of respondents said that their last shift was not staffed to the level planned and 53 per cent said that care was compromised as a result of that; 54 per cent reported that they did not have enough time to provide the level of care that they would have liked to; 47 per cent said that they felt demoralised; and 61 per cent worked extra time—on average, 46 minutes—at the end of their shift. More than a third of respondents said that, because of a lack of time, they had to leave necessary care unprovided.

The most important evidence from the survey was in the statements from NHS staff and in their world view on the current workforce crisis in Scotland. I have picked out three points. NHS professionals said:

“The only reason we had enough staff today is because we had bank staff.”

“We had enough staff for the patients. But in mental health we have attack respond situations and, no, for most of the night we wouldn't have been able to assist staff if a colleague had been under threat of physical violence.”

“When you’re short staffed, the workload is the same, you have to get round everything. You are constantly chasing your tail; you’re anxious; you’re rushed. Having the right staff changes that.”

All of us in the chamber know and recognise that our NHS staff go the extra mile every day of the week to deliver the care that we value so much, but what tools can they have at their disposal when the level of risk to the safety and care of staff and patients in the environment and wards in which they work is unsafe? I want to outline some of the areas in which I think the bill needs to be improved.

In relation to process, the Law Society of Scotland stated that the stage 1 guiding principles were too general. It fears that there could be scope for subjective judgment, leading to the inevitable juggling and compromising of competing priorities. Some stakeholders were concerned that the bill could undermine care by focusing on process and narrowly defined settings, rather than outcomes. Certainly, what we heard at committee was that we need to make sure that our health service is outcome focused.

In relation to accountability, the bill places a general duty on health boards and care service providers to ensure that there is appropriate staffing and states that health boards, commissioners and providers will be accountable. A key concern that was raised with the committee was the need for greater clarity in the bill on where accountability will sit. If no one is named as an accountable officer, there is a risk that responsibility will be felt by the people who are running the tools, who will become exposed if adverse events arise. It is still not completely clear to many members how that will feed in higher up the NHS management structure.

Professional judgment is a key part of the bill that we should seek to improve, and we will be seeking to improve on that. Witnesses called for the input of professional judgment to be more prominent in the bill, and I welcome some of what the cabinet secretary said. It was felt that professionals should be involved in the process and that views should be taken at a local level, below executive and senior management level, as the committee’s convener outlined. Although professional judgment is part of the new common staffing method, it is not included in the bill.

The Royal College of Nursing believes that it is essential that the bill enables the empowerment of nurses, and I agree with that. As the cabinet secretary has outlined, the bill presents opportunities, and I hope that we can realise those opportunities in order to empower our NHS staff and the staff who work in health and social care settings.

The bill aims to ensure that there are adequate staffing levels where health and social care are delivered. As Alex Cole-Hamilton said, the bill could provide a much-needed focus on workforce planning. The social care setting is a key area and the committee would like more clarity on how the bill will impact that area and how the tools will be developed and delivered.

Ahead of today’s debate, I noted the concerns and reservations that were expressed by the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities, the Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations and other organisations about the bill’s proposals in respect of social care. Social care accounts for more than a quarter of the third sector’s turnover, and 34 per cent of voluntary organisations in Scotland are involved in delivering social care-related activities. The provisions of the bill that relate to social care and the development and introduction of standardised workforce tools to the sector, which currently has no single governance structure and is made up of hundreds of diverse organisations, clearly represents a major challenge. I hope that the Scottish Government will work on that to build confidence and the support of the sector.

I welcome much of the Scottish Government’s response, which the cabinet secretary outlined in her letter yesterday to the Health and Sport Committee. The “unintended consequences” of the bill have been outlined by many organisations ahead of the stage 1 debate and I hope that they will be addressed as the bill progresses through Parliament.

In conclusion, the Scottish Conservatives recognise that our health and social care workforce faces a number of key challenges. With or without legislation, unless we urgently resolve the staff shortages across NHS Scotland, safe staffing levels will remain a dream instead of a reality.

In her response to the committee, the cabinet secretary stated:

“This Bill is about workload planning not workforce planning.”

However, for those people who work in our NHS and social care services, those are the same thing. We need to see progress in addressing the staffing challenges in our health and social care services.

Karen Hedge, the national director of Scottish Care, told the committee that the bill will not

“magically create nurses”.

Therefore, we need to be clear that working to deliver a full staffing complement must be the priority of the Scottish Government and the Scottish Parliament.

The Scottish Conservatives support the general principles of the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill and we will work cross party to amend the bill as it progresses through Parliament.

15:02  

Monica Lennon (Central Scotland) (Lab)

I am pleased to open for Scottish Labour in the debate and I thank the Health and Sport Committee for its carefully considered report. From listening to the convener, Lewis Macdonald, it is clear that the committee went to great lengths to gather evidence and to scrutinise the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill. The committee’s recommendations reflect that rich body of evidence and I agree that the Scottish Government would do well to remain open to persuasion, because there is clearly room for improvement. Some of the committee’s recommendations were reinforced by the many stakeholder briefings that we have gratefully received ahead of the debate.

This has been a milestone year for health. This summer, the Parliament and the country came together to mark the NHS at 70: we had a lot to celebrate. Our health service has saved and transformed countless lives—everyone in the chamber will have a close, personal affinity to the NHS.

Moving forward, the integration of health and social care has the potential to be transformative, but we must get to grips with the underlying challenges in order to reduce the levels of ill health and health inequalities that persist. Under this Government, we have not yet seen enough progress on that front. The cabinet secretary said that we are living longer, but we are not yet living healthier lives and that matters because all of us have a right to health and want to live good, healthy lives.

That is a matter of urgency also because our health and social care services are struggling to cope. In her response to the committee’s stage 1 report, the cabinet secretary says that the Scottish Government

“understands the pressure staff are facing”.

We know that the cabinet secretary inherited the bill and I am not convinced that, given all the pressures facing the NHS, this is the bill that she would have wanted. However, as she is sticking with it, Scottish Labour will play its part in improving and strengthening it. We are eager to work with the cabinet secretary and her team in the widest terms possible.

However, as we debate the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill today, our focus has to remain on outcomes and the difference that the bill could make to the health and wellbeing of our constituents and our loved ones. Scotland’s health and social care workforce is working tirelessly to provide the very best of care; it cannot work any harder and it is far from easy.

Miles Briggs spoke about nursing and we know that, according to the RCN, there are times when staff are not able to meet the needs of their patients because of staffing shortages, because of issues with the skills mix of teams and because of ever-increasing demands on services. In the past few weeks, I have seen that at first hand, because my mum has spent far too much time in hospital. None of us is detached from that; it is very real and it is happening now.

It must concern the cabinet secretary that Audit Scotland warns that the NHS in Scotland is not financially sustainable and that its performance has continued to decline. Today, we have had another extremely serious section 22 report on NHS Tayside. We have a health board that is facing perpetual financial crisis, and the buck stops with the Scottish Government.

Jeane Freeman

In order to ensure that we have the absolutely correct context, I am sure that Ms Lennon will agree that the section 22 order on NHS Tayside refers to the previous financial year and that, by the Auditor General for Scotland’s own acknowledgement, the Audit Scotland report did not take account—because it could not at that point—of the medium-term financial framework that I published. In order to ensure that we are getting an accurate picture of the current state of play, perhaps we just need to add those extra bits of context.

Monica Lennon

I am glad that the cabinet secretary has put on the record that information about her medium-term framework, but there is no denying the fact that, again, we have a very serious report from the Auditor General. I am sure that the Public Audit and Post-legislative Scrutiny Committee will pick it up and scrutinise it in due course.

Currently, there are enough job vacancies in the NHS to fill staff numbers for two Scottish hospitals; the British Medical Association says that the true number of consultant vacancies is double that of the official figures from the Information Services Division; Scottish Care points to a shocking 32 per cent vacancy rate for nurses in social care; and the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh says that unless staffing gaps are resolved,

“safe staffing levels will remain a dream rather than a reality.”

What will the bill do to address the staffing crisis? The cabinet secretary is clear that the bill is about workload planning, not workforce planning. However, to put it simply, there must be enough staff available to deal with the high workload that NHS staff are experiencing. The Scottish Government has plenty of work under way—for example, there is the work that the Minister for Public Health, Sport and Wellbeing is focusing on in relation to alcohol and drugs—all of which is important because, to go back to my earlier remarks, the issue is prevention; and we have not seen enough preventive action to reduce the pressure on the NHS.

We hope that the bill is part of a new, wider, radical approach to health and social care workforce planning that is person centred. From Unison to the BMA, the message is loud and clear that just putting existing duties into statute will not in itself change anything. The committee stage 1 report highlights several areas of concern about the bill and the RCN highlights ongoing monitoring and the escalation of risks. If safe staffing levels fall below requirements, there must be a quick, clear and effective route to escalation of staffing levels; and those tools must work in real time so that any health professional who finds themselves on an understaffed ward can alert someone to the problem.

We have had dozens of briefings about the bill. For example, the Royal College of Physicians and the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists highlight the importance of workforce planning supporting the new multidisciplinary models of care. The bill aims to give parity between health and social care by also setting out staffing duties in care services. However, we have heard from COSLA, the Coalition of Care and Support Providers and SCVO that they are all concerned that the bill is unsuitable for the care sector and could undermine integration. We have to be alive to those concerns, and I know that my colleague Alex Rowley will want to say more about that.

In conclusion, Scottish Labour welcomes all efforts to improve safe staffing and we support the general principals of the bill. However, the bill will not fix the health and social care workforce crisis by itself. NHS staff are facing burnout. I was grateful to the cabinet secretary for taking my intervention on that point; I know that she takes such matters very seriously. The social care sector needs to be overhauled because the conditions for many social care staff are simply not good enough.

Scottish Labour believes that health and social care should be focused on achieving the best outcomes—

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Christine Grahame)

No, when you say, “In conclusion”, that means that you are concluding, not saying, “In conclusion, here comes another chapter”.

Monica Lennon

In conclusion, we must focus on the outcomes and we will work with the Government and others on amendments to secure that.

The Deputy Presiding Officer

I know that trick—I have used it myself.

15:10  

Alison Johnstone (Lothian) (Green)

The Greens support the general principles of the bill and we will vote accordingly at decision time. However, concerns have been raised by many groups, including the Royal College of Nursing, allied health professionals and COSLA, and we encourage the Scottish Government to give those concerns sufficient and careful consideration.

It is not surprising that there is a well-established link between safe staffing levels and the delivery of good-quality care. A study by Professor Anne Marie Rafferty found that both patients and nurses in hospitals with favourable patient to nurse ratios had consistently better outcomes than those in hospitals with less favourable staffing ratios: patients in the hospitals with the highest patient to nurse ratios had 26 per cent higher mortality, while the nurses in those hospitals were approximately twice as likely to be dissatisfied with their jobs, show high burn-out levels, and report low or deteriorating quality of care on their wards and hospitals.

That being the case, it is a concern that Scotland continues to experience serious challenges in the recruitment of health and social care staff. Audit Scotland reports that vacancy rates for nursing and midwifery staff rose from 2.7 per cent in 2013-14 to 4.5 per cent in the past year. Currently, 30 per cent of nursing, midwifery and allied health professional vacancies remain open for three months or more, which is an increase of a quarter on the previous year.

Although there has been a national increase in nursing and midwifery staff over the past four years, staff numbers in the year to March 2018 have fallen in some health board areas. Of the nearly 20,000 nursing and midwifery staff who responded to the 2017 iMatter staff experience survey, barely a quarter said that there were enough staff to allow them to do their jobs properly, with less than half saying that they were able to meet all the conflicting demands on their time.

The provisions in the bill may well play a role in ensuring that our health and social care services are appropriately staffed. The Greens welcome the guiding principles for health and care staffing: respecting the dignity and rights of care service users; ensuring the wellbeing of staff; and being open with staff and service users about decisions relating to staffing.

The duty of health boards to ensure that staffing is appropriate for the health, wellbeing and safety of patients is also welcome. However, in her closing speech, will the cabinet secretary elaborate on whether it is the Government’s intention to further extend that duty to cover the wellbeing and safety of staff? Below adequate staffing levels have an impact on staff as well as on patients—I know that we all agree on that.

The staff survey presented in the report “Safe and Effective Staffing: Nursing Against the Odds” paints a disturbing picture of the physical and mental toll on staff when staff levels are below what is needed. An accident and emergency nurse who was surveyed said that because of low staffing levels and lack of resources, they felt, “exhausted, stressed and dehydrated”. That is consistent with the 51 per cent of Scots nursing and midwifery staff surveyed who reported feeling “exhausted and negative”.

I ask the cabinet secretary to consider whether the terms “health”, “wellbeing” and “safety” could be more explicitly defined. I draw her attention to NHS Orkney’s submission to the committee at stage 1, which said:

“The perception of what is safe and what has been agreed may differ and we need to ensure that this doesn’t in turn become an area of tension between staff and managers.”

The duty on health boards to report on how they have ensured proper staffing and how they have followed the common staffing method, and trained and consulted staff is welcome. However, I ask whether that could be made more specific, to give boards additional requirements to report when the duty has not been met. Individual board reports would be welcome, but accountability might be improved if the Scottish Government had a responsibility to collate a report that covered all boards and lay that before Parliament. That would allow for transparency and consistency of reporting and therefore for better public scrutiny.

With others, the Royal College of Nursing seeks a wide range of amendments to the bill, and I look forward to working with all those organisations as we move to stage 2. I encourage the Scottish Government to continue to engage with those bodies on the issues that they raise. I will focus on enabling senior nurses to discharge their management duties fully by being non-case holding and on adding provision that will allow nursing staff to undertake continuing professional development.

The inclusion of the care sector is a crucial issue on which there is not yet a clear consensus. I note that COSLA released the strongly worded statement that the

“Scottish Government has yet to demonstrate the Bill will improve outcomes for people in receipt of care and for social care staff.”

It is important to note that the bill’s provisions will play only a small role in ensuring appropriate levels of staffing. Many of the briefings that we have received have raised issues about the scope of the bill. If it does nothing to address the supply and availability of trained staff, boards and social care providers alike will find it difficult to meet the duties that are placed on them.

The Royal College of Nursing has questioned

“whether this legislation can be implemented fully, and in a way which will improve the quality of care that patients receive, without significant investment—particularly in the workforce—and without recognition of the reality of current workforce pressures, and with the likely future increased demand on services.”

I ask the cabinet secretary to outline what investment is being made in the health and social care workforce and where the bill sits in a broader strategy to address the supply of staff. I also ask her to consider the RCN’s suggestion of a duty on the Government to ensure that there is a sufficient supply of nursing staff to meet current and future demand.

15:16  

Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD)

It is my privilege to offer the Liberal Democrats’ support for the bill’s general principles. I tread in the footsteps of my friend and colleague Kirsty Williams who, as a Liberal Democrat Assembly member, stewarded a similar piece of legislation through the National Assembly for Wales some years ago.

Whenever we talk about staffing, it is important to reflect on how much we rely on our NHS staff, our staff who work in social care in the community and our allied health professionals. Particularly at this time of year, they deserve the thanks of a grateful Parliament and a grateful nation.

When any committee is charged with looking at a bill, it is incumbent on it to ask the question that is top of considerations: is this needed? When I asked exactly that question of Sarah Atherton, who works for the Royal College of Nursing, I was struck by what she relayed of a conversation that she had had with a senior nurse on a psychiatric ward. Sarah Atherton had asked the nurse whether the ward was safely staffed the night before, and the nurse said that there were two answers to that question—the ward had enough staff to treat its patients but, because the system has to operate on an attack response basis, the ward was not safely staffed, as it would not have had enough staff if a crisis had occurred. That epitomises why the bill is needed.

For years, we have ignored the anxieties and expertise of staff on the ground. It is a fair criticism of all parties that have been in government in this country that financial targets have often taken priority over safety. We probably all know of examples that mirror the experience of the psychiatric ward that I referred to.

The bill offers us the opportunity not only to fix the numbers but, I hope, to ensure that we get the right balance of skills and experience in every staff team in every care setting. Getting the right skills mix and the right number of staff has an empirical link to safer outcomes. We need more in the bill to link methodologies, tools and practice to outcomes and draw the golden thread right through.

That is why I was grateful to hear the cabinet secretary’s remarks about strengthening the professional voice in the bill. We must listen to and act on the suggestions of those who are at the coalface. As I said in my intervention, innovation comes from the grass roots most of the time, and best practice is germinated in wards.

We need the staff voice, but we also need clear accountability—we have always regarded that as a slight gap in the bill. That accountability needs to be held at several levels, because when it is everybody’s job to make sure that something happens, it suddenly becomes nobody’s job to make sure that it happens. I endorse what Alison Johnstone said about the idea that senior charge nurses should be non-case holding, that they should have that strategic overview and that, as clinical leaders, they should not be included in the head count of a safe staffing cohort. Every care setting—whether that setting is acute, non acute or in the community—should be encouraged to catalogue and display their staffing levels, so that they can benchmark success and aspire to greater things. Having a staff member who is unencumbered by operational issues is vital to ensure that accountability.

We need to trust the expertise of our staff. We are blessed with some incredibly gifted staff. It is vital to recognise that correlation between staff wellbeing and patient safety. I fear that there is still scant detail in the bill as to how we will ensure that staff in cohorts within any care setting are themselves supported psychologically with regard to stress and stress management. There is a direct causal link to what we are doing through the on-going discussion in the chamber and in the Parliament’s committees about whistleblowing to make sure that we support our staff, including supporting them to raise concerns.

When we talk about staff, we are not talking only about nurses. Initially, there was a myopic view that the bill was about only nursing. I thank nurses for their strengths and for the fact that they have driven the agenda, but they recognise that the bill has to encompass social care staff and allied health professionals. Each of those professions provides a vital and important part of every patient’s care pathway. In particular, we talk about delayed discharge from hospital and the lack of social care provision. That care pathway can interrupt flow throughout the health service. Therefore, it is important that those professions that do not have methodologies that are as established as those of the nursing profession are afforded the space by the bill to grow those methodologies in their own toolkit, in order to interconnect with the methodologies of their multidisciplinary colleagues.

I made this point to the cabinet secretary in an intervention: as with the Child Poverty (Scotland) Bill, we cannot just legislate and make something happen. We can legislate for aspiration, but we must back that up with culture change and empirical policy change on the ground. We have to recognise that the bill will not end nursing shortages or the social care staffing crisis in our communities. Those problems will not be solved by the bill, but it is an absolutely vital part of the jigsaw for ensuring that we have sustainable, safe and attractive professions for people to enter and it is part of that drive to increase provision within those sectors.

Nor should attempts to deliver safe staffing in one sector come at the expense of another sector. The other point that I made in my intervention on the cabinet secretary was about ensuring that we do not just have a gold-plated service in a gold-plated safe-staffing culture in acute settings at the expense of community and non-acute settings. Those settings are equally vital in patient pathways. The bill is needed and it will enjoy the support of the Liberal Democrats tonight.

The Deputy Presiding Officer

We move to the open debate. We will have speeches of six minutes as usual, but there is a little time in hand for interventions, which I would encourage.

15:23  

Emma Harper (South Scotland) (SNP)

We are here in the chamber to debate and, I hope, agree to the general principles of the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill, as introduced by the Government. As deputy convener of the Health and Sport Committee, I agree with the general principles of the bill and I support the Government’s motion today.

In June 2016, I was a new MSP for the South Scotland region when the First Minister announced, at the Royal College of Nursing Scotland congress in Glasgow, the Scottish Government’s intention to enshrine safe staffing in law. I was a new MSP and I had been providing direct patient care as a clinical nurse educator for NHS Dumfries and Galloway just a month before the First Minister’s announcement. I enjoyed my work as a nurse educator and as a perioperative nurse. My 30 years of clinical experience in America, England and Scotland helped inform my scrutiny of the proposed bill at stage 1. Along with colleagues, I acknowledge the amazing work of the health professionals who provide care across health and social care settings 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The people who are professionals are truly amazing.

Since the bill’s introduction in May, the committee has taken evidence from a range of stakeholders, including the Royal College of Nursing, allied health professionals, the British Medical Association and the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities, and I thank them for their input.

There are, of course, issues with the bill that need to be addressed, and I would like to bring members’ attention to a number of them. I highlight the fact that the purpose of the bill is to set out the principles for ensuring that there will be appropriate staffing to deliver high-quality care to patients, clients and service users across a complex care system. The intention is to enable an evidence-based approach to be taken so that safe, efficient and person-centred care can be provided.

It is important to make it clear that although the bill does not focus on national workforce planning, it includes a focus on the development and application of workforce planning tools. The fact that some of those tools have not yet been developed was raised when representatives of the allied health professionals gave evidence to committee. One of my former colleagues in NHS Dumfries and Galloway made it clear to me that the bill must cover the whole multidisciplinary team. As the integration of health and social care progresses, we must make sure that all specialties that provide care, whether in primary care, acute care, the home environment or the community, are covered by the bill.

I am interested in the development of the workforce planning tools. We have heard that current common staffing methodology uses a triangulation approach and includes workforce tools on professional judgment, as well as specific tools that are aimed at areas such as the operating room or neonatal intensive care units. There is a difference between the delivery of care in rural south-west Scotland at Galloway community hospital and the delivery of care in the city centres of Glasgow and Edinburgh, where trauma services and the delivery of different kinds of specialty acute care are essential.

It was interesting to hear in evidence that the development of new tools might take up to 10 years, but I note from the financial memorandum that two further tools are in development and that more will be developed within five years. I would like to ask the Scottish Government what work is being done to speed up the process of developing appropriate tools—especially with allied health professionals—across multidisciplinary teams. As a former nurse who comes from a family of nurses, I know that it can take a long time to implement change in the national health service.

The fact that we are pursuing an integrated health and social care system means that we are having to take on board the fact that many different types of professionals support health and social care needs across Scotland. I welcome the briefings from the RCN, the Association of Anaesthetists, the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh and others. Yesterday, when I spoke to a senior RCN representative, I discussed the RCN’s proposal to allow senior charge nurses not to have their own case load, which would allow them to focus on supporting the co-ordination of care, the management of staff and other time-consuming duties for which they are responsible. Alison Johnstone made similar comments, which I welcome. The importance of that approach applies in many healthcare situations.

I support that ask in principle, but I recognise that it is inevitable that there will be circumstances in which senior charge nurses will provide direct patient care—for example, in the operating theatre. I support the principle of charge nurses having no direct case load, and I would like the Scottish Government to explore options for that as we move forward with the bill.

I have been in an operating room in which everything was going smoothly until the patient’s aorta was punctured during a straightforward minimal invasive surgery procedure. That is when the professional judgment of staff and their ability to react immediately to a fast-changing situation to save a life are paramount. Flexibility must be built into the legislation to allow immediate staffing judgments to be made. I welcome the fact that the bill takes into account the professional judgment tool that was described to the committee in written and face-to-face evidence from experts.

I welcome the bill, and I put on record my thanks to all those who attended the committee’s evidence sessions on it and, indeed, all who have been involved in the process. I thank the Scottish Government and ask it to look at some of the issues that have been highlighted, including that of the workload of senior charge nurses. I look forward to participating in the progress of the bill.

15:29  

Annie Wells (Glasgow) (Con)

The importance of NHS staff goes without saying. At some point, most of us will have had our lives changed for the better thanks to the personal dedication of those providing high-quality care. We understand the immense pressure on staff, who work under extremely difficult conditions, sometimes to the detriment of their own health. That makes the bill all the more important.

Although the Scottish Conservatives support the bill in principle, we have concerns, which are shared by a number of organisations. As my colleague Miles Briggs said, we will look to strengthen the bill at stage 2 with amendments that focus on giving professionals a strong voice and making sure that decision-making data is robust and up to date.

I want to focus on the value that the bill places on the importance of staff wellbeing. It is clear that staff are being pushed to their limits and that staffing shortages are taking their toll. As we heard from Monica Lennon, in the past three years the number of NHS staff absences due to staff suffering stress has increased by nearly 18 per cent, resulting in more than 1 million working days being lost. In Glasgow, the increase in absences is even higher, at nearly 25 per cent. It is clear that staff are struggling to cope. I am pleased that the importance of staff wellbeing is a guiding principle of the bill and hope that the bill will, in some way, provide the basis on which we can improve the situation.

However, it is worth mentioning that the majority of witnesses raised concerns that the bill is being introduced at a time when the workforce is under pressure from a general recruitment and retention problem. For example, statistics show that hospitals are short of 2,400 nurses and midwives, and that NHS boards are in need of 750 more doctors.

Keith Brown (Clackmannanshire and Dunblane) (SNP)

I am sure that Annie Wells has read the Health and Sport Committee’s report and will realise that witnesses are concerned about the current and future effects of Brexit, and the role that Brexit plays in the recruitment issues that they face. Does she agree with them?

Annie Wells

The recruitment and retention problem has not happened overnight; concerns have been raised for quite a while. We have to look at the problem in the longer term, because it is not just in the past two years that we have needed 750 doctors.

In response to the bill, the Royal College of Nursing stated that it was important not to

“tie the hands of boards and put a duty on them to provide appropriate staffing if the supply, which is held by the Scottish Government, does not come through.”—[Official Report, Health and Sport Committee, 11 September 2018; c 28.]

In the third sector, the Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations has expressed concern that, given that 34 per cent of voluntary organisations in Scotland are involved in social-care related activities, additional duties placed on organisations cannot be considered in isolation of the resource provided. Linked to that, greater clarity must be given on where accountability lies—a concern that was noted by the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy.

A general duty has been placed on health boards and care service providers to ensure appropriate staffing, but if no one is named as an accountable officer, senior charge nurses and team leaders will be left exposed should an adverse event arise as a result of shortages in staffing. That view was shared by those in the care sector.

Unison Scotland highlighted the precarious situation of accountability, given the fragmentation of delivery of care services. Who will be responsible for safe staffing levels and reporting on them in the third sector? That will be especially difficult to answer when care provision is commissioned from a third party.

Although we support the principles of the bill, the Scottish Conservatives believe that professional judgment plays an important role. I was pleased to hear the cabinet secretary address that point. As the Health and Sport Committee has commented, it is believed that professionals have to be involved in the process, with views taken at local level to take account of the day-to-day dynamic staffing of health settings. Existing tools must be made to accommodate absence levels, differing staff and skill mixes and the needs of patients. The Royal College of Nursing stated that

“Without nurses of appropriate seniority ... exercising their professional judgement”

each day, safe staffing levels will not be reached, and the SCVO has said that, given its importance in delivering social care, it, too, must be consulted on legislative proposals.

As well as the need for staffing models that allow decisions to be made on the ground, there is a need for decisions to be based on the most accurate data. While they are in among the moving feast of real-time decision making on wards and across community teams, healthcare professionals need to be confident that they can trust data as being reliable and up to date. Only with that data can they make strategic decisions that enable safe high-quality care and services.

To finish, I again express my support for the bill’s principles. Ultimately, the bill puts an existing but enhanced workforce planning method on a statutory footing with principles that are “unobjectionable”. We all want the highest-quality care being given to patients consistently across health boards, with the wellbeing of staff always in mind. At stage 2, the Scottish Conservatives will work on a cross-party basis to lodge amendments that seek to strengthen the bill, and I hope that some of the comments that are made today will be taken on board.

15:36  

Keith Brown (Clackmannanshire and Dunblane) (SNP)

The aim of the bill is to be an enabler of

“high quality care and improved outcomes for service users”

of the health and care services by helping to ensure appropriate staffing for their care. It is important to state that again, because although we started off with what I thought was a very balanced and fair account of the committee’s work from the convener, Lewis Macdonald, the debate has since gone into a number of related areas—and quite legitimately so. It is therefore important that we bear in mind the bill’s purpose.

For me, this is the latest development of the efforts that we have made—and by “we”, I mean everybody—to try to drive high standards in the health and social care sectors and to make best practice the standard to be achieved across the board. The bill’s policy memorandum states:

“The aim of the Bill is to provide a statutory basis for the provision of appropriate staffing in health and care service settings, thereby enabling safe and high quality care and improved outcomes for service users. Provision of high quality care requires the right people, in the right place, with the right skills at the right time to ensure the best health and care outcomes for service users and people experiencing care.”

Although we have in general heard support for the bill’s general principles, I have found it a little odd to hear some witnesses, when asked whether they supported the bill, say that they did not and that they did not see how it could be improved. I was particularly concerned to hear that view from people whose focus was, quite rightly, on the needs of the care sector. To my mind, the bill presents an opportunity to have the right staffing, so it strengthens the arguments of those who want staffing in the care sector to be improved. I am not sure on what basis people would not want to support that. They could, by all means, seek to improve it, but they should at least support the aim.

The aim is that, at a strategic level, staffing in our NHS and associated social care and care home provision will be planned to maximise the effectiveness of available resources, to deliver for clients and to ensure that their experience of health and care is always the paramount consideration. The systems that we put in place must help to ensure that practice in health and care in Scotland is the best that it can be and that the patient experience is positive.

With regard to recruitment, it is evident that there are pressures because of Brexit and that they have been building for some time. I cannot evidence this from what we heard, but I think that those pressures are more acute in the care sector than in the health sector. However, they are evident in both, and they are building day on day, week on week, month on month. Brexit is a substantial issue as far as recruitment is concerned; indeed, paragraph 206 on page 34 of the committee’s report says:

“Brexit uncertainties mean that it is challenging to meet the existing requirements and staffing establishments currently set by health boards and social care providers.”

The bill is intended to deliver a number of things. For example, at its heart is the promotion of safety in the health and care sector—and by “safety”, I mean safety for clients and the health and care staff. The mechanism for delivering that is the creation of a statutory duty with regard to the staffing levels to be applied to territorial and special health boards, but that will require appropriate staff planning and risk management. In the recent round of consultation on the bill, the committee asked stakeholders for their views on how the bill could best achieve that aim. In its submission, my own local health board, NHS Forth Valley, stated:

“The positive outcomes for patients and staff must be at the heart of the decision making process. The workforce tools will run consistently with health and social care boards having to act upon the results.”

NHS Forth Valley also proposed the need for a formal reporting structure to be part of any processes, and was among a number of consultees who stressed the need to clearly identify who is responsible for undertaking that. I have some sympathy with that. The one thing that I would say, however, is that, in relation to talk of outcomes, sanctions and targets, many of us stand up in this chamber and talk about the problem with bureaucracy in the health service, but there is a real danger that we could end up creating new forms of bureaucracy through what is being suggested. It is important that, as we go through the different stages of the bill, we bear that in mind.

Clackmannanshire and Stirling health and social care partnership also commented on the general principles of the bill, stating that it welcomed

“the guiding principle of a rigorous transparent approach to decision making about staffing in health and social care.”

That is what we should be aiming for. If, at the end of that process, people can point to deficiencies or ways in which the situation can be improved, the bill will have achieved its purpose. For example, Clackmannanshire and Stirling health and social care partnership also said that

“There are concerns regarding the additional expectations on planning and commissioning departments”,

but that should be a good thing. Additional expectations on commissioning departments should help to address some of the perceived issues in relation to staffing in those departments.

The concerns that have been raised are entirely fair to raise at this stage of our consideration of the bill, but I welcome the general acceptance in the many consultation responses that were submitted that the principle and direction of travel of the bill are right. In our detailed consideration of the issues, we must take due cognisance of those views.

The points that were raised in the briefing on the bill that was sent to MSPs by the Royal College of Nursing were valuable, and, given the central part that the RCN’s members will play in dealing with the legislation when it is enacted, I think that it is certainly worth considering the points that it makes. It suggested six tests—before Labour MSPs get too excited, they have nothing to do with Brexit. First, the RCN is looking for positive outcomes and for staff to be put at the heart of decision making. The bill seeks to do that; it tries to ensure that professional judgment—some have called it objective judgment—can be brought into play. We are looking for the professionals to make judgments. That is a vital part of what we are doing, and I believe that the cabinet secretary gave us assurances today and when she appeared before the committee that suggest that that will happen.

I welcome the general principles of the bill and I welcome some of the points that have been made by members. It strikes me that we have a good basis on which to take the bill forward, not least because of the assurances that the cabinet secretary has given in her response and because she has said that she intends to listen to what is being said as we move through the process. With that kind of co-operation and constructive engagement, we can get the right bill at the end. I am happy to support the bill.

15:42  

Alex Rowley (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Lab)

I begin by congratulating and thanking Lewis Macdonald and the Health and Sport Committee for producing this detailed report, which will be useful as we move into stage 2.

I know that the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport, Jeane Freeman, issued a response to the report yesterday evening. I have not had a chance to read it properly yet, but I think that it, too, will be useful.

I take Keith Brown’s point about focusing on the purpose of the bill, which he says is about appropriate and safe staffing. However, it is a bit like the emperor’s new clothes: if we do not have the staff, it will be difficult to ensure that staffing is appropriate and safe. The situation reminds me a bit of what sometimes happens with legislation. For example, we can legislate to give people a treatment guarantee, but we know that having a treatment guarantee does not guarantee people treatment when they need it. That brings into question the very purpose of legislation. We need to ask that question in terms of this bill and, perhaps, some other bills that are making their way through Parliament.

I know that the Royal College of Physicians raised a few issues about the bill. It says that legislation alone will not fill the rota gaps and vacancies in the workforce. The recognition in paragraph 97 of the policy memorandum that there are currently

“significant challenges in recruitment in both health and care service settings”

needs to be addressed.

Jeane Freeman

I am sure that Mr Rowley will acknowledge that I have never, at any point, said that the bill will automatically by itself produce the numbers of professionals across health and social care that we need. What I have said is that it is an important additional tool to help us workforce plan as well as we can. Getting the information via the application of this legislation will allow us to ensure that we have robust evidence that will enable us to identify how exactly we should continue to increase the numbers of people we have in training in nursing, medicine and allied health professions. It is one of the tools that we have; it is not a magic bullet that will automatically fix the problem.

Alex Rowley

I think that Monica Lennon acknowledged that when she opened for Labour and said that although we support the bill in principle, we need to do quite a lot of work on it. Some serious questions have been raised by the third sector, by COSLA and by others that need to be addressed going into stage 2.

Nevertheless, I am sure that as parliamentarians we all know that our constituents are asking what we are doing about staff shortages to ensure that people are guaranteed the healthcare that they need, when they need it. For example, in Fife, there are seven GP practices that are registered as being in difficulty or in high-risk situations. NHS Fife says that it cannot recruit the general practitioners. There are practices that are having to close their lists and 16 practices are full. That is not just about accessing GP services, as the cabinet secretary knows; it is about accessing a whole range of community health services as part of a holistic health service. Those services are struggling right now; my constituents are asking me, “What are you doing about that?” and I ask myself, “Where does this legislation provide that support?”

We need to be honest with the public and we need to start addressing the big issues in the health service. COSLA makes a point about social care. By the way, COSLA has produced a two-page briefing that is highly critical of the bill, and we need to address that. COSLA states that the bill is poorly timed, as

“The social care workforce is ... experiencing challenges in terms of recruitment and retention.”

We need to look at social care. Monica Lennon spoke earlier about 70 years of the NHS. In 2020, the NHS will be looking very different from when it was established back in the late 1940s and I do not think that we have asked what a modern-day NHS in Scotland looks like. Part of the answer is, of course, about social care and that is why we would not necessarily sign up to what COSLA has to say about social care being separate. However, the fact is that social care is provided through local authorities and health boards; it is provided through the third sector, and that is why we have so many third sector organisations coming in here with concerns; but it is also provided through the private sector and there are major problems in recruiting for the social care sector because of lack of job security, poor pay, and poor terms and conditions.

What would a national health service look like in 2020? A national health service is not just built around hospital buildings; it is also about caring for people in their own homes. Why should the social care part of the workforce be on the minimum wage or the living wage when other parts of the workforce get more decent pay, have decent terms and conditions and have job security? What does the workforce of the NHS look like moving into 2020? Should all those social carers be part of the health service or are we going to allow the modern health service to be split, with a private sector provision that pays lower wages and has poorer terms and conditions?

We need to invest in our workforce and we need to ask some fundamental questions about what that workforce looks like. Labour will work with the cabinet secretary on this, but we think that we need to be bolder and more radical in considering what a modern health service in Scotland should look like.

15:49  

Sandra White (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

I thank my fellow members of the Health and Sport Committee, the witnesses who gave evidence and, of course, the clerks for their guidance to me and others and the hard work that they put in to produce the stage 1 report.

The bill’s remit is intended to cover staff planning in health and social care services, with the aim that staffing in both sectors is organised and planned to ensure that providers have appropriate staff in place to enable them to deliver safe and high-quality care. The safety of staff is of course paramount, too.

Alex Cole-Hamilton and Emma Harper said that, at the beginning of the process, the RCN was seen to be the driver of the bill, but it was quickly recognised that the bill is not just about acute services; it is about all health and care providers, which all have a part to play in furthering the integration of health and social care in particular, which is very important. I thank members for raising that issue and I thank the RCN for recognising that the bill does not just cover acute care.

I will concentrate on the integration of health and social care. I note the concerns of COSLA and I picked up what Alex Rowley said about them. However, the COSLA briefing says:

“The Bill is a potential threat to the integration of health and social care.”

It is rather sad that COSLA used that as a headline. I am sure that the committee, the cabinet secretary and the minister will look at that issue.

The integration of health and social care is paramount if we are to get the healthcare that we want, which every other member has spoken about. The bill is not just about acute care, and we should not be focusing on acute care; we need to look at integration. Alex Cole-Hamilton and the cabinet secretary said that we need to see a culture change. That point was raised by witnesses at the committee, too. This debate about the bill could be the starting point for people to listen to the argument that there should be cultural change within the various providers.

I turn to the evidence that we received. I thank the cabinet secretary and the Scottish Government for their responses to the committee. In paragraph 194 of our report, we state:

“We can see the attractions and advantages from treating all parts of the delivery of health and care in the same manner. We can see no rationale to ultimately treat this sector any different from the NHS, both are providing services to the public and the public should be assured they and their relatives are being looked after adequately with care, professionalism and dignity.”

The Scottish Government’s response to that states:

“It is our intention that the development of any new tool and methodology would be carried out in a similar manner to the way in which the existing tools were developed in health. A clinical reference group is established prior to the development of any new tool. All Health Boards are invited to contribute to the clinical reference group.”

I hope that that allays some of the fears that COSLA raised about other allied health professionals.

Integration is one of the great things that we can move forward with the bill. I know that the bill is a work in progress, but that is one of the areas that we should cover. I am perhaps being a little selfish in mentioning that, because I am the convener of the cross-party group on older people, age and ageing. There has been lots of interest from our members and other organisations in the integration of health and social care, particularly the provision and staffing of community care and care homes.

In fact, the cross-party group will be hearing from Brian Slater, who is head of partnership support in the health and social care integration directorate of the Scottish Government, at our meeting next week. I am sure that members of the group will be interested to hear what was said in this debate and to hear what Mr Slater has to say about the progress that is being made in integration of health and social care. I know that members will want to find out the implications of the bill and what levels of staffing will be, particularly given that we are dealing with an ageing population, with the pressure that that puts on the system. It is important that we look at that issue.

As I said, I understand that the bill is still at stage 1 and so is very much a work in progress. I look forward to seeing how it progresses through Parliament. I hope that when we get to stage 3 we will all agree with it and that COSLA and others will say that integration is really important and that the bill is not just about acute services but about all provision of health and social care.

15:55  

Edward Mountain (Highlands and Islands) (Con)

I join my colleagues in supporting the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill in principle. I thank the committee at the outset for its in-depth report; I know how much work goes into such reports.

I would like to reiterate a word of caution for the Government that has already been raised this afternoon. To paraphrase the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh, we cannot legislate staff into existence. Making new laws can identify work frameworks and targets for staffing. However, frankly, we need action on recruitment to make the bill meaningful.

Let us look at another bill in relation to this issue: the Patient Rights (Scotland) Act 2011, which sets down a 12-week treatment time guarantee in law. That is workload planning, or it should have been when it was established. The problem is that, for many of my constituents in the Highlands, that law is broken on a weekly if not a daily basis. I mention in passing that we found out this week that two constituents have waited 72 weeks for chronic pain treatment in NHS Highland. Frankly, that is not acceptable.

The Scottish Government must accept that legislation alone will not reduce waiting times or resolve the recruitment crisis that is affecting our NHS. The bill in itself will not ensure greater delivery of service.

The bill can make a difference, but only if it is used as part of a wider range of measures to tackle workforce planning across our NHS. If it is to make the difference that it needs to, it needs to be strengthened significantly. We have already heard from my colleague Miles Briggs that the Scottish Conservatives will lodge amendments to give professionals a strong voice in the staffing process, based on workloads, and to ensure that the decision-making process data is robust and up to date—that is critical. Why do those amendments matter? On this side of the chamber, we believe that hard-working doctors and nurses know better than anyone when it comes to safe staffing levels to deliver the service that is required. I believe that their voices have often been ignored in the past.

I will give an example of where workforce planning is failing. In August 2017, more than 50 doctors and consultants signed a letter to the board of NHS Highland stating that

“the crisis in radiology staffing, especially acute in the Highlands, has reached an unprecedented level.”

You would think that that would be a clear warning about workforce planning and delivery. A year on and the situation in NHS Highland is far worse; there is no substantive interventional radiologist in post. That means that patients need to travel to NHS Tayside and NHS Grampian which, frankly, is unacceptable. It is a failure of workload planning that has come about because of poor workforce planning.

Keith Brown

Edward Mountain commended the work of the committee and the witnesses who gave evidence to it. Brexit was one of the issues that were raised by witnesses, particularly—if I recall correctly—in relation to radiographers. Does he concede the point that Brexit is having a detrimental effect on recruitment in the NHS, especially in rural areas of Scotland?

Edward Mountain

It is very easy to find something that is going on at the moment to blame for the problem, but the problem goes back a lot longer than that—it goes back to poor workforce planning, probably up to 10 years ago. If the First Minister were here in the chamber, I would ask her about that as well.

There has not been enough planning either by the Government or—in the case of my constituency and region—by NHS Highland to resolve the problem. From speaking privately to healthcare professionals, which I do almost weekly, I know that they have come to the same conclusion as me.

I hope that the bill will address the need to have safe staffing levels to deliver the services that are required. It is a question of which we put first. I believe that doctors and nurses know what is needed to provide the services that are required. The problem is that they are often constrained by those in administration, who believe that they know better. We know that, when staffing levels are low, pressure on existing staff increases, which leads to unrealistic expectations that the same service can be delivered with reduced numbers—it cannot. That often leads to unrealistic demands that become overbearing and unachievable, causing staff to feel bullied and undervalued, with the result that they leave.

It has become clear that that leads to a problem with recruiting. For example, the orthodontic department in NHS Highland has not functioned for two years, and the oral and maxillofacial surgery department has not functioned for three. Those are definitely needed and the situation has been identified as a problem, but there is no one to man them. That creates a perfect storm, and I am worried that the bill in its current form will not address that. That is why it needs to be amended, with strong input from those on the ground and not just those in offices.

The bill also needs a provision to protect staff welfare. Not to do so would be a failure. Certainly with my colleague Miles Briggs and other Conservative colleagues—and I hope with members across the chamber—I will be looking to find a suitable amendment that takes that into account.

I support the bill, knowing that it does not go far enough at this stage; with amendments, it can perhaps do that. At the moment, it is not sufficiently aspirational or inspirational, but there is a good opportunity with proper amendments, which should come from across the chamber, to make it both of those things.

16:01  

David Torrance (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)

I thank everyone who has contributed to the process—in particular, the committee clerks for all their hard work, and the healthcare professionals and representatives who gave up their valuable time to participate in our evidence sessions.

NHS Scotland’s workforce is growing, and the demands on our health and social care sector have never been greater. We need to be flexible in relation to those demands. We have seen a 48.3 per cent increase in consultants, an increase of 5.7 per cent in training places for nurses and midwives, with a further 2,600 training places to be created by 2021, and overall workforce growth of 9.5 per cent since 2006. Currently, staffing levels are set locally by health providers. The bill does not seek to change that by prescribing minimum staffing levels or fixed ratios; rather, it will continue to support local decisions, which is a flexible approach that gives the ability to redesign and innovate across disciplinary and multi-agency settings.

The issue of staffing levels is not new. The Royal College of Nursing states in its staffing guidance that the question

“What is the optimal level and mix of nursing staff required to deliver quality care as cost-effectively as possible?”

is a perennial one. In order to forecast the workforce that is required to meet future care needs, workforce planning needs to consider the changing balance between types of care and the anticipated different models of delivery. The bill will provide a consistent process with validated workload and workforce planning tools, which will support our healthcare workers as they continue to provide world-class care to patients.

It is widely recognised that, although it has since 2013 been mandatory for health boards to utilise the tools and methodology, there are inconsistencies in how tools are applied and the extent to which the existing methodology is utilised to make informed decisions about staffing requirements. Enshrining the process in law will help to ensure a more consistent approach to staffing across all service areas, which in turn will contribute to better outcomes for patients and provide public assurance that the right numbers of staff are in place to deliver person-centred care.

I welcome the comments of Ann Gow of Healthcare Improvement Scotland, who stated during one of the committee’s evidence sessions:

“It really should not matter where in the social sector people are looked after: they should be entitled to good care and high-quality outcomes, and to an assurance that the right levels of staff will be in place to look after them.”—[Official Report, Health and Sport Committee, 25 September 2018; c 3.]

It is vital that we have the right number of staff, with the right knowledge, in the right place and at the right time to provide safe and effective care.

I thank Helen Wright, who is NHS Fife’s executive director of nursing, for taking the time to share her thoughts about the bill directly with me. The most important people in the process are those who work in our health and social care services. It is imperative, if we are to deliver successfully a robust and sustainable statutory framework, that staffing methods are profession led and developed in collaboration with the sector.

The safety of patient care must be paramount, so we have to focus on delivering high-quality care through a systematic and responsive approach to determining staffing levels. An effective and stable staff team is the backbone of high-quality care. An objective evidence-based statutory process that builds on the current model, integrated with professional human judgment, will better equip services with tools that are flexible and can take into account the varying needs of the sector, without becoming an obstacle to either integration or innovation, thereby restricting the opportunity for varying standards of care to exist across different services, or in different areas of a service.

A number of members have mentioned the difficulties of recruitment in the health and social care sector, so I consider it important that I highlight today the current threat to the health and social care sectors from Brexit. At this point in time, it is anything but certain that there will be business as usual beyond next March, because the invaluable contribution of European Union workers all across Scotland is being jeopardised by the ill-conceived and short-sighted immigration policies of our United Kingdom Tory Government. Figures show that there are 26,000 people from the European Union working in health, social care and public administration in Scotland.

Miles Briggs

As David Torrance knows, the committee also heard concerns about the policy of new recruits potentially being sent into child social care instead of adult social care, and the impact on workforce planning that that has had. We have also heard that Nicola Sturgeon’s spectacular error of judgment in cutting the number of training places has had an impact on our health service. Would he like to highlight those points as well?

David Torrance

Brexit is having that impact right now as we see, for example, a UK transplant surgeon who has performed more than 1,000 operations leaving and citing Brexit as the problem. When we see the number of specialist doctors dropping to an eight-year low because of Brexit, we know that we have real problems right now and that there will be more problems in the future.

We have already seen that Brexit is having an impact on recruitment and retention of EU nationals and, as the Brexit shambles continues, it will have very real and far-reaching implications for health and social care. The contribution of EU nationals to our workforce must not be underestimated. Our health and social care sectors will both face a considerable shortfall if there is restriction of EU migration. Changes to the residence rights of EU nationals will also have a significant impact on the sustainability of our health and social care sectors. We have long relied on EU nationals across all parts of our healthcare system: as the demands on our services increase, we will continue to need them in the future. Brexit is a very real threat to the health and social care sector that cannot be ignored, as uncertainty hangs over adult social care, which puts more stress on services.

In conclusion, I thank everyone who has been involved in the committee’s work. I fully support the principles of the bill.

16:08  

Anas Sarwar (Glasgow) (Lab)

I start, as the cabinet secretary and many other members have done, by thanking all our NHS and social care staff who continue to go above and beyond in increasingly difficult circumstances. I offer a sincere “Thank you” to each and every one of them.

However, our thanks are not enough: those staff need more. Staff representatives have made it clear that they are under extreme pressure. They feel that there are too few of them to deliver the care that they would like to give their patients, and they fear that patient care is being compromised because of a lack of staff. In short, they feel overworked, undervalued and underresourced.

At the same time, while public appreciation for the NHS and its staff is rightly high, it is also the public’s number 1 concern. I want to say at the outset that I accept that the problems are not of Jeane Freeman’s making, although she must accept that her Government has been in power for 11 years and that she now has responsibility for fixing the problems.

We support the principles of the bill, but I believe that it needs major surgery. I also sincerely believe that the bill would have been a very different bill indeed if the cabinet secretary had designed it from the outset. She has said that the bill is about workload rather than about workforce planning, but I think that the two are interconnected. If we do not have adequate levels of staff, that puts an increased workload on existing staff, so I would like the bill to be more than a public relations exercise. I am sure that that aspiration is shared by the cabinet secretary. We have to accept that the bill will provide not one extra member of staff and will not, in itself, solve the workforce crisis.

I know that the cabinet secretary does not like the term “workforce crisis”, but we have to accept reality. In our NHS, we are short of 3,500 nurses and midwives, 540 allied health professionals and almost 400 consultants. NHS staff lose 1 million days a year to stress, and we spend £100 million a year on medical locums and £25 million a year on private nursing agencies. We have to be honest: if that is not a crisis, what is?

What we need, alongside the bill, is a credible and deliverable workforce plan, sufficient training places and a recruitment and retention strategy. We need to look at how we can bring the vacancy rate down, how we can reduce pressure on existing NHS and social care staff, and how we can help to boost their morale.

We also have to accept a fundamental issue and problem. We cannot magic up the people—3,500 nurses and midwives, 540 AHPs, 393 consultants and more. In the acute sector alone, we are short of almost 5,000 people. If we were to add the social care sector, that would be many more thousands, on top. We will not find the 5,000-plus people whom we need right now, so we have to have an honest and serious conversation about what we can deliver, how we can deliver it and how we will find the right skills mix to deliver an NHS that is fit for purpose.

I want to give some practical suggestions about additions that I would like to see to the bill, but first let me emphasise the point that Alec Rowley made. This must not become like the Patient Rights (Scotland) Act 2011, which is all great in principle and we all agree on it, but which in reality does not fit the word “guarantee”. That is why the bill requires some serious amendment.

The first amendment would concern safe wards. I note that the word “safe” is no longer in the title or the bill. Who decides whether a ward is safe and what happens when a ward is not safe? When a ward is not safe, the ward manager has a decision to make. They can employ a member of staff straight away, but they more often than not turn to agencies, which could lead to increasing agency fees. They can shut the ward—I doubt that that is what we would want—or they can close beds.

If a ward is judged to be safe, but is in a difficult situation, or it is judged to be unsafe but continues to operate, that poses severe risks for existing NHS staff. If we look at the example of the Bawa-Garba case, we see that staff are under increased pressure and are worried about the implications of an adverse incident and about who will be held responsible. We need to define what is “safe” and we need to build into the bill protections for staff.

We also need more robust data. What data will be made available through the bill to allow greater scrutiny by Parliament and greater public scrutiny? I have already mentioned agency staff. I think that the bill should go further: we should look to cap agency fees. I am not talking about the overall amount that a health board can spend on agency staff, because that would have unintended consequences, but about how much an agency can charge for a shift or a board can pay for a shift.

Let me give you some examples. We have heard in the Public Audit and Post-legislative Scrutiny Committee that there are examples of medical consultants being paid up to £400,000 in a single year, and we have heard from Audit Scotland that, on average, a full-time equivalent agency nurse costs three times what an NHS nurse costs. If we connect those costs, that means we can have one agency nurse for three NHS nurses and one agency consultant for four NHS consultants. The cabinet secretary should look seriously at an amendment to the bill that would cap how much an agency can charge and how much a health board can pay for a shift.

We also need to go further on scrutiny and sanctions. I do not mean financial sanctions; I am talking about accountability. What sanctions can be imposed on health boards? It should be written into the bill that health boards must publish when they fail to meet their obligations, and there should be a commitment that, if the intentions of the bill are not met, the cabinet secretary—whoever it is at the time—should come to Parliament to give a detailed statement about why the intentions have not been met and what steps are being taken to address that.

Finally, greater co-ordination with social care is needed. I accept COSLA’s concern about social care being separate: if we are truly to talk about integration we cannot isolate social care. We have to be careful not to go back to thinking about just doctors, nurses and midwives, but to recognise that we need a multidisciplinary team—especially if we cannot find adequate numbers of doctors and nurses. How do we build into the bill greater protection for the multidisciplinary team?

All those matters need explanation by the next time the bill comes to Parliament. I hope that this will be an opportunity for the cabinet secretary to work with other political parties to deliver a truly transformative bill, so that we have an NHS that is fit for purpose for the future.

16:15  

Alex Neil (Airdrie and Shotts) (SNP)

It is good that we have general agreement across the chamber on the principles of the bill, and that there is wide recognition that the role of the bill is not to solve the problem entirely but, as the cabinet secretary rightly said, to be an additional tool in the box to help solve the problem of planning and implementing a workforce development plan.

There has been a lot of talk about acute services and the care sector, but I emphasise that the bill also covers the primary sector. That is important because 90 percent of all patient contact with the health service is through the primary care sector and because we are, quite rightly, planning—and I think that there is cross-party support for this—to shift the emphasis from acute care to preventative care, primary care and social care in the community.

Some of the ideas come from Alaska, which I mention not only because it is the source of a number of the current reforms that we are implementing in the primary care sector, but because there has been a very successful reform of the entire health service there. As a result of the reform, Alaska has closed down some of its hospitals. It now provides so many services in the primary care sector that demand on the acute sector has reduced to the extent that it no longer needs as many hospitals. That is clearly a good thing, as it is never good to have to be treated in hospital. The chances of catching an infection and all the rest of it, even with a very successful patient safety programme, are still much higher than they are in the primary care sector. The point is, that we should not plan the workforce by looking at today’s vacancies and deciding that the workforce plan must replace certain people and find people for certain vacancies, although that is part of it. What matters is the demand forecast for the future profile of services that are going to be required. We should base our workforce plan on our estimates of future demand, not on existing vacancies.

Alex Rowley

I am aware of the Alaskan model because Councillor Andrew Rodger, who was on the board of NHS Fife for many years, championed it. However, the difficulty is the transformation that is involved in getting the resources to the community side—into primary care—while still maintaining acute services. The Government’s idea that the money will somehow just go across and the demand will fall off has not happened. Does the member agree that there has to be bridging in place to provide more resources for community care in order to take the pressure off acute services?

Alex Neil

That is a very fair question. I will make two points. First, the provision for set-aside money in the Public Bodies (Joint Working) (Scotland) Act 2014 has not worked as well as planned and we all know the reasons for that. It was intended to be the modern equivalent of the bridging fund that was used when the Victorian so-called asylums were emptied and people were treated for mental health issues in the community. Secondly, if we get every penny of the Barnett consequentials that we are supposed to get, as a result of the very substantial increase in health spending that is planned for south of the border, I imagine that a fair proportion of that will go into building up the primary and community care sector facilities that we need in order that we can shift the balance from the acute sector to those sectors.

I take the member’s point and I think that the set-aside money approach has not worked as well as the bridging funding method that was used when mental health services were modernised. I am sure that the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport will look at the issue for the future.

However, there is no doubt at all that we have to look at the profile of what health will be like in three, four, five or 10 years’ time. There was an announcement two weeks ago by the health secretary and the University of Glasgow about a brilliant £15 million joint project that will look at how artificial intelligence can improve prevention and diagnosis. Part of that will be about being able to identify, in the not-too-distant future, what disease people have before they show the symptoms of having it. The manpower requirements for that kind of diagnosis are completely different from the manpower requirements for how we diagnose today. In fact, the first priority for the future will be to get people who can operate artificial intelligence. I imagine that there is nothing in workforce planning at the moment for artificial intelligence engineers and the like. However, that project is a good example of where we should be thinking of a workforce plan that is not narrowly about filling existing vacancies, but about providing for the kind of 21st century, leading-edge health service that we are planning.

I should say that Scotland is ahead in the application of artificial intelligence and associated technologies to the health service. I hear all the concerns, moans and groans on a daily basis, but sometimes we have to start shouting about the things that we are doing really well in Scotland. Being ahead on artificial intelligence technologies is one of the huge benefits that we have in our health service, and I believe that that £15 million project will transform things even more. That is how we must think about the workforce, because the workforce in five years’ time in terms of numbers, locations, job descriptions and training requirements will be completely different from what it has been in the past five or 10 years, and I think that we are all agreed that we need to plan accordingly.

The bill is an additional tool for the health secretary and the health boards to help us get it right in both the primary and acute sectors. We can never be absolutely accurate in workforce planning—anybody would tell us that—but I am sure that if we do it on the basis that I have suggested and the direction of travel is right, we can get it as near as damn it to right.

16:22  

Bill Bowman (North East Scotland) (Con)

I welcome the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill in principle, but it should be acknowledged that there are important points to raise about it. I suspect that I might repeat some points that have already been raised in the debate.

In its programme for government 2017-18, the Scottish Government committed to introduce a safe staffing bill during the 2017-18 parliamentary year to deliver on the commitment to enshrine in law the principles of safe staffing in the NHS. That commitment resulted in the introduction of the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill, with its aims of enabling safe and high-quality care and ensuring better outcomes for service users through making the provision of appropriate staffing in health and care a statutory requirement. The bill covers both health and social care services, with the aim of ensuring more integrated workload and staff planning. It has been noted that that broader approach seeks to ensure that there will be appropriate staffing to deliver high-quality care whatever the setting.

As has already been mentioned, it is important to be clear that the bill does not focus on national workforce planning. The bill focuses on the development and application of workload planning tools that aim to ensure that health and social care providers have adequate numbers of suitably qualified staff to provide safe and high-quality services. Although the Scottish Government has overall responsibility for NHS workforce planning and decides on most of the numbers of health service training places, it should be noted that that does not necessarily cover the number of training places for those entering the allied health professions, such as occupational therapy.

The Scottish Government undertook two consultations on the bill’s proposals—in 2017 and in 2018—and the general feedback was that the proposals seemed too narrow. There was a fear that the focus and resources would be directed at nurses and midwives rather than at all groups, including occupational therapists, for example. In addition, it was felt that the proposals did not consider safe staffing in a system-wide way in the context of national workforce planning and training numbers, and current workforce challenges.

The bill currently does not provide guidance on how to identify, monitor and mitigate staffing risks in response to differing daily needs. Additionally, the proposals must go further to strengthen the role of the nurse to make the professional judgments in regard to staffing.

The second consultation on proposals, which took account of earlier responses and focused on how the legislative framework would cohere across health and social care, ran for four weeks in February 2018. The respondents felt that any new methodologies should work across health and social care, that there should be flexibility in how new tools were developed, used and reviewed and that there should be recognition of the new challenges across sectors in recruiting and retaining staff.

The Finance Committee also issued a call for views on the financial memorandum of the bill, and received several responses. The issues that were raised included training costs, costs associated with reviewing the staffing tool and costs to other social care providers. It is important that we use all our resources wisely, and the goal of the bill should be to do just that.

We can all agree that a well-researched and evidence-based staffing framework would be ideal to ensure that the right staff are helping the right patients. It would have a legislative framework for health boards that is methodologically sound. That would include the use of specified staffing and professional judgment tools, consideration of quality, local context and risk, and a requirement to report on how boards use the tool and methodology when making decisions about staffing requirements. For example, what might be right in Ninewells in my region might not be right for Stracathro.

However, the bill provides no concrete examples of how legislation will actually achieve that. The Scottish Government claims that that practice is based on methods that are implemented by nurses and midwives, yet it fails to produce data that demonstrates the success that caregivers have had with the methods. If the bill is to be effective, it must require constant reporting. That would not only maintain data to measure effectiveness but ensure that the guidelines are followed.

It is important to consider how the bill will deal with the real problems of staff shortages and budget cuts in planning teams. There has been little information about the costs of implementing those changes. The social care workforce is currently experiencing challenges in terms of recruitment and retention. We must be sure that the bill will not add further processes and pressures to a system that is already under strain, or increase the reliance on agency staff and undermine the financial stability of the sector. A move to a new system will create new up-front costs before any of the promised savings can be realised.

Although it is already the duty of health boards and care service providers to ensure appropriate numbers of staff, the guiding principle of the bill is acceptable. As has been said, having the right people with the right skills in the right place at the right time to ensure that the highest quality of care and outcomes are delivered across health and social care is a principle that we all share.

The Scottish Government is undertaking a reform of the planning system 12 years after the last reform. However, it has been clear from the beginning that there are problems in planning that are caused by cuts to budgets and staff shortages. The Royal College of Physicians and the Royal College of Nursing Scotland have both raised concerns that staff shortages are a key issue. As others have commented, it is resources, not reorganisation, that are needed.

16:28  

Bob Doris (Glasgow Maryhill and Springburn) (SNP)

I have not been involved in the scrutiny of the bill at stage 1, because I do not sit on the Health and Sport Committee. However, I note that the policy memorandum says:

“The policy intention of the Scottish Ministers is to enable a rigorous, evidence-based approach to decision making relating to staffing requirements”,

and the stage 1 report says that the

“overall aim of the Bill is to ensure safe and appropriate care staffing levels based on clear, evidence-based methodologies, regardless of setting”.

We can all agree with those underlying principles. I associate myself with those intentions.

Some interesting parts of the stage 1 report have come to my attention. Paragraph 57 says:

“We believe there must be more clarity on where accountability for the provision of appropriate staffing in health boards and care services lies. Whilst the Policy Memorandum advises it will lie with organisations we believe unless there is a named accountable officer there is a high likelihood, particularly in health board settings, for those at ward level to be held or feel accountable.”

I note that the cabinet secretary has since said that clarity in NHS wards around the country will be important, and I welcome the assurances to the committee that health boards will have corporate responsibility for compliance. I also note that senior charge nurses will be expected to run the current adult in-patient tool.

To be fair, I am not sure whether that provides full clarity, given that establishing safe staffing levels at any snapshot in time is not an exact science. I declare an interest, as my wife is a nurse. Clinical co-ordinators use significant data more generally to determine what staffing is required at any given time. Even large events such as football games in a city, predictions of icy weather and trends of peaks and troughs in demand over the past few years can have implications for safe staffing levels in accident and emergency units, high-dependency units, intensive care units and beyond. Predicted demand and surge demand all have to be fed into the mix.

Depending on demand, complexity and the conditions that nurses in particular often have to deal with, nurses are transferred regularly between wards. A nurse often has to decide whether it is safe to transfer a nurse from their ward. By the same token, a nurse might have to decide whether it was appropriate to take an additional patient into their ward. Those nurses would consider whether staffing levels would be safe with an additional patient or if they allowed a nurse to go to another ward that was experiencing surge demand.

The nurse in charge is not always a senior charge nurse, although I appreciate that the final decision would be taken by a senior charge nurse. At every organisational layer in NHS hospitals, professional judgment is exercised. For corporate compliance, the buck must stop somewhere. Greater clarity about that is required.

It is positive that, if conflict arises when a nurse in charge tells a senior charge nurse that taking an additional patient on a ward would not be advisable or when a senior charge nurse disagrees with the board on the professional judgment of safe staffing levels, there will be an opportunity to review, revise and enhance the workload and staff planning tools. However, we need clarity about where responsibility sits.

The extension of the bill to the care sector is powerful and will strengthen the sector—particularly in relation to third sector providers. Operators of third sector care homes in my constituency have told me that the national care home contract has been unfair to them. They have asserted that it gives council care homes preferential treatment and that social care services that have been procured from the third sector are not always funded as appropriately as those in a local authority setting might be.

Surely developing and agreeing—with professional judgment—what a multidisciplinary skills mix would look like in the care sector would be a key strength in the care sector’s negotiations with councils and integration joint boards. Ensuring a level playing field across the care sector, irrespective of where care is delivered, is welcome.

My mum was in a care home that was—fortunately—wonderful. The building was old, but the staff were fantastic. We want to empower people to ask how they can know that the staffing mix in a care home is safe. When they ask that, they are given general reassurances that it is okay and that the care and the skills mix are suitable for their mum, dad, brother or sister.

Such reassurances would be much better if people knew that there was a robust, consistent and reliable evidence-based safe workload planning tool to ensure that the skills mix was correct. Such a tool does not exist consistently across the country, but having one would empower not just the care sector but staff on the front line to say that they do not believe that staffing is sufficient and that providers must do better. In the care sector, we must empower families to be sure that their loved ones are suitably looked after.

I welcome the bill’s general principles.

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Linda Fabiani)

We move to the closing speeches.

16:34  

David Stewart (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)

This has been an excellent debate, with insightful and well-informed speeches from across the chamber. As a member of the Health and Sport Committee, I was present and took an active part in the questioning of all our witnesses, including the cabinet secretary. Therefore, I feel that I have some background in the subject.

To paraphrase the conclusion of our stage 1 report—which many members have mentioned today—no one can object to the guiding principles of the bill, which is about having the right people with the right skills in the right place at the right time, to ensure the highest quality of care. As we have heard, Labour supports the general principles of the bill. However, as Monica Lennon, Anas Sarwar and Alex Rowley made clear, there are areas of concern, and we believe that addressing those areas could strengthen bill.

This morning I got the cabinet secretary’s response to the committee’s stage 1 report, in which she said:

“This Bill is about workload planning not workforce planning.”

Critics might argue that that is about how many angels can dance on the head of the pin. Many territorial boards in Scotland, such as my own in Highland, have a workforce crisis. Anas Sarwar talked about the consultant who is employed for £400,000 a year—a horrendous amount of money—which, in turn, fuels the flames of financial instability. Scottish Labour believes that health and social care policy should be focused on achieving the best outcomes for people and protecting staff wellbeing.

As COSLA has argued, the overreliance on processes could make the bill just another bureaucratic box-ticking exercise. However, I have heard the cabinet secretary say that she will lodge some amendments at stage 2, and I believe that other members will do that, too. There are opportunities to strengthen the bill.

We need to learn lessons from history. As I said a few weeks ago—during our debate on bullying at NHS Highland—we need to look at the Francis report on bullying and whistleblowing in the NHS in England. It concluded that losing trained talent from the NHS led to inadequate staffing levels and poor quality of care.

As we know from the stage 1 report, a set of 12 workforce planning tools has been developed for nursing and midwifery. As the cabinet secretary will know, the committee conducted a survey on the tools. Some respondents said that the tools were not helpful in a community setting and were time consuming, and that staff were not sure how the tools could help to develop safe staffing for patients. A third of survey respondents had received no training in how to use the tools, and there was no consistency in how training was delivered.

As Audit Scotland has said, there is a risk that the time taken to train affected staff could put extra pressure on the workforce and impact on services and quality of care to patients.

This useful debate was kicked off by the convener of the committee, Lewis Macdonald, who talked about the committee’s constructive suggestions in a unanimous report. He also mentioned allied health professionals’ views, which we must listen to in the debate. As the cabinet secretary will be aware, some evidence suggested that the bill is perhaps too process focused.

Miles Briggs made good comments about the crucial point—it is self-explanatory—that people are the most valuable asset in the NHS. He asked what the bill will do for those working in health and social care on the front line. He also mentioned the RCN survey, which gave us some very useful raw materials.

Just about every member made the obvious point—it must be made—that every single day, NHS staff go the extra mile to help patients. My colleague, Monica Lennon, talked about the fact that we are living longer, but she also asked whether we are living healthier, particularly if we look at health inequality within Scotland. She talked about how a focus on outcomes is key and she made the interesting point that there are enough vacancies in the NHS to staff two moderately sized hospitals.

Alison Johnstone made an excellent point about research finding links between good, safe staffing levels and favourable health outcomes. She also touched on the 4.5 per cent vacancy level for nurses and midwives.

Many members have made the point that the Scottish Government must have a duty of care for the wellbeing of all staff. That duty may be mentioned in some historical legislation, but perhaps there could be an amendment in that regard from the committee at stage 2 that the cabinet secretary would look on favourably.

Alex Cole-Hamilton started with a rhetorical question: is the bill needed? He stressed the importance of protecting hard-working staff on the front line and made a key point about the need to get the right balance of skills and experience.

Anas Sarwar made an interesting point about whether there should be a cap on agency staff costs, which I hope that the cabinet secretary will consider.

The other day, I was reading the British Medical Journal, in which Dr David Oliver, who is a consultant in acute general medicine, wrote:

“Without adequate staffing in clinical roles NHS performance will decline, and services will become unsustainable. Morale will worsen, and staff will leave or choose to do less—a vicious circle.”

As Nye Bevan would have said about that,

“You don’t have to gaze into a crystal ball when you can read an open book.”

16:46  

Brian Whittle (South Scotland) (Con)

I refer the chamber to my entry in the register of members’ interests, which states that I am a director of an IT company that is developing communication and collaboration platforms for sectors including the healthcare sector. I receive no remuneration for that post. In addition, a close family member works in the Scottish NHS.

It has been a good debate on an extremely important subject. When the bill was first proposed, it was to be called the safe staffing bill. The word “safe” was dropped because of the connotations of a safe level of staffing not being met. As Anas Sarwar said, if we had safe levels of staffing, by default, we would also have unsafe levels of staffing. That probably tells us how important the bill is.

The bill allows us to focus on our healthcare professionals, their health and the quality of the healthcare that we receive from the NHS. The guiding principles and overall purpose of the bill are about reassuring people in hospital or social care that they will receive safe and high-quality care.

There was a concern among members of the committee that the work on the integration of health and social care, which is already well under way, could be negatively affected by the bill, so I think that the cabinet secretary needs to reassure the committee that that will be avoided.

Edward Mountain was right in his summation when he said that although the welfare of all our healthcare professionals is mentioned in the bill, it does not say—David Stewart made the same point—how that will be achieved, given the ever-increasing demands on the health and social care sector, which the cabinet secretary herself mentioned. Conservative members have consistently stated that, when it comes to creating an environment in which patient outcomes are a priority, looking after the health of our healthcare professionals must be the first step to consider. As the Marie Curie charity highlighted, staff safety and wellbeing contribute to safe and high-quality care.

The bill will require to be underpinned by the appropriate technology. That was a thread that I was keen to pursue during the committee’s evidence taking. My concern in that regard is that a replacement platform to deliver on the bill’s objectives was not developed prior to the bill’s introduction, even though the development of appropriate technology is fundamental to the success of those objectives. The committee was surprised to learn that a review of the current tools to assess their efficacy had not been undertaken prior to the bill’s introduction.

The starting point for any bill should be consideration of the end objectives, and the Scottish Government has not been particularly successful in rolling out technology. To be successful in developing technology, it is essential that the project is fully scoped and that tight protocols are in place. Understanding that step should have been a prerequisite for the bill’s introduction. The implementation of the current tools is patchy at best.

I always enjoy listening to Alex Neil’s contributions to health debates, and he was right to say that there are wonderful technology companies in Scotland that are developing fantastic products. However, we fall down when it comes to integrating those products into the health service; we are not particularly good at that. The use of those tools and their integration into the NHS must be considered.

As things stand, the technology that the Government is relying on for the nurse and midwifery workforce tools is bolted on to an existing platform. That is a recipe for confusion and does not seem to deliver a patient-medical practitioner outcome focus. As Miles Briggs said, we need to look at outcomes versus process. COSLA said that it saw the bill as focusing on “inputs rather than outcomes”. Indeed, the committee noted that the Scottish Government did not consider that outcomes should be mentioned in the bill.

If outcomes were the primary objective, allied health professionals, occupational therapists and social care would be intrinsically woven into the software development before it ever launched, because an outcomes-focused solution must involve that multidisciplinary team. It is inconceivable that any health care plan could be effective without physiotherapists, radiographers, speech therapists, mental health practitioners, social care professionals and so on. It is very welcome to hear the cabinet secretary suggest that stage 2 amendments will be lodged to address that, and we look forward to seeing and assessing those amendments.

I was pleased to hear that NHS National Services Scotland is undertaking work to procure a new platform to replace the Scottish standard time system platform, but that is being done without the development plan for the workforce planning tools required for a multidisciplinary team approach. That work needs to be done in conjunction with the introduction of the bill, if patient and staff outcomes rather than process are to be the main drivers.

Many members have highlighted the unintended consequences of the tools applying only to nurses and midwives. It might squeeze out the other disciplines, such as allied health professionals, occupational therapists, social care professionals and so on.

Annie Wells highlighted the third sector’s concerns. Given that a third of the voluntary sector is already involved in social care, that sector needs to be persuaded. The SCVO suggested that no particular benefit would come from the bill, while the Law Society of Scotland said:

“It is difficult to assess from the face of the Bill whether the main policy objective of appropriate staffing will be met, as the Bill is largely a vehicle for more legislation to come.”

The Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh warned:

“There is a danger that individuals are held accountable for not being able to provide ‘safe’ levels despite circumstances being out of their control.”

Other sectors, such as the care sector, have raised similar concerns. Unison Scotland noted that if the Scottish Government decides to proceed with the bill in a fashion that requires adherence, it needs to make it clear who is responsible for delivering that policy. If the Government cannot clarify specific lines of accountability, the bill will become redundant.

With regard to social care, if commissioners are introduced into the process without being referred to in the bill, how will they be required to adhere to the guiding principles?

I am sure that all members would agree that the Scottish Government’s objectives are not only laudable but essential, but if the bill is to succeed there is work to do. In supporting the bill at this stage, we recognise that the elephant in the room is the shortage of staff across all medical professions. Unless we address that, the potential of the bill will be eroded.

The Deputy Presiding Officer

I call Jeane Freeman to close the debate. We have a little extra time, so a generous 10 minutes should take us to decision time.

16:48  

Jeane Freeman

Thank you, Presiding Officer.

I agree with other members that this has been a good debate, which has encapsulated the complexity of the legislation and the importance of ensuring that the bill acts as an enabler for the development of more evidence-based, professional-led methods of assessing the workload that is associated with the delivery of care for the people of Scotland.

I thank all members who have taken part in the debate, and I take this opportunity to thank the Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee, the Finance and Constitution Committee and, in particular, the Health and Sport Committee for their work to inform Parliament’s consideration of the bill.

Before I turn to specific points that members have raised, I thank our key partners across the health and care sector for their constructive engagement with us and for their considerable input to the bill so far. I have listened very carefully to all the views that have been expressed—I will return to that later—and will continue to work with those key partners to ensure that the bill delivers what we want it to deliver.

I will turn to some of the points that have been made, but I have to say that, even with a generous 10 minutes, I will not be able to cover them all. Before I start, though, I will say this: after the debate has been concluded and Parliament has—I hope—agreed to support the bill at stage 1, we will look carefully at the Official Report of the debate and I will carefully consider all the points that have been raised and how we might address them. I will then deal with those issues when I come to the Health and Sport Committee at stage 2.

I am certain that members across the chamber will want to lodge amendments at stage 2. As was my approach when I had responsibility for social security, I will offer an opportunity to discuss those amendments before they are lodged to ensure that, where we can reach agreement, we do so in advance. I would hate to be in the position where the Government agrees with the principle and spirit of an amendment but cannot agree to its being passed simply because some of the words are not quite right in legislative terms. We have managed to take that approach before and I am certain that we can manage to do so again. I am not seeking to subsume everyone else’s amendments into Government amendments, but I want to work as hard as I can to reach consensus on the bill. That is because I believe that we all agree on the bill’s principles and recognise its importance, and we all want to make good law that will aid us in our work.

First, I want to address some of the points that Lewis Macdonald made when he spoke on behalf of the committee. I should say that I am grateful for the considered report that the committee has produced for us and for the contribution that Mr Macdonald made. On the point about the bill being too focused on process at the expense of outcomes, I know that others have made the same comment—indeed, COSLA has raised it as a concern—but I do not believe it to be the case. The bill recognises a focus on outcomes, but I am perfectly willing to look at whether we can strengthen that aspect and make it even clearer.

That said, I cannot understand the thinking here. Surely having an evidence-based, robust approach and a clear methodology that are consistently applied across our health and social care sector, which are appropriate to those settings and which allow us to identify workload and, in turn, ensure that professional judgment can be exercised with regard to the staff and skills mix that is needed will lead to the provision of high-quality outcomes for patients and staff. As I have said, if that is not clear enough, I will be very happy to look at it in more detail.

I am grateful to Mr Macdonald for recognising the importance of rolling out excellence in care and for raising the point about monitoring and guidance. In his speech, Anas Sarwar made some useful points about how, once the bill is, as I hope, passed and enacted, the public and, indeed, the chamber can be advised of the work that will go on and the results that will be produced and can compare and contrast that information with work on workforce planning and the recruitment and training of appropriate levels of staff in all areas. Again, I am happy to look at how that aspect might be strengthened in the bill.

I do not believe that the bill will skew resources because one set of tools is ahead of the other. We have made it very clear that, as the tools are developed for the settings in which we will want them to be put in place, we will work with stakeholders to ensure that they are appropriate to those community-based settings. The existing tools already cover both acute and community settings, but I strongly take Alex Neil’s point that, when we talk about community settings, we are talking about not only social care but primary care.

Anas Sarwar

I realise that the cabinet secretary cannot respond to all the requests that have been made, but can she respond to the specific point about a cap on agency fees and charges?

Jeane Freeman

I say to Mr Sarwar that I am getting there—trust me.

On the question of why we need legislation as opposed to the current mandate, one member—I think that it was David Stewart—made it clear why we need to move from a mandate to legislation. It is because we have the mandate but we do not have sufficient training, we do not have time for training, we do not have support for staff and we do not have support to ensure that the information that is produced is analysed and then applied, and the legislation will enable us to do that.

With regard to who is accountable, the bill, if passed, will add to the National Health Service (Scotland) Act 1978 and will make it a duty for the health board to be accountable. That includes the chief officers of IJBs. Similarly, the existing powers of the Care Inspectorate would apply. I therefore think that the question of accountability can be answered, although I am happy to discuss that further.

Before I run out of time, I will turn to the proposed cap on agency charges. I agree with Mr Sarwar in full that the current situation, of which he gave examples, is unacceptable. I am not certain that the Scottish Government has the powers to do what he asks in terms of capping the agency charges, but I am happy to continue to discuss that further with him and his colleagues to see what more we might do. Certainly, the application of the legislation should lead to a continued reduction in the requirement for agency spend. I should make the point that, in the current year, that is down by 7 per cent from what it was previously, and the application of the legislation should allow us to drive that down even further.

I take this opportunity to thank Mr Sarwar for his contribution, in which he said what he thought was wrong with the bill and then offered concrete suggestions for its improvement.

I need to make a point about Brexit. I am not standing here and saying that our current issues with recruitment and retention are exclusively down to Brexit, but there is no question but that Brexit will exacerbate the problem that we have. So, too, will immigration legislation that does not meet the particular needs of Scotland, the Scottish economy and the Scottish population. That is why we must seriously consider the issue of immigration powers coming to this Parliament and not simply residing in Westminster, where they are skewed.

David Stewart

The cabinet secretary will be well aware of the UK Government changes that were made this week, which will double the non-EU staff levy that has to be paid. That will affect the health service in Scotland. Has the cabinet secretary made an assessment of the effect that that will have?

Jeane Freeman

I cannot think that it will be a good one. I have not yet made an assessment of that in detail but, once I have done so, I am happy to let Mr Stewart know how it might add to the difficulties that we are facing.

Mr Mountain and others talked about looking at the issue of wellbeing in the bill. Again, I am happy to consider an amendment that might strengthen that area and to discuss that issue further. We need to be careful that we do not stray into health and safety or employment legislation, because those areas are reserved.

I do not think that it is an either/or proposition when it comes to assessing workload and workload planning. We should not wait for one to be got right before we address the other; the two need to go hand in hand. However, I believe that the bill, significantly strengthened at stage 2, as it undoubtedly will be, will greatly contribute to our capacity to increase the performance and efficacy of our workforce planning and, from that, the number of people who we support through training across a range of professions.

As always, I am open to further conversations as we go into stage 2 in order to see the extent to which we can reach consensus on this important piece of legislation. There will undoubtedly be areas on which we disagree, but I am certain that, with good will from across the chamber, we can get a piece of legislation that is not only fit for purpose but fit for the needs and expectations of the people we serve.

6 December 2018

Vote at Stage 1

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Vote at Stage 1 transcript

The Presiding Officer (Ken Macintosh)

We move to decision time. The first question is, that motion S5M-15055, in the name of Jeane Freeman, on stage 1 of the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill be agreed to.

Motion agreed to,

That the Parliament agrees to the general principles of the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill.

The Presiding Officer

The second question is, that motion S5M-14969, in the name of Derek Mackay, on a financial resolution for the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill, be agreed to.

Motion agreed to,

That the Parliament, for the purposes of any Act of the Scottish Parliament resulting from the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill, agrees to any expenditure of a kind referred to in Rule 9.12.3(b) of the Parliament’s Standing Orders arising in consequence of the Act.

The Presiding Officer

That concludes decision time.

Meeting closed at 17:00.  

6 December 2018

MSPs agreed that this Bill could continue

Stage 2 - Changes to detail 

MSPs can propose changes to the Bill. The changes are considered and then voted on by the committee.

Changes to the Bill

MSPs can propose changes to a Bill  these are called 'amendments'. The changes are considered then voted on by the lead committee.

The lists of proposed changes are known as a 'marshalled list'. There's a separate list for each week that the committee is looking at proposed changes.

The 'groupings' document groups amendments together based on their subject matter. It shows the order in which the amendments will be debated by the committee and in the Chamber. This is to avoid repetition in the debates.

How is it decided whether the changes go into the Bill?

When MSPs want to make a change to a Bill, they propose an 'amendment'. This sets out the changes they want to make to a specific part of the Bill.

The group of MSPs that is examining the Bill (lead committee) votes on whether it thinks each amendment should be accepted or not.

Depending on the number of amendments, this can be done during one or more meetings.

First meeting on amendments

Documents with the amendments considered at this meeting held on 29 January 2019:

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First meeting on amendments transcript

The Convener

Agenda item 2 is stage 2 consideration of the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill.

The Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport, Jeane Freeman, is accompanied by Diane Murray, who is associate chief nursing officer; Louise Kay, who is the bill team leader; Julie Davidson and Johanna Irvine from the Scottish Government legal directorate; and Jonathan Brown, who is a parliamentary counsel. The officials at the table will change according to which amendments are being debated. I welcome you all.

I also welcome Monica Lennon, and welcome back Alison Johnstone, who are here because they have lodged amendments to the bill. I welcome in advance of his arrival Anas Sarwar, who will join us for the same reason.

Members should have with them a copy of the bill as introduced, the marshalled list of amendments, which was published on Thursday, and the groupings of amendments, which sets out the amendments in groups in the order in which they will be debated.

It might be helpful to members and others if I briefly explain the procedure. There will be one debate on each group of amendments. I will call the member who lodged the first amendment in the group to speak to and move that amendment, and to speak to all the other amendments in the group. I will then call other members who have lodged amendments in the group. Members who have not lodged amendments in the group, but who wish to speak, should indicate that by catching my attention in the usual way. If the cabinet secretary has not already spoken to the group, I will invite her to contribute to the debate just before moving to the winding-up speech. I will conclude the debate on the group by inviting the member who moved the first amendment in the group to wind up.

Following the debate on each group, I will ask the member who moved the first amendment in the group whether he or she wishes to press it to a vote, or to seek to withdraw it. If the member wishes to press the amendment, I will put the question on it. If a member wishes to withdraw their amendment after it has been moved, that must be agreed to by the other members of the committee. If any member present objects, the committee will move to a vote on the amendment.

If a member does not want to move their amendment when it is called, they should simply say, “Not moved.” Please note that any other member present may move the amendment. If no one moves the amendment, I will immediately move on to the next amendment on the marshalled list.

Only committee members may vote on the amendments. Voting in any division is by show of hands. I remind members to indicate their intention clearly and to keep their hands in a position in which they can be seen, so that their votes will be recorded fully by members of the clerking team.

I will ask the committee to approve each section of the bill at the appropriate point.

We will make whatever progress we can make today and seek to get through as much of stage 2 as we can by 12 o’clock.

Section 1—Guiding principles for health and care staffing

The Convener

Amendment 81, in the name of Monica Lennon, is grouped with amendments 82, 1, 83, 2, 8 to 12 and 14.

Monica Lennon (Central Scotland) (Lab)

Amendments 81 to 83 would ensure that the definition of the purpose of staffing includes a reference that it should achieve the best possible outcomes for patients. Together, the three amendments would ensure that individuals, whether they are national health service patients or people using social care services, would be placed at the heart of what the bill is trying to achieve.

I am sure that we all agree that staff are the backbone of the NHS, but they are not there to deliver a service for the sake of it; they are there to look after and care for patients and users of its services. That is also reflected in amendment 1, which is in Alex Cole-Hamilton’s name. The health and social care sector operates with that mindset, and the policy memorandum for the bill states that the bill’s aim is to be an enabler of

“high quality care and improved outcomes for service users.”

However, if that is the intention, it should be explicit in the bill, especially as the rest of the duties in the bill are to be interpreted and implemented through the lens of the guiding principles. Otherwise, the bill runs the risk of becoming process driven and setting a new tick-box exercise, which no one at the table wants.

Amendment 8, which is in the name of the cabinet secretary, will add “improving ... outcomes” to the list of considerations that are to be factored in when arranging health and social care staffing. However, section 1 is caveated as being required only

“in so far as consistent with the main purpose”.

Ensuring the best outcomes for patients and people who require social care should not be caveated, because it is the reason why we have health and care services and staff in the first place.

I move amendment 81.

Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD)

Amendments 1 and 2, which are in my name, should not be controversial. Monica Lennon has alluded to the reasoning behind them, which is to recognise that person-centred planning is absolutely key throughout our health and care services. The bill does not necessarily reflect that in its language. Amendments 1 and 2 seek to extend the reach of that to recognise that the approach has to be about the

“health, wellbeing and safety of service users”

as much as it is about staff.

The one amendment in the group that I have a problem with is amendment 9, which is in the name of the cabinet secretary, because I believe that it would dilute the intention of the bill by changing it from being about having the right staff in the right place at the right time to being about

“making the best use of the available”

staff and resources. We need to throw our caps over the wall on the issue and to be a bit stronger in our intention.

My amendment 11 is really important in terms of the debate that we heard throughout stage 1 about extending the reach of the bill to allied health professionals. The amendment recognises that the toolkit and the tools that it contains have an application that goes far beyond primary care clinicians. We heard strong testimony from a range of allied health professionals about their desire to be included in the bill, to work towards best practice, and to work together with primary care colleagues. The Royal College of Nursing Scotland had some anxiety about use of the word “together”, but is happy with amendment 11 as long as its intention is that a collaborative approach be taken, rather than people just working side by side or cheek by jowl. I confirm that that is the case.

The Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport (Jeane Freeman)

In its stage 1 report, the committee asked the Scottish Government to place in the bill an additional guiding principle linking the outcome focus to the health and care standard and quality measures. Amendments 8 and 12 are intended to do just that. They will insert a new general principle of

“improving standards and outcomes for service users”,

alongside a definition that provides that by

“standards and outcomes for service users”,

we mean the health and social care standards.

Amendment 9 will remove the phrase

“allocating staff efficiently and effectively”

from the list of guiding principles in section 1(1)(b) and replace it with

“making the best use of the available individuals, facilities and resources”.

That wording, which was used in the Public Bodies (Joint Working) (Scotland) Act 2014 integration planning principles, makes it clear that we do not wish health boards and care services to address each and every risk simply by bringing in agency staff. We wish to see them managing their services and staff “efficiently and effectively”, and to see them considering whole-service redesign where appropriate, in order to ensure that they are providing the best possible service to their patients and service users.

I heard the concern from some staff groups that the bill is not specific enough about their inclusion, and that it does not recognise the importance of multidisciplinary working. Amendment 10 will make it clear in the guiding principles that multidisciplinary approaches to staffing should be considered where appropriate. I confirm that the Government is happy to support amendment 11, which is in the name of Alex Cole-Hamilton, which will place a definition of “multi-disciplinary services” in section 1.

Related amendment 14 will provide further clarification in the general duty in proposed new section 12IA of the National Health Service (Scotland) Act 1978 in order to ensure appropriate staffing and that the contribution of all professional disciplines to delivery of high-quality care must be considered.

Although I am supportive of the aims of amendments 1 and 2, which are in the name of Alex Cole-Hamilton, I say with respect that they are entirely unnecessary, and seem to have stemmed from a slight misunderstanding of the bill as drafted. The duty in proposed new section 12IA of the 1978 act to “ensure ... appropriate” staffing already sets out that, for the national health service,

“It is the duty of every Health Board and the Agency to ensure that at all times suitably qualified and competent individuals are working in such numbers as are appropriate for ... the health, wellbeing and safety of patients, and ... the provision of high-quality health care.”

Part 3 of the bill contains an equivalent duty for

“Any person who provides a care service”.

Sections 2 and 3 of the bill set out that “every Health Board”, in complying with proposed new section 12IA of the 1978 act, and

“any person who provides a care service”,

in complying with section 6 of the bill,

“must have regard to ... the guiding principles”.

Therefore, the principles and the general duty are intrinsically linked. Those who must follow the general duty must also

“have regard to the guiding principles”

in doing so.

Amendments 1 and 2 are therefore not necessary, because they would add nothing new to the bill but would, instead, duplicate—indeed, through amendment 2 they would, arguably, triplicate—something that is already clearly set out in the bill. Taken literally, they would mean that a health board would be legally required to provide appropriate numbers of staff for

“the health, wellbeing and safety of”

patients, and, in doing so, would have to arrange staffing for the health, wellbeing and safety of patients, and—in so far as is consistent for that purpose—arrange staffing for the health, wellbeing and safety of patients. I am sure that the committee gets my point. I say to Alex Cole-Hamilton that we do not need to replicate statutory duties in order for them to have legal force. On that basis, I ask the committee not to support amendments 1 and 2.

On amendments 81, 82 and 83, which are in the name of Monica Lennon, the guiding principles in section 1 apply across health and social care and must recognise that the positive outcomes that service users wish to see are not just clinical or medical in nature. Amendment 83 would state that the purpose of staffing for health and care services is

“to ensure the best health care outcomes”,

but neglects to mention the wider health and care outcomes, which are set out in the health and social care standards. For that reason, I ask the committee to reject amendments 81 to 83.

The Convener

As no other member wishes to speak, I ask Monica Lennon to wind up.

Monica Lennon

The cabinet secretary has made some valid and interesting points. However, I am sure that members have put a lot of work into their amendments, and there might be some points that we disagree on. I do not have much to add. I know that I do not have a vote in the committee, but I support the amendments. I had concerns about amendment 9, because I know that the RCN has expressed concerns about it. However, I know that the cabinet secretary has expressed a different view.

10:15  

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 81 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

Against

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 5, Against 4, Abstentions 0.

Amendment 81 agreed to.

Amendment 82 moved—[Monica Lennon].

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 82 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

Against

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 5, Against 4, Abstentions 0.

Amendment 82 agreed to.

Amendment 1 moved—[Alex Cole-Hamilton].

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 1 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

Against

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 5, Against 4, Abstentions 0.

Amendment 1 agreed to.

Amendment 83 moved—[Monica Lennon].

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 83 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

Against

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 5, Against 4, Abstentions 0.

Amendment 83 agreed to.

Amendment 2 moved—[Alex Cole-Hamilton].

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 2 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

Against

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 5, Against 4, Abstentions 0.

Amendment 2 agreed to.

Amendment 8 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Amendment 9 moved—[Jeane Freeman].

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 9 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

Against

Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 4, Against 5, Abstentions 0.

Amendment 9 disagreed to.

Amendment 10 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Amendment 11 moved—[Alex Cole-Hamilton]—and agreed to.

Amendment 12 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Section 1, as amended, agreed to.

Section 2—Guiding principles in health care staffing and planning

The Convener

Amendment 84, in the name of Miles Briggs, is grouped with amendments 85 to 89 and 110.

Miles Briggs (Lothian) (Con)

The purpose of amendment 84 is to place a duty on commissioners to be satisfied that, in contracting or agreeing services, they have taken

“all reasonable steps to ensure that”

providers are able to deliver health services that have

“appropriate staffing arrangements”.

As the bill is drafted, commissioners must only

“have regard to—

(a) the guiding principles ... , and

(b) the need ... to have appropriate staffing arrangements in place.”

Commissioners should be clear about their part in ensuring staffing for safe and effective care. As commissioners, NHS boards and integration authorities should therefore be under a clear duty to commission services in a way that allows health service providers to arrange staffing for safe, high-quality care. If services are not commissioned with sufficient funding to ensure that there are appropriate numbers of staff, or staff with appropriate expertise, it is the provider and not the commissioner who will be held accountable. Ultimately, it is patients who may experience poor-quality care as a result.

Amendment 86 is similar and replicates amendment 84 for care services.

I move amendment 84.

Monica Lennon

Amendments 85, 87 and 89 are aimed at improving the ease with which there can be scrutiny of staffing levels and the implementation of the duties in the bill. For health services, amendment 85 does that by, first, improving the information that is made available about decisions concerning staffing levels in health services; secondly, ensuring that decisions about staffing levels are linked to improving outcomes for service users, rather than being made for financial or practical reasons; thirdly, requiring the Scottish ministers to make the information public by reporting to Parliament; and, finally, requiring the Scottish ministers to respond to decisions that have been taken by health service providers about staffing, setting out what action they intend to take in relation to staffing in the health service. The intention of that final obligation on the Scottish ministers is to connect the bill, which is process driven and focused on on-the-ground workload planning, to national-level workforce planning. Decisions that are made at national Government level have an impact on the ability of health and care providers to provide staff for services, whether because of the budget choices that are made, the number of training places that are made available, or the registration and recruitment process that is required.

I note that amendment 90, in the name of Alison Johnstone, although not in this group, is complementary, as it places a duty on ministers to ensure an adequate supply of healthcare staff.

Amendment 85 is intended to provide full scrutiny of the decisions that have been made up the chain of accountability. Amendment 87 is a small amendment that ensures that commissioners must consider all the obligations on providers, as opposed to only those that are listed later in the bill. Amendment 89 gives the same obligations of reporting to commissioners of care as amendment 85 does to healthcare providers. Similarly to amendment 85, it is aimed at improving scrutiny of the implementation of the bill and the staffing levels in the social care sector.

Should amendments 86 and 88, in the names of Miles Briggs and David Stewart, be agreed to, amendment 89 will also require commissioners to report when financial decisions have been made about staffing levels and available resources for staffing in the commissioning of care services. As with amendment 85, amendment 89 provides for scrutiny of the decisions made by ministers and requires them to respond to the situations that are faced by the sector.

A slight difference between amendment 85 and amendment 89 is that amendment 89 requires reporting on the risk that is faced by commissioners of care in complying with the duty. It is important that that is included, so that the context in which decisions are taken is made clear. That would apply, for example, to the financial context as many social care budgets are squeezed, or to a lack of available staff.

Although a reference to risk is not included in amendment 85, it has not been totally left out. Instead, it has been added to an amendment in a different group, which is about the content of health board reports to Scottish ministers on staffing and seemed a more appropriate place.

David Stewart (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)

Amendments 88 and 110, in my name, seek to ensure that commissioners of care services bear a similar responsibility and duty with regard to the staffing of care services as are given to care providers.

In the evidence sessions during stage 1, the committee heard from groups in the social care sector that were concerned that the bill placed all the focus on care providers and did not adequately recognise the impact that commission decisions about funding and resources have on staffing levels. I recognise that amendment 86, in the name of Miles Briggs, seeks to ensure that sufficient funding is given to providers in order to provide adequate staffing arrangements. I believe that amendment 110 complements that aim. The reference to “resources” would include funding but, by mirroring the wording of section 6, amendment 110 would require commissioners to specifically consider the same factors that service providers are required to consider when determining the appropriate staffing levels. Locating the provision relating to the commissioners’ new duty before the existing duty that is contained in section 6 indicates the shared responsibility of commissioners and providers to provide adequate staffing and the reliance by the latter on the former for their ability to comply with that duty.

I acknowledge the note from Scottish Care that was given to the committee yesterday, which references amendment 110, and the concern that it would limit the ability of providers to embrace new technologies. However, I respectfully suggest that the additional considerations that are set out in subsection (2) of the section that amendment 110 would introduce, specifically paragraph (e), which refers to

“the needs of service users”,

provide flexibility in how the required number of staff is assessed. Similar wording is used in section 4 with regard to healthcare services. I am aware that the social care sector differs from the health sector, but new technologies have adapted how services in the healthcare system are provided, and subsequently the staff and professions that are needed to provide such services. There is no reason in principle why a similar situation should not apply in social care.

Amendment 88 is consequential to amendment 110 and requires commissioners to consider the additional duty. If it is passed, amendment 89, in the name of Monica Lennon, would close the feedback loop and ensure that reports to the Scottish ministers would include a reference to the additional duty that would be placed on commissioners.

Jeane Freeman

Amendments 84 and 86, in the name of Mr Miles Briggs, are parallel provisions that apply respectively to healthcare planning and care service planning. I therefore intend to speak to both amendments before addressing the rest of the amendments in the group.

In truth, I am not clear what would be achieved by amendment 84 and what its aim is. It would require health boards to “take all reasonable steps” to provide sufficient funds to persons from whom they have contracted a service or with whom they have entered into an arrangement under the National Health Service (Scotland) Act 1978. Amendment 84 amends section 2, but section 2 does not apply to the commissioning of services by the integration authority: it applies to the contracting of services from a private health care provider or agency staff. Agreement on the payment that is required for the provision of a service is an integral part of the contracting process. More importantly, in contracting a service by virtue of the 1978 act, a health board retains accountability for the services that are provided under that contract and must ensure that they are delivered in an appropriate way. Put simply, a service provider would not agree to the contract if the amount that was set out in it was insufficient, and a board would not agree to a contract if it had not satisfied itself that the provider would deliver the required quality of care and level of staffing.

Amendment 86 would amend section 3 to place a similar duty on local authorities and integration authorities to provide sufficient funds to those from whom they contract a care service. Section 3 applies to the contracting of a service by a local authority or the integration authority from a care service provider. It may be the case that Miles Briggs has lodged amendments 84 and 86 due to a concern that local authorities are contracting services from care service providers, as planned by the integration authority, in cases in which the amount paid does not allow a care service provider to have appropriate staff in place. As is the case with the contracting of services in health, when a care service provider tenders for a contract with a local authority, both must agree that the amount that is paid for the service allows them to comply with their respective duties before agreeing to the contract. Section 3 requires local authorities and integration authorities to have regard to the duties that are placed on care service providers. As drafted, the amendments do not work, because it is not the responsibility of the health board or local authority to provide funds; rather they pay for a service and are accountable for ensuring that the service meets the legislative requirements. If Mr Briggs has any remaining concerns, I suggest that we work together to fully understand them and seek to draft an amendment at stage 3.

I ask Mr Briggs not to press amendment 84 and not to move amendment 86, on the understanding that I will work with him to address his concerns and bring forward an amendment at stage 3, if he so wishes.

10:30  

Amendment 85 would require health boards to report on how they have complied with the duties that are placed on them under section 2. That is something that could be included in the reporting duty that is set out in proposed new section 12IE of the 1978 act and I would be happy to make that more explicit for stage 3. I ask the committee to reject amendment 85 on the basis that I will amend section 12IE at stage 3.

Amendment 87 would create a circular reference. Section 3(1) imposes a duty to have regard to the guiding principles when carrying out the section 6 duty. Section 3(2) is about the planning aspect and when arrangements are being secured to get the care service delivered operationally by another person. The guiding principles already apply under section 3(2)(a). Given that commissioners already have to have regard to them under that provision, to create a duty to have regard to the duty to have regard to them is clearly circular. On that basis I ask the committee to reject amendment 87.

Amendment 89 would require local authorities and integration authorities to report on their compliance with section 3(2) and any risks that may affect their ability to comply. There are already statutory requirements on integration authorities to plan for the use of their resources in the context of their available budgets, publish those service and financial plans annually, and report on them annually. Amendment 89 therefore duplicates existing statutory duties, and for that reason I ask the committee to reject it.

I have serious concerns about the impact that amendments 88 and 110 would have on the success of integration. Integration authorities are already under a statutory obligation to deliver best value in terms of the quality of care that they commission within the resources that are available to them. By bringing together expertise in health and social care services, integration authorities are developing innovative approaches to care that focus on prevention, support and independence for people with multiple complex needs, for whom community-based support can often provide a better outcome at lower cost than would be found in a hospital or care home. By focusing on an obligation to provide a defined amount of money for a defined service for a particular period of time, amendment 110 risks inhibiting local partners’ capacity for innovation within their total available resources.

I point out that amendment 110 focuses only on social care and does not apply to health. I assume that amendment 110 has been lodged due to the same concerns about adequate funding for care service providers. Therefore, I extend the same offer to David Stewart as I do to Miles Briggs, which is to work together on drafting something that will work for stage 3. For that reason, I ask David Stewart not to move amendments 88 and 110.

The Convener

I ask Miles Briggs to wind up and to press or withdraw amendment 84.

Miles Briggs

Amendments 84 and 86 are intended to place a duty on commissioners to be satisfied that, in contracting or delivering services, they have taken “all reasonable steps” to ensure that providers are able to deliver health services with appropriate staffing arrangements. Given the constructive aspect of what the cabinet secretary has said, which I welcome—and if David Stewart agrees—I am happy not to press amendment 84 and not to move amendment 86.

Amendment 84, by agreement, withdrawn.

The Convener

Amendment 85 has already been debated with amendment 84.

Monica Lennon

I did not quite catch everything that the cabinet secretary said, but I think that there was a welcome commitment to amending proposed new section 12IE of the 1978 act. I am not sure whether that captures everything that I was looking to do; I am happy to discuss the matter with her, but I will move the amendment today as a safeguard.

Amendment 85 moved—[Monica Lennon].

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 85 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

Against

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 5, Against 4, Abstentions 0.

Amendment 85 agreed to.

Section 2, as amended, agreed to.

Section 3—Guiding principles in care service staffing and planning

Amendment 86 not moved.

Amendment 87 moved—[Monica Lennon].

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 87 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

Against

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 5, Against 4, Abstentions 0.

Amendment 87 agreed to.

Amendment 88 not moved.

The Convener

The next group is on ministerial guidance on staffing by care services. Amendment 13, in the name of the cabinet secretary, is grouped with amendments 68 to 71.

Jeane Freeman

Amendments 13 and 68 to 71 relate to the guidance on staffing by care services that ministers can produce under the bill.

Amendment 13 would allow ministers to issue guidance on the duty on commissioners of care services under section 3(2) to have regard, when commissioning services, to the guiding principles for care staffing and to certain statutory duties on care service providers in relation to staffing. As with the other guidance powers in the bill, that would be subject to consultation and would have to be published.

Section 8(1) already sets out that guidance can cover the duties placed on care service providers under sections 6 and 7 on ensuring appropriate staffing and adequate training of staff, respectively. Amendment 68 clarifies that that guidance can cover the guiding principles, too.

Section 8(2) lists those whom ministers must consult before issuing the guidance, and amendment 69 will add the Scottish Social Services Council to that list. In evidence to the committee, the SSSC highlighted its omission from the list, and I agree that it is essential that its view as the regulator for the social service workforce in Scotland is sought. As it had always been my intention to consult with SSSC through section 8(2)(d), which allows ministers to consult with

“such other persons as they consider appropriate”,

I was therefore happy to lodge the amendment to assure the SSSC that it will be consulted.

Amendment 70 will add those who commission services to the list of those whom ministers must consult before issuing the guidance. That will include integration authorities, whose addition was suggested in some of the written evidence to the committee.

I have listened to the views that have been expressed to the committee by third sector bodies that wanted the bill to contain a stronger commitment to seeking the views of service users, their carers and the third sector organisations that represent them. Section 8(2)(b) already requires ministers to consult representatives of service users, but amendment 71 will add representatives of carers to the list of those whom ministers must consult before issuing guidance under section 8 to care service providers.

I move amendment 13.

Sandra White (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

I want to mention one issue again. The bill is inclusive, in terms of nursing and social care, and amendment 13 goes some way to putting across that it is about not just acute and primary care but social care, too. I welcome this addition from the cabinet secretary.

Jeane Freeman

I welcome what Ms White has said. It is important to be reminded of that issue at this stage in our deliberations. The bill is intended to cover both health and social care. Therefore, we need to be careful neither to overmedicalise nor to ignore social care and the views of those operating and delivering in that service area. Amendment 13 is entirely compliant with overall cross-party support for integration of health and social care, so I am grateful to Ms White for making that point. Other than that, I have nothing to say.

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 13 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Amendment 13 agreed to.

Amendment 89 moved—[Monica Lennon].

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 89 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

Against

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 5, Against 4, Abstentions 0.

Amendment 89 agreed to.

Section 3, as amended, agreed to.

Section 4—NHS duties in relation to staffing

Amendment 14 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

The Convener

The next group of amendments relates to the duty to ensure appropriate staffing and the purposes of staffing. Amendment 3, in the name of Alex Cole-Hamilton, is grouped with amendments 4, 5, 15 and 16.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I hope that this group of amendments will not prove to be controversial. They are about extending the reach of the bill and recognising that although the safety of patients has to be paramount, so must that of staff. At stage 1, I gave an example that I had heard from a stakeholder about a psychiatric unit where professionals were asked by their union whether they had a safe staffing complement that night. They said, “We have a safe staffing complement for the patients, but because we work on an attack-response basis, if something happens, we can’t guarantee that we have enough staff to keep our staff safe.” My amendment recognises that sometimes we put clinicians, nurses and front-line professionals in harm’s way in our health and social care settings, and that their safety should be as paramount as patient safety.

The meaning and intent of my amendments 4 and 5 extend that point and recognise that the bill reaches further than just hospital and service settings.

I also want to say a word about the cabinet secretary’s amendment 15. Our interpretation—I hope that she will clarify the matter in her remarks—is that, according to amendment 15, the focus on staff wellbeing relates only to whether patient care could be compromised. Our staff’s wellbeing and safety should be a concern at all times, not just when patient care is unsatisfactory. As I have said, staff operate in a fluid and dynamic environment and although everything may seem fine, well staffed and safe, that might change in a heartbeat. On that basis, I will oppose amendment 15.

I move amendment 3.

10:45  

Jeane Freeman

I appreciate amendment 3’s valid aim to ensure that staff wellbeing is considered when ensuring adequate numbers of staff. With the bill, we seek to ensure safe and high-quality services. Success will create a virtuous circle of better outcomes for patients, together with improved wellbeing for staff. Evidence demonstrates that one affects the other.

An almost identical provision to amendment 3 in relation to staff already exists in health and safety legislation and we want to avoid replicating any duty that already exists in primary legislation. We must also be mindful that employment and health and safety law are reserved matters into which we should not stray.

I support the aims of amendment 3 and we already have a guiding principle that ensures the wellbeing of staff. However, given my concerns about the specific wording and the risk that it poses in terms of reserved legislation, I propose the replacement amendment 15, which answers the request of the Royal College of Nursing to include staff wellbeing in the duty on care service providers to ensure appropriate staffing, while aligning with the rest of the bill and, most important, keeping the primary focus of the legislation on the welfare of service users. I agree that staff wellbeing is crucial, but we should be looking at how it impacts on the service while maintaining our responsibilities in relation to reserved health and safety legislation.

I have no concerns about amendment 4, given the clear aims of the bill to secure safe and high-quality healthcare.

Amendment 5 is unnecessary because the term “health care” is already defined in proposed new section 12IG of the 1978 act as meaning

“a service for or in connection with the prevention, diagnosis or treatment of illness.”

Amendment 5 would duplicate that definition, so I ask the committee not to support it.

Amendment 16 lists factors that health boards should consider when fulfilling the general duty to ensure appropriate staffing. It responds to stage 1 written evidence from the RCN and the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. It follows a similar format to the list for care services in section 6, and it requires factors such as local context and the needs of patients to be considered.

I point out that the reference in proposed new section 12IA(2)(e) of the 1978 act to having regard to “appropriate clinical advice” was suggested for inclusion by Alex Cole-Hamilton during the stage 1 debate. The Scottish Government’s position is that amendment 16, in conjunction with further references throughout the bill to the seeking of appropriate clinical advice, as defined in proposed new section 12IG of the 1978 act, is the appropriate way of ensuring that all staffing decisions are informed by clinical advice.

I therefore ask the committee to support the amendments in my name and not to support amendments 3 and 5.

George Adam (Paisley) (SNP)

I have listened to what the cabinet secretary and Alex Cole-Hamilton have said. If I am getting this right, I am concerned that amendment 3 could mean we are stepping into reserved health and safety legislation. If that is the case, is there not a way that we could work on the issue during the coming weeks to get it right?

I will back amendment 4, because it gets the balance right. It might be the case that we can have some kind of workaround or compromise for amendment 3. When we start moving into legislation that is not defined by the Scottish Parliament, we are getting ourselves into muddy waters and I want to make sure that we are in a safe place.

Emma Harper (South Scotland) (SNP)

I share George Adam’s concerns about encroaching on reserved legislation. Questions about health and safety, which is a reserved matter, versus what we can do in our devolved Parliament have come up in a lot of my constituency work. I am interested in making sure that we are clear that we do not encroach on reserved laws when we pursue our legislation.

The Convener

As no other members wish to speak, I call Alex Cole-Hamilton to wind up and to press or seek to withdraw amendment 3.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I am not persuaded that amendment 3 would fail a competence test in respect of the Scottish Parliament or Scottish Government. The first letter in SHANARRI—the safe, healthy, achieving, nurtured, active, respected, responsible and included indicators—which we apply to getting it right for every child, stands for “safe”. It is not a reserved concept. Yes, health and safety legislation is reserved, but working in a policy context to make our staff safe should not be seen as outwith the purview of the Scottish Parliament. To that end, I press amendment 3.

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 3 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

Against

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 5, Against 4, Abstentions 0.

Amendment 3 agreed to.

Amendment 4 moved—[Alex Cole-Hamilton]—and agreed to.

Amendment 5 moved—[Alex Cole-Hamilton].

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 5 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

Against

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 5, Against 4, Abstentions 0.

Amendment 5 agreed to.

Amendment 15 moved—[Jeane Freeman].

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 15 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

Against

Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 4, Against 5, Abstentions 0.

Amendment 15 disagreed to.

Amendment 16 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

The Convener

We move to the next group, which is on real-time staffing assessment and the risk escalation process. Amendment 17, which is in the name of the cabinet secretary, is grouped with amendments 17A to 17I, 107, 123, 39, 41 and 48 to 65.

Jeane Freeman

During the stage 1 debate, I undertook to lodge an amendment to place a more explicit duty on health boards, relevant special health boards and the agency to ensure that there are clear mechanisms for day-to-day assessment of staff needs, and clear routes for the professional voice to be heard in those assessments. I believe that amendment 17 and the other Government amendments in the group would achieve those aims.

Healthcare settings are dynamic working environments in which situations can change swiftly. The bill already places a duty on health boards, special health boards

“and the Agency to ensure that at all times suitably qualified and competent individuals are working in such numbers as are appropriate for”

ensuring

“the health, wellbeing and safety of patients, and ... the provision of high-quality health care.”

Amendment 17, which would insert new sections into the 1978 act, takes that a step further by placing a duty on those bodies to have

“in place arrangements for the real-time assessment of”

staffing requirements and

“for the identification ... of ... risks caused by staffing ... to the health, wellbeing and safety of patients ... the provision of high-quality healthcare, or ... in so far as it affects either of those matters, the wellbeing of staff.”

As is only logical, those criteria for compliance would mirror the criteria in the general staffing duty on boards in proposed new section 12IA of the 1978 act, which would have been amended by amendment 15, which we have already debated. Those criteria set out that a procedure must be in place that allows any member of staff to identify and report such a risk. A procedure must also be in place that allows the mitigation of such risks by the person with the lead clinical professional responsibility in that area.

Where it has not been possible to mitigate a risk at local level, amendment 17’s proposed new section 12IAB of the 1978 act would place a duty on health boards, relevant special health boards and the agency to have in place procedures

“for the escalation of ... Risk”

to the appropriate decision maker within the organisation, who would have to seek appropriate clinical advice, as necessary, in reaching any decision. That is in recognition of the importance of the professional voice in the decision-making process.

Amendment 17 was developed in collaboration with stakeholders from professional and trade union bodies, and with nursing and medical directors. During discussions about what the proposed amendment should seek to achieve, the feedback was that it should not only put in place a new process for real-time staffing assessment and escalation of risks but ensure that, where staff have highlighted a risk, they should receive feedback on any decisions that are made as a result.

With that in mind, amendment 17 sets out that decisions must be relayed to all those involved in identifying, attempting to mitigate or reporting the risk and to those who have given clinical advice. Any of those individuals may record disagreement with the decision that is reached.

That also applies at the level of the board. If, having offered their clinical advice to the board, a nurse director or medical director were to feel that they disagreed with the decision that was subsequently reached, they would have the ability to record that. Of course, any nurse or doctor would also act in accordance with their professional code, which would require them to note their disagreement. Amendment 17 would require boards to have in place a procedure to allow nurse directors, medical directors or any member of staff to record their disagreement.

Regard should be had to professional clinical advice at all levels of the organisation, and clear processes should be in place for transparency of decision making in the light of such advice. That is why I have ensured that the need for clinical advice is woven through every provision in the bill; it should not be a stand-alone provision and should not refer to just one person or a small number of people. The health board would also be required to raise awareness of the procedures among staff.

Amendment 39 would place a duty on the health board to include in its annual report details of how it had carried out its duties in relation to the new real-time staffing assessment and risk escalation provisions, thereby providing transparency and accountability for their delivery.

Amendment 41 clarifies that the guidance to which every health board and the agency must have regard may, in particular, include provision about

“procedures for the identification, mitigation and escalation of risks caused by staffing levels in arrangements put in place”

under proposed new sections 12IAA and 12IAB of the 1978 act. During discussions on the proposed amendment, the majority of stakeholders were keen to point out that they already have in place processes for staffing assessment and escalation of risks. They did not want to reinvent the wheel, and their preference was that the amendment should not be overly prescriptive in setting out the processes and procedures that must be followed. Furthermore, the bill needs to work across a variety of settings and to take account of the changing landscape brought about by integration. I am therefore keen to avoid placing too much administrative detail in primary legislation, as that would risk its being too inflexible. Such detail is better set out in guidance that can be amended over time should changing needs require it.

Amendments 48, 49, 50, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 58, 59, 60, 62, 63 and 64 would insert references to proposed new sections 12IAA and 12IAB of the 1978 act into section 5. In doing so, they would apply the provisions that are set out in those proposed new sections to the special health boards that provide clinical health care—the State Hospitals Board for Scotland, NHS 24, the National Waiting Times Centre board and the Scottish Ambulance Service board—by amending their governing secondary legislation.

Amendments 51, 57, 61 and 65 are technical amendments. Section 2 of the bill places three duties on health boards and the agency: one to

“have regard to the guiding principles”

and two on health boards when commissioning health services from other providers. References in the bill to section 2 refer to the duties to capture all three. The amendments would therefore change the references in section 5(3)(b), section 5(6)(b), section 5(9)(b) and section 5(12)(b) respectively from “Duty” to “Duties”, to clarify that all three duties apply to the special health boards that are covered by section 5.

11:00  

I turn to amendments 17A to 17I, which have been lodged by Mr Stewart. I am happy to accept the majority of the amendments. However, amendments 17D and 17I are unnecessary.

Scottish Government amendment 39 will, as I have just described, add the duty to have in place a real-time staffing assessment and a risk escalation process to the list of duties that health boards and the agency must report on under proposed new section 12IE of the 1978 act.

Amendment 39, coupled with amendments 37 and 38, which are to be debated under group 14, sets out that health boards and the agency will, within one month of the end of the financial year, each have to

“publish, and submit to Scottish Ministers”

a report

“setting out how during that financial year it has carried out its duties under”

the new sections on risk assessment and escalation. I therefore ask Mr Stewart not to move amendments 17D and 17I.

Amendment 107, which was also lodged by Mr Stewart, sets out that:

“Every Health Board and the Agency must establish a risk management protocol ... to—

(a) identify,

(b) monitor, and

(c) assess,

risk associated with complying with the”

general duty. In essence, much of what is suggested in amendment 107 is already covered in proposed new section 12IAA of the 1978 act, “Duty to have real-time staffing assessment in place”, and proposed new section 12IAB, “Duty to have risk escalation process in place”, which I mentioned when speaking to amendment 17.

My intention is to set out in guidance, rather than in primary legislation, the steps to be taken by a health board or the agency to mitigate any risk associated with complying with the general duty in proposed new section 12IA of the 1978 act. That would allow greater flexibility, particularly as we move towards multidisciplinary and multi-agency working, which might open up new avenues for dealing with some of our current staffing issues.

With that in mind, I ask Mr Stewart not to move amendment 107. However, I would be happy to meet him to discuss whether proposed new sections 12IAA and 12IAB of the 1978 act could be amended in a way that might satisfy his wish to see health boards put in place some kind of risk management protocol setting out the actions that individuals with the lead clinical professional responsibility may take to mitigate risks locally.

I am afraid that I cannot support amendment 123, which was lodged by Miles Briggs. Although I understand and agree with the intent of the amendment, it raises a number of concerns. First and foremost, much of what the amendment seeks to achieve can already be achieved through Scottish Government amendment 17. Through the proposed new sections on real-time staffing assessment and risk escalation, any member of staff will be able to report if they feel that the health board is not complying with the general duty, and action will then have to be taken to mitigate that or reasons will have to be provided for not doing so. If it is not possible to mitigate a risk locally, it will have to be escalated up through the organisation, with those making decisions having to take appropriate clinical advice before doing so. All those involved in identifying, reporting, escalating or providing clinical advice on a risk must be informed of any decision that is made as a result, and there will have to be a procedure in place that allows them to record their disagreement with the decision if they wish to do so.

It seems to me that amendment 123 is, in essence, about ensuring that the professional voice is heard. I am very much in agreement with that aim, and proposed new section 12IB of the 1978 act, “Duty to follow common staffing method”, already includes a duty to have regard to “appropriate clinical advice”. If amendment 17—alongside amendment 16, which we have already debated—is accepted, the general duty for health and the duty to have in place a risk escalation process include duties to have regard to appropriate clinical advice.

A further concern relates to how amendment 123 attempts to delegate operational responsibility without also delegating legal accountability. Who would be held accountable if something went wrong when the health board had carried out all the procedures and had followed the advice of the relevant designated person to the letter? The amendment would create basic legal uncertainty on that vital point. We would also need to be clear about how the provision sat alongside existing professional duties.

I see merit in ensuring that there is clarity about who can offer clinical advice when a decision is escalated all the way to the board and in ensuring that the board must seek that advice, have regard to it and clearly identify how it has informed the final decision. However, it is important that it is clear that final accountability must sit with the board, because no decision can be taken in isolation.

Were we to agree to amendment 123, we would risk the role of the health board being compromised in that a designated person would be responsible for carrying out the functions that will, in fact, be given to the health board through the bill. The amendment would further undermine the bill by allowing that designated person to sub-delegate their functions to someone who, in their opinion, was suitably qualified and competent. In the 1978 act, the board is a legal entity. To have a single board member named in the bill would create confusion in relation to any future instance when it was believed that the legislation was not being implemented and a court decision was sought. The nurse director has a responsibility to provide clinical and professional advice, as does the medical director, and guidance and directions from ministers are used to set out how a board complies with its legal duties through those individuals.

I have said that I understand and support the intention behind amendment 123, but it is crucial that we get right the detail of any amendment that addresses such a fundamental point. For all the reasons that I have discussed, I am not comfortable that amendment 123 is right. For that reason, I invite Mr Briggs to work with me in advance of stage 3 to develop an amendment that we are both content with and that meets what, I believe, is our shared aim of strengthening the professional voice in decision making.

Subsection (1)(d) of amendment 123 sets out that

“Every Health Board and the Agency must ... make arrangements for the purpose of informing patients and staff of staffing levels.”

I am keen to hear how that might work in practice. Staff numbers alone are not an indicator of the quality of the service; other factors, such as the skills mix of staff, also need to be considered. As I have said, health settings are dynamic environments and, as such, staff might move from one ward to another to deal with changes in demand throughout the day. I therefore find it difficult to see how staff and patients are to be kept up to date with staff numbers in that dynamic situation.

That said, I have lodged a number of amendments that aim to strengthen the reporting mechanisms in the bill. If, as I presume, Mr Briggs’s aim is to provide patients and staff with an indication of how well services are running, I would be happy to discuss strengthening the section even further by including a duty to publish the details of how health boards and—where appropriate—wards perform against outcome measures.

I therefore ask Mr Briggs not to move amendment 123. If he does, I invite the committee not to support it on the understanding that I wish to work with him in advance of stage 3.

I move amendment 17.

David Stewart

Amendment 107, which is in my name, seeks to achieve a similar aim to that of amendment 17, which has been lodged by the cabinet secretary. It is crucial that health boards and healthcare providers have in place processes and measures to assess and mitigate the possible risks to their duty to supply appropriate staffing. Such risks could be short term—for example, members of staff being unable to work because of illness—or there could be longer-term challenges, including difficulties in recruiting and lack of available staff to fill vacancies nationwide. Amendment 107 could allow for more flexibility in local arrangements: it explicitly references the ability for staff to seek “local resolution” of a possible risk.

It is also important that any risk management or escalation process be appropriate and accessible for staff. It is crucial that staff feel that the process works for them, that their concerns are noted, escalated and dealt with, and that individual staff members are not placed in circumstances in which they need to operate in unsafe environments, or held responsible for adverse incidents that are caused, ultimately, by managerial or financial decisions that have been taken at a higher level. That said, if the Government is prepared to accept my small amendments to amendment 17, I will be satisfied and will not move amendment 107.

Amendment 17A would close a small gap in the process that is set out in the Government’s amendment 17, in that any process must set out how individual staff members and employees can notify the relevant person of the risk in the first instance. Just stating identification does not explicitly include that step.

Amendments 17B and 17E would change the reference from

“the individual with lead clinical responsibility”

to “an individual”, in order to ensure that the definition is flexible enough.

Amendments 17F and 17G would ensure that decision makers must not only seek but take into account clinical advice, so that decisions are not justified purely based on finance.

Amendments 17I and 17D seek to establish a feedback loop in order to ensure that any nationwide risk can be recognised.

Amendments 17C and 17H would require health boards to go further than merely raising awareness of risk management processes, and to ensure that employees know how to use them and feel equipped to do so.

Miles Briggs

Amendment 123 would place a duty on each NHS board to

“designate a person ... to carry out functions”

on its behalf in relation to the staff groups that are mentioned in it. It is right that NHS boards be made organisationally accountable for duties under the bill. Decisions on staffing are affected by many factors, including patient demand, workforce capacity and capability, finance and the NHS estate. Executive orders will cover responsibility for those matters, but the entire NHS board will remain accountable. As the cabinet secretary has outlined, the 1978 act already places on NHS boards specific duties on quality, workforce planning and health improvements.

I believe that nursing leaders have the particular skills, knowledge and experience that are needed to exercise sound professional judgment in setting nursing staff levels, managing nursing-related risks to the duty, ensuring appropriate staffing, and escalating significant concerns within the NHS board. For that reason, each board should appoint a designated person in nursing and midwifery to carry out functions on its behalf.

The professional judgment, advice and actions of nursing leaders must be placed on a statutory footing in order to guarantee that NHS boards can make informed clinical decisions in relation to their duties under the bill. The Health and Sport Committee’s report looked for an “accountable person” to ensure that the accountabilities in this area remain firmly at corporate board level, which is important.

In the light of what the cabinet secretary has said, I am happy to work with her on an amendment to which we might all agree.

Emma Harper

I would like to make a small contribution on amendment 17, with regard to the proposals around a real-time staffing assessment and risk-escalation process.

As a former operating room and trauma nurse, I know that things can change swiftly and that it is important to be able to have all hands on deck. Therefore, I welcome the proposal to add a real-time staffing assessment and risk-escalation process, because I understand that people need to be able to make split-second decisions if they are to provide safe and high-quality care.

I also welcome the cabinet secretary’s comments regarding the wider health and social care approaches, because the bill is not concerned only with acute care; it concerns care across the whole of health and social care. I support the idea of being flexible rather than being too prescriptive in the primary legislation, so that guidance for allied health professionals across health and social care, in primary as well as acute care, can be developed later.

Sandra White

I have concerns about amendment 123 in the name of Miles Briggs, but I note that the cabinet secretary and Miles Briggs have agreed to work together on another amendment. My concerns relate to the possibility that the confidence of boards will be knocked slightly by the proposal in the amendment relating to a designated nursing or midwifery person. I assume that Miles Briggs will not move the amendment, so I look forward to seeing what he and the cabinet secretary come back with.

The Convener

I invite the cabinet secretary to wind up.

Jeane Freeman

I have nothing more to say, other than to thank Miles Briggs and David Stewart for their willingness to work with me before stage 3.

The Convener

I invite David Stewart to say whether he wishes to press amendment 17A.

David Stewart

In the light of the cabinet secretary’s comments, and because I know that she is, in part, accepting my proposals, I am happy not to press amendment 17A.

11:15  

Amendments 17A to 17I not moved.

Amendment 17 agreed to.

The Convener

The next group of amendments is on the duty to ensure appropriate staffing in respect of agency workers. Amendment 80, in the name of Anas Sarwar, is the only amendment in the group.

David Stewart

Unfortunately, my colleague Anas Sarwar has not been able to make it to the meeting. With the committee’s agreement, I will speak briefly to amendment 80, in his stead.

Amendment 80 is designed as a probing amendment and, therefore, is to spark debate, which I think has been welcomed by the cabinet secretary. Although the amendment is supported in principle by stakeholders, I understand and share the concerns that have been expressed about a number of unanswered questions.

The fact is that we have to find an acceptable way of moving forward on the matter. Audit Scotland has shown that agency nurses are being paid three times what NHS nurses are paid, and it has been reported that in the health board in my area—NHS Highland—some locum consultants are earning the phenomenal sum of £400,000 a year. Amendment 80 therefore seeks to cap what an agency can charge, not what a health board can spend in total. I recognise the important role that agencies play, given the workforce crisis that we face, but Anas Sarwar’s clear point is that private companies should not be exploiting the NHS and the public purse.

The 150 per cent figure that is set out in amendment 80 comes from a directive to boards in England and Wales. Obviously, responsibility for health is fully devolved to Scotland, but I do not see why we should not follow best practice that we might see in other parts of the United Kingdom.

It is right that the Scottish Government act to limit that spiralling spend. Workforce tools might well encourage more use of agency staff in understaffed wards in order to avoid their being shut down or beds being closed, but it is important that some protections be built into the bill. One of the primary reasons for the overspending in boards, including mine in the Highlands, is spend on agency staff.

I accept that there are wider issues to take into account, but amendment 80 would represent a start by putting in place a limit or cap on agency spending.

I move amendment 80.

Miles Briggs

I am very sympathetic to amendment 80. I appreciate that the member who lodged it is not with us this morning, so before we vote on it, I must seek clarification. Specifically, does the 150 per cent limit that is proposed include agency fees? If so, that might have an unintended consequence for, or a knock-on effect on, individual agency staff’s take-home pay. Does Mr Stewart have any information on that?

The Convener

Before I ask Mr Stewart to wind up, I must ask the cabinet secretary whether she wishes to comment on amendment 80.

Jeane Freeman

I thank Anas Sarwar for lodging amendment 80, and I agree with him that it is not appropriate for private companies to make such profits at the expense of our national health service. However, the Scottish Government and NHS boards have given much thought to the issue, so I have to disagree with Mr Sarwar’s proposed approach. I will outline some of my concerns in that respect, but at this stage I ask that amendment 80 not be pressed, and suggest that Mr Sarwar and I look at whether we can reach agreement on an amendment for stage 3.

Currently, by the time that health boards go to an agency, that action will have been processed through existing enhanced governance arrangements. That means that other options, including use of overtime and bank staff, will have been exhausted and that the only way to provide cover is through use of agency staff. Decisions about agency use will always be signed off by a senior member of clinical staff. If the decision is taken to use agency staff, that will have been because the advice from a senior clinical professional was that patient safety was likely to be compromised if an appropriate staff member was not secured. Patient safety has to be the cornerstone of our approach.

We already have a preferred-supplier contract that the agencies that we use most are invited to join. Agencies on that contract supply NHS Scotland staff at rates that are similar to NHS rates of pay, which means that pay rates are capped for those who are on the contract. That also caps the commission rates that agencies on the framework contract receive in order to ensure that they cannot make exorbitant or surplus profits for supplying the NHS with key front-line staff. NHS boards have been instructed by chief executive letter to source, in the first instance, only from agencies that are on that contract, but we know that if a nurse cannot be supplied through the contract, one will need to be sourced from an agency that is not on the contract.

The amendments that I have lodged to create duties to have in place real-time staffing assessment and a risk-escalation process will reinforce the position that appropriate clinical advice needs to be sought as part of the risk-mitigation process, including if the risk is being mitigated through use of agency staff. Guidance will set out more detail on that, including on the circumstances under which it will be acceptable to resort to use of agency staff, and on the board-level sign-off process that I expect to be in place for procurement of agency staff, and monitoring of same.

The proposed break-glass provision in amendment 80 sets a potentially very high bar. What circumstances would be classed as “exceptional”? If the bar were to be set too high, that could undermine the principles of the bill with regard to safety, and it might lack the flexibility that is needed to ensure safe staffing. Let us be honest: if a board comes to me with a request to pay over the cap because it urgently needs a nurse in an intensive care unit, I will defer to the clinical opinion of the nurse or medical director. I am sure that members would expect me to do precisely that. I would prefer that a board spend its time sourcing an agency nurse and doing everything in its power to ensure the safety of the service, to its going through an additional bureaucratic process to seek my approval.

I note that a similar approach has been taken in England, although not through legislation, with the recognition that there needs to be a break-glass clause to ensure safety and continuity of service. That break-glass clause is used extensively, and nursing agency spend is around three times higher per head in England than it is in Scotland.

Given the amendments that I have lodged on real-time staffing assessment and risk-escalation processes, and the need to ensure that we take an effective and proportionate approach to reducing agency spend, I ask the committee to reject amendment 80 on the understanding that I will work with Anas Sarwar to explore whether there is a way in which we can agree the best approach to addressing the issues, including the associated escalation and governance of the process at board level in order to ensure that staffing decisions are taken at the highest level.

David Stewart

I agree with the cabinet secretary that the issue is vital. However, on the basis and understanding that she will meet my colleague Anas Sarwar, I will not press amendment 80.

Amendment 80, by agreement, withdrawn.

The Convener

The next group of amendments is entitled “Duty to ensure appropriate staffing: sufficient number of healthcare professionals”. Amendment 90, in the name of Alison Johnstone, is the only amendment in the group.

Alison Johnstone (Lothian) (Green)

Amendment 90 would ensure that, where ministers have commissioning powers, enough student places are offered to train a workforce that will better ensure that we deliver the healthcare that will meet Scotland’s changing needs. I imagine that we are all agreed that the bill is a starting point. Any Scottish Government must, and will surely, want to take some responsibility for ensuring that Scotland has the right number of registered nurses, midwives and medical practitioners to deliver the healthcare that Scotland needs.

In September last year, more than a third of all nursing and midwifery vacancies had been vacant for three months or more. Although I accept that there has been some improvement, in June last year, the nursing and midwifery vacancy rate was 5.3 per cent, which was more than 3,000 whole-time-equivalent posts, and was the highest number of vacancies ever recorded. ISD Scotland tells us that turnover has been increasing for several years due to the increasing number of leavers in each year.

Amendment 90 would also require the Scottish ministers to take into account NHS boards’ reports when commissioning places. It is clear that ministerial decisions have an impact on providers’ ability to have appropriate staffing. The amendment would also require ministers to report to Parliament on commissioning of nurses, midwives and medical professionals.

I move amendment 90.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I thank Alison Johnstone for lodging amendment 90. I considered lodging a similar amendment, so she has the Liberal Democrats’ enthusiastic support.

Jeane Freeman

To ensure appropriate numbers of health professionals, there needs to be robust evidence of the workload that will be required to provide high-quality care, and evidence of the appropriate staffing levels and skills to deliver that. The bill’s purpose is to create a framework through which health boards can generate and use that evidence consistently. Once boards are using the common staffing method effectively and consistently, and reporting on it, that will—of course—inform national planning.

Later, I will speak to an amendment that will require the Scottish ministers to report on how the information that boards generate as part of that process has been taken into consideration in setting national staffing policies. That is the proportionate way to link the bill to wider workforce planning.

The commissioning of student intake in relation to nursing and midwifery already takes into account the available data, and is agreed by consensus by the nursing and midwifery stakeholder reference group. The Scottish ministers do not have the power to direct universities to take specific numbers of students. Once we have agreed, with the reference group, what is required, we provide funding for that number of places at universities throughout Scotland, and that funding is then allocated to individual universities by the Scottish Further and Higher Education Funding Council. Universities receive funding only for the places that they fill, which incentivises them to offer the maximum number of places, but we do not have the power to make them do that.

The process requires a projection of what might be needed. Of course, improving the data that we use to do that will help, but I say with the best will in the world that we cannot project for every possible circumstance. Ensuring that we have the right number of staff available is a complex issue that is not just about setting the number of student places: it is also a recruitment and retention issue, and there is an onus on employers to seek to incentivise and grow their staff, as is happening in health boards across Scotland.

The cumulative effect of the bill’s provisions will help us to address the issue. The bill recognises that the Scottish ministers, health boards, integration authorities, universities and colleges all have roles. I am happy to commit to working with Alison Johnstone and others to ensure that the reporting duties that will be placed on health boards and the Scottish ministers will create the transparency that is needed for effective workforce planning. On that basis, I ask her not to press amendment 90.

Alison Johnstone

We all agree that workload and workforce are absolutely inextricably linked. The fact that we are debating amendment 90 shows that it is within the scope of the bill.

11:30  

However transformative or efficient workforce planning tools might be, we cannot apply them adequately if we simply do not have in place appropriate numbers of staff. I appreciate the cabinet secretary’s point that the tools will help us to ensure that we have appropriate numbers of staff in place in the future, but I think that the two issues go hand in hand. We cannot continue to put all the focus on the providers. If we want a partnership approach, it is clear that the partnership involves the Scottish Government. Our health boards cannot ensure that enough staff are in place if not enough nurses, midwives and doctors have been trained. We are all aware of what has happened previously, when ministers have decided that X nurses will be trained. There is a knock-on consequence. The more the decision is a joint one, the better.

In a 2017 iMatter survey, only 27 per cent of nursing and midwifery staff agreed that there were enough staff to enable them to do their jobs properly, so it is an important issue. It takes 13 years to make a general practitioner, so we must get a grip on the issue now. We cannot afford to wait until we have more information. The information that we have in front of us—we all hear from constituents who simply cannot get an appointment with a GP—is such that we must act together, and we must act now.

It is right that the Scottish Government should play as large a part as possible, and take the responsibility for ensuring that Scotland’s NHS has an adequate supply of appropriately trained nurses and medics. Therefore, I intend to press amendment 90.

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 90 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

Against

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 5, Against 4, Abstentions 0.

Amendment 90 agreed to.

The Convener

The next group is entitled “Duty on Health Boards to ensure appropriate staffing: senior nurses”. Amendment 91, in the name of Alison Johnstone, is the only amendment in the group.

Alison Johnstone

Amendment 91 seeks to ensure that senior charge nurses and their equivalents in community teams have the time that they need to carry out their important clinical leadership role. Senior charge nurses are key to the on-going delivery of safe care—indeed, they are key to the successful implementation of the bill. The Royal College of Nursing supports amendment 91 whole-heartedly. It has told me, and I am sure that it will have advised colleagues, that senior charge nurses must be given the time that they need to fulfil their clinical leadership role by not being counted in the number of nursing staff who are required to provide direct care to patients.

Amendment 91 seeks to ensure that the non-case load holding status of nurse leaders—senior charge nurses—is fully realised in practice.

I move amendment 91.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

I thank Alison Johnstone for lodging amendment 91, and I absolutely agree with what it seeks to do. It speaks to the dynamic nature of the theatre of operations that our nurses work in. In the past, we have expected far too much of our senior charge nurses when it comes to case load holding. As a result, they have not been able to take a strategic overview of the health, safety, cleanliness and wellbeing of their patients and their staff. For that reason, I support amendment 91.

Emma Harper

I support the approach that senior charge nurses and the management team take to workforce planning. As somebody who has worked on the front line, where senior charge nurses have the flexibility to support patient care, to carry out their clinical duties and to support student nurses and mentoring across the board, I believe that, because of the dynamic differences in case load that exist—in some places, senior charge nurses work across health and social care—amendment 91 would be too prescriptive.

We need to allow senior charge nurses to be empowered and flexible and to make decisions in their individual areas, for example, in relation to chemotherapy or the operating room. In my experience, sometimes, senior charge nurses have to step in because, at that moment, they are the person who has the experience. I support the ability to be flexible in the approach across health and social care, allowing senior charge nurses to be empowered and make individual choices based on their clinical expertise.

Brian Whittle (South Scotland) (Con)

I am generally supportive of amendment 91, but I seek some clarification, which Alison Johnstone might be able to provide when summing up. To follow up on Emma Harper’s point, I believe that the amendment would not preclude a senior charge nurse from taking on case load in certain circumstances, given that, as Alex Cole-Hamilton said, it is such a fluid environment. Perhaps Alison Johnstone can clarify that point.

Jeane Freeman

I understand that the RCN is keen for the role of the senior charge nurse to become non-case load holding and I have had several discussions with the college on that point. However, my view is that, to put such a provision in primary legislation, which is what amendment 91 would do, would be inappropriate. It would be inflexible and would not recognise the multidisciplinary approach or the different local contexts in which healthcare is provided across Scotland.

Although it might be appropriate for a senior charge nurse in a large ward to be non-case load holding, it might not be appropriate for someone in the same role in a small ward with very few staff. I saw that for myself on Friday, when I visited my local community hospital, where the senior nurse was very definite that she believed that her clinical leadership and case-load roles are complementary.

In addition, as I have said before, the bill is not only about nurses; it covers a variety of professions. Although the majority of the current tools for use as part of the common staffing method cover nurses and midwives, that will change over time. Amendment 91 applies only to nurses and does not provide a mechanism to include other staff groups in the future. I cannot support such a narrow nursing-only provision in a bill that takes a multidisciplinary approach to staffing by covering all staffing groups, and for which we have already accepted amendments that define what that multidisciplinary approach should be, as promoted by Alex Cole-Hamilton.

To illustrate the kind of problems that such a narrow nursing-only provision might cause, I want members to consider the evolving multidisciplinary nature of teams. For example, in rehabilitation or re-enabling services, the clinical team leader is not necessarily a nurse, but might be a physiotherapist, or anyone from a team that comprises nurses, physios, occupational therapists and speech and language therapists. Surely there should be flexibility to ensure that the appropriate person is given time to undertake the leadership role?

Another potential unintended consequence, which is important and worth mentioning, relates to the ability to maintain clinical competence. It is essential that senior charge nurses maintain their clinical competence in care delivery in order to maintain clinical credibility and to provide effective supervision and oversight of clinical care. It would be much harder to do that if they were entirely non-case load holding.

The issue of senior charge nurses being non-case load holding has been discussed with the Scottish executive nurse directors group. I understand that, at the group’s meeting last Friday, it discussed the amendment and indicated that it did not support it, for the reasons that I have described. It is important to listen to those nurse directors from across our health boards.

The Scottish Government has lodged amendment 20, which we will discuss when we come to group 11, with the aim of achieving a position that is consistent with our multidisciplinary approach, by setting out an additional step in the common staffing method, requiring consideration of the role and professional duties of lead clinical professionals, which covers all professions, and not just nursing. Given that the committee will vote on amendment 91 in Ms Johnstone’s name before we reach group 11, I will take a minute to outline what amendment 20 does, so that members are aware of the alternative before we come to the vote.

Amendment 20 aims to recognise the unique roles and responsibilities that are placed on all clinical team leaders. It ensures that, in carrying out the common staffing method, health boards and the agency must take into account the role and, in particular, the professional duties of any individual with lead clinical professional responsibility for the particular type of healthcare whose staffing levels are being set. The Scottish executive nurse directors group supports that approach, because it believes that it clearly articulates the role of the clinical leader in the common staffing method.

Guidance will set out the detail of what that will mean in practice but, in essence, it means that boards will have to carefully consider whether, in their circumstances, and given the other duties that they are expected to carry out, it is appropriate for clinical team leaders to have a case load. The decision that is reached on that will then have to be factored in when the health board sets out its staffing establishment for the coming period.

It is worth noting that, as part of the common staffing method, account is to be taken of appropriate clinical advice. That clinical advice is to cover all the steps in the common staffing method, not just the final output. Senior clinicians will therefore always be directly involved in decisions about whether it is appropriate for clinical team leaders in their area to hold case loads.

For those reasons, I ask Ms Johnstone not to press amendment 91, and if she does, for the committee to reject it, knowing that we will come to amendment 20 in group 11, which I hope the committee will support.

Alison Johnstone

I thank colleagues for their comments and questions.

On Mr Whittle’s point, senior charge nurses should not be expected to be case load holding. They should not constantly have to plug gaps because of a lack of other staff.

It is correct that amendment 91 addresses senior charge nurses alone, but we have to take into account the fact that nursing and midwifery staff account for 42.6 per cent of the NHS workforce, and so are the largest group. The title of the proposed new section makes it clear that it is about them and the roles that they are meant to undertake.

I appreciate Emma Harper’s personal experience, but the RCN has not presented the amendment on a whim. It has done so after a great deal of consultation and discussion with our nursing and midwifery workforce. Whether in a small community hospital or a bigger ward in a city hospital, from chemotherapy to the operating theatre, rostering should be appropriate anyway, and the unique role of senior charge nurse should be properly supported. Senior charge nurses are involved in things such as complex discharges and other issues around flow. If they have time to spend on that co-ordinating role, that can help to reduce issues such as delayed discharge and improve co-ordination and communication across teams. Senior charge nurses are expected to manage and develop the performance of a nursing team and to manage the practice setting by ensuring the effective use of resources and workforce planning through monitoring workloads.

Sandra White

Will Alison Johnstone take a small intervention?

Alison Johnstone

I will.

Sandra White

From the start of the bill process, the committee has worked hard to ensure that it is multidisciplinary and not just about acute services or nursing. Many people who work in hospitals take on many responsibilities. I do not mean any disrespect to anyone and I give credit to all the people who work in the health service, but there are many more people than just senior nursing clinicians. That is where I have a problem with amendment 91. As the cabinet secretary said, there are multidisciplinary teams of professionals, so why should we concentrate on just a small part of those?

11:45  

Alison Johnstone

The senior charge nurse role applies only to nursing, and nursing makes up more than 42 per cent of the NHS workforce. Such nurses help to co-ordinate inputs from different members of the multidisciplinary team. It is a key role. Having worked with the Royal College of Nursing to ascertain the impact, I will press amendment 91. If the role is properly focused and those experienced professionals are allowed to do their job to the utmost, it could have a positive effect.

Emma Harper

Will the member take another intervention?

Alison Johnstone

Certainly.

Emma Harper

Under amendment 91, it would be mandatory to remove the case load from senior charge nurses. My point is that senior charge nurses should already be empowered and able to be flexible in their choices on how they roster staff.

Alison Johnstone said that, if senior charge nurses do not have a case load, that should allow them to support training. In my experience, they can still support training if, for instance, they are scrubbed and at the operating table to remove a gallbladder, because they can conduct, guide and support people in that environment.

Amendment 91 is too prescriptive. There is such a wide range of health professionals and senior charge nurses in many areas, and those in the senior charge nurse role should be empowered to choose whether to pick up a case or assign it. Wide-ranging skills are required. Senior charge nurses should be allowed to make those informed clinical decisions, so we should not prescribe their role in the bill.

Alison Johnstone

Only a quarter of nursing staff in Scotland surveyed by the RCN in 2017 reported that the senior charge nurse was non-case load holding. The results of a freedom of information request to NHS boards from the RCN show that, of the 911 whole-time equivalent senior charge nurses identified at September 2017, only 115 were non-case load holding. We are struggling to recruit and retain nurses. We should work towards having an experienced professional in charge of a ward, giving leadership and security and helping others to develop their careers.

Miles Briggs

Will Alison Johnstone take a short intervention?

Alison Johnstone

Certainly.

Miles Briggs

I am incredibly sympathetic to what Alison Johnstone is trying to achieve with amendment 91, but none of us wants to write poor legislation. It is important for the delivery of the outcome of the bill that we have non-case load holding staff within its parameters. Given that amendment 20, which the cabinet secretary referred to, aims to develop that, and the overlap with potential work for stage 3 on getting the designated person right, it may be possible to do some work on the issue before stage 3 to ensure that the measures are incorporated in the bill. It is an important aspect, but there seems to be a bit of confusion.

Alison Johnstone

I have concerns that we may water down the approach considerably. On that basis, I will press amendment 91.

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 91 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

Against

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 5, Against 4, Abstentions 0.

Amendment 91 agreed to.

The Convener

The next group is entitled “Duty on Health Boards to ensure appropriate staffing: training”. Amendment 124, in the name of Alison Johnstone, is the only amendment in the group.

Alison Johnstone

Amendment 124 is the third amendment in my name this morning. It aims to place a duty on NHS boards to ensure that employees receive the time to carry out continuing professional development.

NHS governance standards already state that employers will give time to staff for CPD, but as we are all too well aware, that precious time is often lost because of the high demands on staff time.

The “RCN Employment Survey 2017” reported that the main reason that nursing staff feel that there are too few opportunities to progress in their current job is that there are too few opportunities to access training and development. There are real difficulties in that respect. Nursing staff simply feel unable to take time off for training due to the many demands that they face in their work.

With that, I move amendment 124.

Emma Harper

I will not say a lot about amendment 124, but will just point out that in my former role as a nurse educator, I managed to get NHS Dumfries and Galloway to put in place four educators to support education and facilitate continuing professional development. In my current work, I have been looking at the education that is being provided out there, and I suggest that we do not put what is set out in the amendment in the bill until we can get a real assessment of the education and support that is being provided.

I understand the challenges facing nursing staff in being able to access CPD while they are on the ward and are being pulled in different directions, but I suggest that we have a further look at the situation with education across health boards. I know that in the health board where I worked—NHS Dumfries and Galloway—particular efforts were being made to accommodate more focused CPD for the staff.

Brian Whittle

Amendment 124 is an incredibly important amendment that we should support. With regard to CPD, the committee is very well aware of the pressure being put on paediatric wards in affording all staff the opportunity to have cardiotocography scan training and development, but it is incredibly important not just for the staff themselves and for patient safety but for staff retention that they are allowed to develop continually.

George Adam

I just want to back everything that my colleague Emma Harper has said. On three or four amendments, she has given us her point of view as a professional who has worked on the front line. She provides a valuable resource for the committee, but on each occasion, the majority of the committee has not really taken on board what she has had to say. I simply want to back Emma Harper’s position on amendment 124 not for the obvious reasons but because she has been on the front line and knows exactly what is going on out there.

Jeane Freeman

I thank Alison Johnstone for her opening remarks on amendment 124. The amendment itself mirrors section 7, which relates to the care side of things, but I should point out that that section was inserted because the bill seeks to revoke regulation 15 of the Social Care and Social Work Improvement Scotland (Requirements for Care Services) Regulations 2011 and, in so doing, revokes important provisions on staff training. It was therefore felt necessary to replicate those provisions in the bill to ensure that care service staff still had the same rights to training and development as they had before.

However, health is a different regulatory environment. I am very supportive of amendment 124’s aim of ensuring that healthcare staff have similar rights to training, but I have a number of reservations about the amendment itself. The National Health Service Reform (Scotland) Act 2004 inserted into the 1978 act section 12I, on the duty in relation to governance of staff, and the staff governance standard was published to support that. That standard already requires all NHS boards to demonstrate that their staff are appropriately trained and developed and goes on to provide some detail in that respect, and it is, of course, subject to significant scrutiny and work by the partnership forums, which are central to how we work in our NHS. The amendment therefore duplicates, in part, something that already exists in the standard. I gently suggest to the committee that we do not make good law by duplicating what we find elsewhere.

Furthermore, I have concerns about the extremely wide scope of amendment 124. If we take account of ever-changing health technologies and treatments, the legislative entitlement would be open ended and unquantified, so I question how the entitlement would be managed. For instance, who would decide and how would it be decided which staff should get priority for further qualifications that are deemed to be appropriate for work? Do the educational development sectors have the capacity to deliver what would be required? In that regard, the comments that were made by Ms Harper are very pertinent.

Staff should receive training and should continue to be developed throughout their careers—I have absolutely no argument with that point. However, making it a legislative entitlement in the way that is suggested is not the correct thing to do. I have serious concerns about whether it will be feasible—or, indeed, possible—to maintain safe and high-quality services if growing numbers of staff are released for an open-ended and unpredictable amount of training and development.

As part of the development of each of the workload tools, the amount of time that staff should spend training has been factored into the tool. For the existing tools for nursing and midwifery, there is an allowance of 2 per cent, which equates to 33 hours each year for a whole-time-equivalent nurse. Since the allowance has been factored into the tools, I expect boards to ensure that staff receive it, and if they do not, I want to know why.

Therefore, I am happy to commit to working with Ms Johnstone, should she wish it, and with the RCN and others with an interest, to consider what might be done to make the common staffing methodology more explicit about the built-in time for training and the need for boards to meet it. I feel strongly that it is an important issue and one which must be addressed, but the correct way to go about it is not to put what is, in effect, an open-ended proposition into primary legislation.

On that basis, I ask Ms Johnstone not to press the amendment and, if she does, I ask the committee not to support it.

The Convener

I call on Alison Johnstone to wind up and press or seek to withdraw amendment 124.

Alison Johnstone

I will start by addressing Brian Whittle’s comments. I agree whole-heartedly that ensuring that our staff have adequate time to develop themselves professionally will empower them and make sure that they are educated in the latest innovations and developments in their field. It will help us to recruit and retain people; it will make them feel valued.

George Adam is absolutely right to say that Emma Harper is a valuable resource to the committee and the Parliament who reflects the experience that she has gained working in nursing. However, it is also true that, in a large workforce such as nursing, there are different views and experiences, perhaps as a result of geography or the management that people experience, so it is important that we try to look at the issue as widely as possible.

Emma Harper

Will you take a wee brief intervention?

Alison Johnstone

Certainly.

Emma Harper

Continuing professional development and education are provided in lots of different ways, off and on the ward, in the community or through self-directed learning as part of a professional nurse’s approach. For nurses, it is not often done in work time, but there are other health professionals who might require bedside, on-the-job training.

There is a wide approach to delivery of appropriate learning for developing clinical skills so, again, it is not required to put it into primary legislation when amendment 20 describes a more flexible approach to the training of staff. I support guidance following the introduction of the bill so that we can continue to focus on how we best provide education with regard to recruitment, retention and staff development.

Alison Johnstone

During an inquiry that was conducted when I was a member of this committee, we heard from the chair of the British Medical Association—I cannot quite recall on what occasion that was—and he spoke about the fact that medics have protected time for training. He was favourable to and supportive of the idea that that should be enjoyed by colleagues in nursing as well. The 2017 RCN UK employment survey reported that the main reason that nursing staff feel that there are too few opportunities to progress is that there are too few opportunities to access training and development.

I appreciate Emma Harper’s comments about learning in one’s own time and self-directed learning, but there is something invaluable about setting aside specific time for such important work—it shows appreciation.

12:00  

I appreciate the cabinet secretary’s comments too, but, with respect, this is not an open-ended commitment. We are talking about appropriate training, which is what we have in place at the moment.

In the Scotland staff survey in 2015, 22 per cent—almost one quarter—of nursing and midwifery staff indicated that they had not received, and did not expect to receive, the training that was identified in their personal development plan.

It is time that we looked at this issue. Nursing is an incredibly important career—is there a more important one? We should be investing in it whole-heartedly.

I press amendment 124.

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 124 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

Against

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 5, Against 4, Abstentions 0.

Amendment 124 agreed to.

The Convener

We will resume stage 2 next week. Members can still lodge amendments relating to the part of the bill after the part that amendment 124 deals with. The deadline for lodging further amendments is 12 noon tomorrow, Wednesday 30 January.

12:01 Meeting continued in private until 12:23.  

29 January 2019

Second meeting on amendments

Documents with the amendments considered at this meeting held on 5 February 2019

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Second meeting on amendments transcript

The Convener (Lewis Macdonald)

Good morning, and welcome to the fourth meeting in 2019 of the Health and Sport Committee. I ask everyone in the room to ensure that their mobile phones are off or in silent mode, please. Mobile devices may be used for social media purposes, but they should not be used for photography or for recording the proceedings.

We have received apologies from Alex Cole-Hamilton and David Torrance, and we are joined by Bob Doris, who is a substitute member for David Torrance. Welcome to the meeting.

The first item on the agenda is continued stage 2 consideration of the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill. I once again welcome the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport, Jeane Freeman, who is accompanied by Diane Murray, Louise Kay, Julie Davidson and Jonathan Brown. Fiona McQueen, too, is accompanying the cabinet secretary. I welcome the officials to the table.

I also welcome Monica Lennon, who will speak to and move amendments, and Mike Rumbles who will speak to amendments in due course. I am glad to welcome members of the public who have joined us.

Members should have a copy of the bill, the marshalled list of amendments that was published on Thursday, and the groupings of amendments, which sets out the amendments in the order in which they will be debated.

I will briefly explain the procedure again. There will be a debate on each group of amendments. I will call the member who has lodged the lead amendment in the group to speak to and move that amendment, and to speak to all the other amendments in the group. I will then call other members who have lodged amendments in the group. Members who have not lodged amendments in the group may also contribute—they should simply catch my eye in the usual way. If she has not already done so, I will invite the cabinet secretary to contribute to the debate just before we move to the winding-up speech by the member who moved the lead amendment.

Following the debate on each group, the member who moved the lead amendment in the group should indicate whether they wish to press it to a vote or to seek to withdraw it. If they wish to press it, I will put the question on that amendment. If a member wishes to withdraw their amendment after it has been moved, they must seek the agreement of other members to do so. If any member present objects to its being withdrawn, the amendment will immediately be put to a vote.

If any member does not want to move their amendment when called, they should say, “Not moved.” It is open to any other member then to move that amendment. If no one moves the amendment, I will move immediately to the next amendment on the marshalled list.

Only committee members and substitute members may vote. Voting in a division is by show of hands. Members should indicate their intention clearly and keep their hands up until their vote has been recorded.

The committee is required to approve formally each section of the bill, so I will put the question on each section at the appropriate point.

The intention is that we will finish stage 2 today, if we can. If we are unable to do so, we will return to it after the February recess. We have approximately three hours set aside in which to complete proceedings today. I hope that we can get through the amendments.

Section 4—NHS duties in relation to staffing

The Convener

The first group of amendments is entitled “Common staffing method: purpose and frequency of use”. Amendment 18, in the name of the cabinet secretary, is grouped with amendments 93 and 22.

The Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport (Jeane Freeman)

Amendments 18 and 22 relate to the frequency of use of the common staffing method in proposed new section 12IB of the National Health Service (Scotland) Act 1978. The common staffing method includes use of the staffing level and professional judgment tools and consideration of the results that they produce. Proposed new section 12IB(3)(c) will provide Scottish ministers with the power to prescribe the frequency of use of the staffing level and professional judgment tools as part of the common staffing method. It will not allow ministers to prescribe the frequency of use of the common staffing method as a whole.

The data output that is produced as a result of using the tools should be used only as part of the common staffing method and should not be used in isolation. Similarly, the common staffing method should not be used without using the tools and data output from the tools. Therefore, it is the Scottish Government’s intention that the whole common staffing method, as set out in proposed new section 12IB of the 1978 act, rather than just the tools, be used at a specified frequency.

Having reflected on the matter, the Scottish Government considers that the power in proposed new section 12IB(3)(c) of the 1978 act would be too narrow to achieve that, because it relates only to frequency of use of the tools, rather than of the wider common staffing method. Accordingly, amendment 22 will remove proposed new section 12IB(3)(c).

Amendment 18 sets out a replacement power for Scottish ministers to prescribe in regulations the frequency at which the common staffing method as a whole—rather than just the tools—is to be used. It is worth emphasising that it will be a minimum frequency: health boards will have discretion to use the common staffing method more often, if they wish to do so.

As well as clarifying that Scottish ministers can specify the frequency with which the whole common staffing method, and not just the tools, should be used, amendments 18 and 22 should also remove any suggestion that the output of the tools can be used separately from the common staffing method, or that the common staffing method can be followed without using the data from the output of the tools.

I will now speak to Mr Briggs’s amendment 93, which seeks to provide that the purpose of the common staffing method is to set staffing establishments. Although the common staffing method is used to set staffing establishments, that is not its only purpose: it is designed to be used more widely. Indeed, the bill already reflects its wider use as a method to support service redesign. That is set out as a specific step in proposed new section 12IB(2)(d) of the 1978 act.

If we were to say that the common staffing method was purely about setting a staffing establishment annually, the opportunity that is being created by the bill would be missed and we would merely be making voluntary use of the existing tools a statutory requirement. Throughout the consultation on the bill, we were told that it needs to go beyond looking at just how the establishment is set. The common staffing method that is set out in the bill will do just that. To restrict it to setting establishments would undermine the purpose of the legislation.

However, although I do not believe that amendment 93 accurately conveys the range of uses for which the common staffing method can bring benefits, it is worth noting that those other uses do lead to the setting of an establishment figure, and would therefore be captured within the purpose that is set out in amendment 93. Therefore, I will not oppose amendment 93, although I ask Mr Briggs to confirm that his intention is that the amendment cover not only the routine regular staffing establishment setting process, but its use to provide an establishment figure as a result of other triggers, including the need to redesign a service.

I move amendment 18.

Miles Briggs (Lothian) (Con)

Amendment 93 seeks to designate the common staffing method as the process by which the staffing establishment figure will be set. In the bill as drafted, the common staffing method is the only process that can be used to set staffing levels. It is required that the staffing tool and the professional judgment be run as the first step in the common staffing method. If current practice is followed, in almost all cases the two tools will be run on an annual or biannual basis. In some specific settings, such as neonatal care, the staffing tool would be run daily, if current practice continues.

Given the steps that the common staffing method requires, it is a way to set a staffing establishment figure. That is what I am looking to incorporate. It is not a real-time process to monitor staffing, safety or quality.

I have heard what the cabinet secretary has said, but I think that amendment 93 could still complement the bill.

Sandra White (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

I have a couple of questions for the minister, and, perhaps, a comment to make. I thank the minister for clarifying the situation around amendment 18, particularly with regard to frequency. In my mind, we are moving more towards integration, and this is part of it. I have concerns about some of the amendments, so I appreciate clarity on that one.

I know that the minister has said that she is minded to agree to Miles Briggs’s amendment 93, but I would like him to say whether his amendment would prevent the service redesign and flexibility that the bill is all about. That is my concern about it.

The Convener

If Mr Briggs wishes to respond to that question, he will have to make an intervention on Sandra White, or on the minister, in due course.

Miles Briggs

I will intervene just now. The wider context of health and social care integration is the important background to the bill, and I think that committee members are committed to it. Through amendment 93, I am looking to strengthen the bill in respect of the common staffing method. Currently, it is the only process that is used in establishing staffing levels.

Sandra White

Will you take an intervention?

The Convener

You still have the floor, Ms White.

Sandra White

Thank you, convener. I would like Miles Briggs to clarify the point that he just made. He quite rightly spoke about the long term, which is a difficult issue to address. However, I asked about service redesign and flexibility. Would amendment 93 stop service redesign and prevent flexibility in relation to staff?

Miles Briggs

I do not believe that amendment 93 would do that.

The Convener

That concludes Sandra White’s contribution. I invite the cabinet secretary to wind up.

Jeane Freeman

I have little to add. I am grateful for Miles Briggs’s confirmation that he does not believe that amendment 93 would restrict or prevent service redesign. With that assurance, I press amendment 18 and will not stand in the way of his amendment 93.

Amendment 18 agreed to.

Amendment 93 moved—[Miles Briggs]—and agreed to.

The Convener

The next group of amendments is entitled “Common staffing method: steps and factors in method”. Amendment 94, in the name of Miles Briggs, is grouped with amendments 95, 19, 20, 96 to 98, 21, and 99 to 102.

Miles Briggs

The purpose of amendments 94, 95, 97, 99, 100 and 101 is to remove the hierarchy within the common staffing method so that tools, patient acuity and dependency, and the clinical advice of nurses of appropriate seniority are given equal weight.

The current common staffing method is based on average workload for each specialty across Scotland. It is supplemented by considering the specifics of local contexts, including the age profile of staff, local recruitment challenges, quality indicators and professional judgment. As drafted, the use of a staffing level tool and a professional judgment tool is the first step; a consideration of current staffing levels, local context and so on is the next step; and the final step is a consideration of patient need and appropriate clinical advice. That means that, in the common staffing method, the tools hold more weight than patient need and the clinical advice of nurses of appropriate seniority, and the common staffing method is not truly triangulated. The process that is set out by the common staffing method should give equal weight to the use of staffing tools, patient acuity and dependency, and the clinical advice of nurses of appropriate seniority.

When the committee took evidence on this issue, we looked specifically at a piece of work around an ultimate focus on outcomes to be achieved. I believe that the amendments complement the legislation in that regard.

I move amendment 94.

09:45  

Jeane Freeman

I will speak to amendment 20 in particular. I addressed that amendment last week, and I do not intend to repeat everything that I said then. However, I would like to point out that, in developing amendment 20, I listened to the Royal College of Nursing view that the leadership role of the senior charge nurse should be recognised. That was covered by the 2008 report “Leading Better Care: Report of the Senior Charge Nurse Review and Clinical Quality Indicators Project”, which set out that, in recognition of their leadership role, senior charge nurses should not be completely case load holding. We will continue to work on the leadership role of the senior charge nurse, and the workload planning tools and common staffing method provide an evidence-based way to do so.

It is not appropriate that nurses have been singled out for preferential treatment in a bill that is not only about nursing. I have looked further at amendment 91, in the name of Alison Johnstone, which was passed last week, and I am not convinced that it does what she intended it to do. I have serious concerns about the way in which it is worded and the impact that it could have on patient care, and I will return to that issue later in the process.

Amendment 20 aims to recognise the unique roles and responsibilities that are placed on all clinical team leaders and sets out an additional step in the common staffing method that requires health boards to consider the role and professional duties of lead clinical professionals. It takes account of the multidisciplinary nature of the services that we aim to provide. For example, in a rehabilitation ward where the team leader is a physiotherapist, that person will be allowed appropriate time to fulfil their leadership role. It will also mean that midwives are afforded the same support as nurses for their leadership role. Given the passing of amendment 91, that is all the more important to ensure that all staff groups are supported in their leadership role. The Scottish executive nurse directors group is also supportive of that approach, which it believes clearly articulates the role of the clinical leader in the common staffing method. With that in mind, I ask the committee to support amendment 20.

Amendment 19 sets out that, as part of the common staffing method, health boards and the agency must take into account the different skills and levels of experience of its employees. It aims to address the concern that has been raised by some of our stakeholders that the workload tools do not result in a definition of the level of skill and experience that are required to deliver the workload. By amending the bill in this way, I intend to ensure that health boards and the agency not only look at how to put in the correct number of staff but ensure that those staff have the skills and experience that are necessary to provide the safe and high-quality service that I am keen to see across our national health service.

Amendment 21 sets out that, as part of the common staffing method, comments by individuals who have a personal interest in the patient’s healthcare, such as family members and carers, should be taken into account, as well as those of the patient himself or herself, in so far as those comments relate to the duty to ensure appropriate staffing. That recognises that, for various reasons, patients are not always able to speak for themselves, although that does not mean that their wishes should not be heard and responded to.

I am not clear about the intention of amendment 96, in the name of David Stewart. From my reading of it, it could be about underlining the importance of multidisciplinary services, avoiding the unintended consequences of covering one staff group by a workload planning tool for other staff groups, or recognising that some aspects of care could be carried out by more than one profession. I agree with all of those and they have been considered in the drafting of the bill, so I would welcome Mr Stewart’s clarification of the intention of amendment 96.

I see no issues with many of the amendments that have been lodged by Mr Briggs, although some appear to be based on a misunderstanding that there is some kind of hierarchy in the common staffing method which, for clarity, I say is not the case. All steps in the method must be carried out and all are given equal weight. However, it does no harm to change the order in which the steps appear so, if Mr Briggs wishes to do that, I will not stand in his way.

The amendments that give me cause for concern are amendments 94, 95 and 102. In relation to amendments 94 and 95, I am concerned by the lack of clarity on what is meant by “peer-reviewed evidence” and “professional and improvement organisations”. What is the definition of “peer-reviewed evidence” and would there necessarily be any certainty that something that is reviewed by a health “peer” should always be taken into account? In the health field, there could be numerous trials or pieces of work that some people might class as evidence but on which clinicians disagree. Is it the case that all such work should be taken into account? Similarly, what is a “professional and improvement organisation”? Those are exactly the questions that will be asked by the working group that is set up to develop a tool and it is the working group that will be best placed to determine what is relevant for that tool.

When Healthcare Improvement Scotland reviews the effectiveness of the tools and the common staffing method, as set out in amendment 17, it will take into account the most up-to-date and relevant evidence and guidance, as is its professional duty. I do not feel that it is appropriate for legislation to require that a senior charge nurse, for example, carry out a review of available evidence every time he or she runs the common staffing method. My preference is to include something in guidance, in order to allow for greater clarity and flexibility. However, I would be happy to work with Mr Briggs to see whether we could develop an amendment for stage 3, if he feels strongly that he wants to include something in primary legislation, although I do not believe that that is necessary. I therefore ask Mr Briggs not to press amendment 94 or move amendment 95.

I believe that amendment 102 is based on a proposal by the RCN, which is keen to see excellence in care referenced in the bill in some way. If my assumption is correct, amendment 102 is completely unnecessary, as proposed new section 12IB(2)(b) of the 1978 act sets out that account must be taken of,

“in so far as relevant, any measures for monitoring and improving the quality of health care which are published as standards and outcomes under section 10H(1) by the Scottish Ministers”.

Excellence in care will be one such measure. Therefore, I cannot see what the amendment adds. If Mr Briggs feels that the current provisions do not achieve what is required then—as is the case with amendments 94 and 95—I will be happy to work with him to develop an amendment for stage 3 that does. As it stands, I am hesitant to support amendment 102 and I ask the member not to move it.

David Stewart (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)

Like many other amendments in the group, amendment 96 seeks to add to the list of considerations that must be taken into account when determining staffing levels. In evidence at stage 1, the committee heard concerns from a number of stakeholders that the bill could have the unintended consequence of drawing resources into the supply of professions that are covered by the existing tools at the expense of other healthcare professions that are not yet covered by the tools, which would not benefit the delivery of quality services or improve outcomes for patients and service users. Therefore, amendment 96 would require account to be taken of the potential impact on other staff and professions when determining appropriate staffing levels.

Amendments in other groups that have been lodged by the cabinet secretary and by Alex Cole-Hamilton seek to embed a multidisciplinary approach through the development and review of tools, which is welcome. However, I submit that amendment 96 is needed in addition to the amendments that reference multidisciplinary working approaches, to ensure that all professions are considered from day 1 of the implementation of the bill and not only when the tools are reviewed. Amendment 96 does not detract from the multidisciplinary amendments; rather it makes explicit their ultimate aim and is complementary to them. I hope that my comments cover the questions that the cabinet secretary raised in her opening remarks.

Emma Harper (South Scotland) (SNP)

I want to clarify that, if we are going to pursue common staffing methods, many of the tools have not yet been created. About one third of our care homes have nursing staff, but many care homes do not have nurses working in them. We are talking about social care being provided in people’s homes, so there are no nursing assessment requirements, unless people are unwell for whatever reason. The tools for a multidisciplinary team approach have not yet been developed and the amendments might restrict the ability to manage common staffing methods. My concern in that regard is about the care home setting, in which not many nurses work.

The Convener

I call Miles Briggs to wind up, and to press or withdraw his amendment.

Miles Briggs

The common staffing method

“means that a Health Board or the Agency ... takes into account ... measures for monitoring and improving the quality of health care which are published as standards and outcomes under section 10H(1) by the Scottish Ministers”.

The aim of amendments 94 and 95 is to set out that peer-led evidence be part of that. Having listened to the cabinet secretary, I am happy to look at how we can come to a cross-party agreement on this issue at stage 3, so I will withdraw amendment 94 and not move amendments 95 and 102.

Amendment 94, by agreement, withdrawn.

Amendment 95 not moved.

Amendments 19 and 20 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Amendment 96 moved—[David Stewart]—and agreed to.

Amendments 97 and 98 moved—[Miles Briggs]—and agreed to.

Amendment 21 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Amendments 99 to 101 moved—[Miles Briggs]—and agreed to.

Amendment 22 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Amendment 102 not moved.

The Convener

The next group of amendments is entitled “Common staffing method: types of healthcare and employees covered”. Amendment 23, in the name of the cabinet secretary, is grouped with amendments 24 to 36, 45 and 46.

Jeane Freeman

These are minor technical amendments to the healthcare settings that are covered by the duty on health boards and the agency to use the common staffing method.

The purpose of amendments 23 and 25 to 29 is to clarify that, where multiple types of employees or locations are covered by a healthcare setting in the table in proposed new section 12IC(1) of the 1978 act, the requirement to follow the common staffing method applies where one or more of the employee types or locations are present and not just where all those listed are present. The amendments will ensure that, for example, for neonatal provision, which can be delivered by registered nurses, registered midwives or a combination of the two, the duty to use the common staffing method comes into effect when some of the employee types are present in a particular ward and not just when all those listed are present.

10:00  

Amendments 24 and 31 will bring the definitions of “Adult inpatient” and “Small ward provision” in line with the nursing and midwifery workload and workforce planning programme guidance for the use of those specific staffing-level tools.

Amendment 30 removes the “Perioperative provision” entry from proposed new section 12IC of the 1978 act. A review of the perioperative staffing-level tool, which would be used as part of the common staffing method in perioperative healthcare settings, has identified issues, which are currently being investigated. Because of that, the tool is currently unavailable for use by health boards, and as such they would be unable to comply with the duty to use the common staffing method in perioperative settings.

Amendments 34 and 35 clarify that medical students and student nurses and midwives are not included in the staffing establishment for the purposes of the common staffing method. The exclusion can be extended to other types of student in the future if necessary, as more staffing groups, such as allied health professionals, are brought within the common staffing method.

Last week, I spoke about the importance of taking a multidisciplinary approach and, in doing so, recognising the important role that allied health professionals play in achieving outcomes for service users. Those professionals highlighted that point during the stage 1 evidence sessions and it was noted by the committee. Amendment 36, which arises from productive engagement with the Allied Health Professions Federation, clarifies that allied health professionals are an example of the type of employee that can be covered by the common staffing method. That means that, when new tools are developed that cover allied health professionals, the duty to use the common staffing method can be extended to cover them.

Amendment 46 expands the definition of “employee” in proposed new section 12IG to include those who are employed by a local authority under the lead agency model of integration. That means that those local authority employees will be captured under the common staffing method, which is necessary to ensure its correct operation in lead agency settings.

Amendments 32, 33 and 45 are minor technical corrections to ensure that the legislation operates as intended. Throughout the bill, the term “individual” is used to describe a natural person and the term “person” is used to describe a legal person. However, section 12IC(2), which sets out the types of healthcare to which the duty to use the common staffing method applies, and the definition of “appropriate clinical advice” in 12IG use the term “person” to describe a natural person. Amendments 32, 33, and 45 therefore change those references from “person” to “individual” to provide clarity that they refer to a natural person, and to provide consistency throughout the bill.

I move amendment 23.

Amendment 23 agreed to.

Amendments 24 to 36 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

The Convener

The next group is entitled “Common staffing method: training and consultation of staff”. Amendment 103, in the name of Miles Briggs, is grouped with amendments 6 and 104 to 106.

Miles Briggs

Amendments 103 to 106 seek to put a duty on NHS boards to support, as well as encourage, staff to share their views on the boards’ compliance with the legislation. Under the bill as drafted, NHS boards will be required only to encourage employees to give views on their staffing arrangements, and that requirement covers only the areas that use the common staffing method.

Employees of NHS boards will have valuable experience of staffing issues as well as views on whether the care that they are able to provide is safe and of high quality. As a result, the duty on NHS boards should be strengthened to ensure that they must actively seek their employees’ views and support them in making their views known. That might mean, for example, NHS boards ensuring that reasonable systems are in place for collecting those views.

A strengthened duty to engage with employees would mean that those working in areas covered by the common staffing method would have a significant opportunity to comment on and, potentially, to shape board processes for discharging the duties that the legislation puts on them. The operation of the legislation could, in practice, be further strengthened if the provisions for staff engagement under proposed new section 12ID(a) and (b) of the 1978 act and the provisions for reporting back to staff in proposed new section 12ID(e) were not solely focused on the use of the common staffing method but took into consideration the guiding principles for staffing and the duty to ensure appropriate staffing. Given that amendments have been agreed to on the need for NHS boards to establish protocols to identify monitoring and assess risk, supporting staff in giving their views on the protocols should be covered in the bill, too.

Amendment 104 seeks to ensure that nurses of appropriate seniority are trained in the common staffing method. The bill contains provision for NHS employees to be trained in the use of the method and for their having adequate time to use it. Given that being educated in the use of the method and having the time to use it are hugely important to the bill’s outcomes, it should be made explicit that NHS boards will make training on the common staffing method available to nurses of appropriate seniority across all settings.

I move amendment 103.

The Convener

I welcome Mike Rumbles to the meeting. I invite him to speak to amendment 6, in the name of Alex Cole-Hamilton, and the other amendments in the group.

Mike Rumbles (North East Scotland) (LD)

Thank you very much, convener; it is a pleasure to be here. Unfortunately, Alex Cole-Hamilton cannot be here for today’s meeting of the Health and Sport Committee—indeed, he is visiting a hospital at the moment—so he has asked me to attend to speak to his amendment on his behalf.

In Alex Cole-Hamilton’s view, amendment 6 takes nothing away from the bill; it simply adds to and improves it. It seeks to add the phrase “and areas for improvement” to proposed new section 12ID(b) of the 1978 act so that it reads “use any such views it receives to identify best practice and areas for improvement in relation to such staffing arrangements”. The amendment, which is supported by the Royal College of Nursing, would, I think, add greatly to the intention behind that section of the bill.

Jeane Freeman

I have no concerns about amendment 103 and I am happy to accept amendment 6, which I think is a helpful addition to the duty on boards in proposed new section 12ID of the 1978 act. I maintain, though, that amendment 104 is unnecessary, as proposed new section 12ID(c) as drafted already requires all staff who use the common staffing method to be trained.

I appreciate what amendments 105 and 106 seek to do with regard to the real-time staffing assessment procedures but, technically speaking, they would be placed in the wrong part of the bill. The real-time staffing assessment procedures apply to all employees of a health board, whereas the amendments would apply only to employees covered by the common staffing method, because proposed new section 12ID, into which the amendments would be inserted, applies only to employees engaged in the common staffing method, not to all health board employees. I assume that Mr Briggs’s intention is to cover all employees.

In addition, the opening words of proposed new section 12ID of the 1978 act explicitly make compliance with the duty to use the common staffing method in proposed new section 12IB dependent on fulfilling the duties listed in section 12ID. Given the differing coverage of the sections, it makes no sense to make compliance in law by health boards with section 12IB dependent on new procedures relating to the real-time staffing assessment procedures, which are not linked to the common staffing method. The correct link for any requirements relating to those new assessment and escalation procedures is with proposed new sections 12IAA and 12IAB, which the committee agreed to last week, precisely because of their wider application to all of a board’s employees.

I therefore ask Mr Briggs not to press amendments 105 and 106 and instead to lodge at stage 3 alternative amendments that amend the technically correct sections of the bill. I am happy to work with him on those amendments.

The Convener

I call Miles Briggs to wind up and to press or withdraw amendment 103.

Miles Briggs

I welcome the cabinet secretary’s agreement to support my amendments. As we head towards stage 3, there will be a lot of housekeeping to clean up the bill, so at this stage, I am happy not to press amendments 105 and 106.

Sandra White

On a point of clarification, the cabinet secretary has picked up on what I intended to say, but I will go over it again. When Mr Briggs was talking to his amendments at the beginning, he mentioned nursing staff, and I was concerned about that. The cabinet secretary has clarified her position as regards staffing levels, and I am concerned that he is leaning more towards nursing staff than any other types of staff. Would Mr Briggs consider having a chat with the committee or the cabinet secretary in order before lodging his amendments at stage 3? I have some concerns about how prescriptive they are. I hope that my comments are helpful.

Miles Briggs

We are all agreed on the multidisciplinary nature of the bill. When it comes to health and social care integration, we are trying to make legislation work for two different sectors. My understanding is that the cabinet secretary is content with amendments 103 and 104 in my name, but I am happy not to move amendments 105 and 106, with the understanding that, at stage 3, I will lodge amendments on which we can all agree.

Sandra White

Thank you for that.

Miles Briggs

I press amendment 103.

Amendment 103 agreed to.

Amendment 6 moved—[Mike Rumbles]—and agreed to.

Amendment 104 moved—[Miles Briggs]—and agreed to.

Amendments 105 and 106 not moved.

The Convener

We come to amendment 107, in the name of David Stewart.

David Stewart

I have had a discussion with the cabinet secretary and I am happy that she has taken on board the spirit of the amendment.

Amendments 107 and 123 not moved.

The Convener

In debates on groupings, other than when moving an amendment, if members wish to contribute to the general debate, they should indicate that before I call the cabinet secretary to speak, so that I can take their contribution separately. Of course, members can always intervene on other members and on the cabinet secretary, but if they wish to make comments on a group, I encourage them to do so.

The next group of amendments is entitled “Reporting on staffing by health boards and the Scottish ministers”. Amendment 37, in the name of Jeane Freeman, is grouped with amendments 38, 40, 108 and 109.

10:15  

Jeane Freeman

Amendments 37 and 38 will strengthen the duty on health boards to report on how they have carried out their new duties under the bill. That includes reporting on section 2, on which Monica Lennon’s amendment 85—which was agreed to last week—also inserted a reporting duty.

Boards will have to provide a report detailing how they have complied with the general duty to ensure appropriate staffing and the duties on: the common staffing method; real-time assessment of staffing; escalation of staffing concerns; and the training and consultation of staff. Boards will have to submit the reports to ministers and publish them within one month of the end of the financial year.

Amendment 40 will create an additional duty on ministers to inform Parliament about how the reports provided by the health boards have been, or will be, taken into account when setting national staffing policy for NHS services.

I know that the committee heard evidence from stakeholders who wished to see a firmer link to workforce planning. Our approach recognises that the bill is not about strategic, national level workforce planning, but that the information generated by implementing the duty on health boards to ensure appropriate staffing and by the common staffing method is a factor that will be considered in such national planning.

In setting out a clear reporting process, my intention is to create transparency around the decisions that are taken by boards, allowing scrutiny of how that is reflected in their workforce projections. Similarly, creating transparency around the information that has been provided to ministers will allow scrutiny of how that information is then reflected by the Scottish Government in national workforce planning.

I do not think that there is anything covered by Monica Lennon’s amendments 108 and 109 that is not already addressed by my amendments. Amendment 109 sets out a similar reporting duty on Scottish ministers, however it does not cover the new real-time staffing and risk escalation duties that amendment 17 places on health boards and does not contain the link to how the information is used for wider workforce planning. I ask the committee to resist amendment 109.

I see merit in the intention behind amendment 108, which would require health boards and the agency to report on risks and challenges. I had intended that guidance would set out that boards must include that information in their reports, so I would be happy to make it explicit as part of section 12IF at stage 3. Therefore, I ask Monica Lennon not to move amendments 108 or 109.

I move amendment 37.

Monica Lennon (Central Scotland) (Lab)

Similarly to amendments to sections 2 and 3 of the bill in an earlier group, amendments 108 and 109 aim to improve the scrutiny of health boards’ compliance with the bill.

Amendment 108 would do that by requiring health boards to specify, in the information that they provide to Scottish ministers, any particular risk or challenge that they have faced in complying with their duties, particularly their duty to provide appropriate staff, taking into account the guiding principles, their duty to follow the common staffing method and their duty to provide appropriate and adequate training to staff. The purpose of including reporting on risk is to allow the identification of any systemic issues that might hinder staffing levels, at both a health board level and a national level.

Amendment 109 would require Scottish ministers to gather the information that they receive from health boards and respond to it publicly. It would also require the public report from ministers to address the risks faced by health boards in relation to their staffing duties. The aim of amendment 109 is to encourage scrutiny of the decisions taken by the Scottish Government with regard to national workforce planning and staffing of our health service.

I note that amendments moved by Alison Johnstone last week also sought to establish a link between the bill and national workforce planning. I supported those amendments and I believe that amendments 108 and 109 would strengthen that connection further by ensuring that Scottish ministers are held accountable for mitigating risks faced by health boards in any area of national policy—be it the supply of trained professionals required by Alison Johnstone’s amendments, pay levels, terms and conditions or issues such as the accessibility of workplaces in rural areas.

I welcome the cabinet secretary’s comments. I recognise that amendment 40, in her name, also seeks to provide a connection to national Government workforce planning, which is welcome. However, the specific reference to risk in amendment 109 is stronger and therefore I commend it to the committee.

The Convener

As no other member wishes to contribute to the debate, I invite the cabinet secretary to wind up.

Jeane Freeman

I repeat that Ms Lennon’s amendment 109 does not cover the new real-time staffing and risk escalation duties that amendment 17 places on health boards, and does not contain the link to how the information is used for wider workforce planning. I believe that that makes amendment 109 the weaker one, and I ask the committee to support instead my amendment 40.

Amendment 37 agreed to.

Amendments 38 to 40 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Amendment 108 moved—[Monica Lennon].

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 108 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

Against

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Doris, Bob (Glasgow Maryhill and Springburn) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 4, Against 4, Abstentions 0.

I use my casting vote to vote in favour of amendment 108.

Amendment 108 agreed to.

Amendment 109 moved—[Monica Lennon].

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 109 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

Against

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Doris, Bob (Glasgow Maryhill and Springburn) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 4, Against 4, Abstentions 0.

I will use my casting vote to vote in favour of amendment 109.

Amendment 109 agreed to.

Amendment 41 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

The Convener

The next group is on ministerial guidance on staffing by health boards. Amendment 42, in the name of the cabinet secretary, is grouped with amendments 43, 44 and 47.

Jeane Freeman

Amendments 42 to 44 and 47 relate to the guidance that ministers can produce under proposed new section 12IF of the 1978 act, which covers the new staffing duties on health boards and the Common Services Agency. Section 12IF sets out that health boards and the agency must have regard to any guidance that has been issued by ministers when carrying out their duties under proposed new sections 12IA to 12IE. Section 12IF(3) lists those whom ministers must consult before issuing such guidance. Amendments 42 to 44 make changes to that list, and amendment 47 is consequential on amendment 42.

Amendment 42 clarifies that ministers must consult every relevant special health board, and amendment 47 sets out that that means those to which such duties apply as a result of section 5. That means that ministers will not be required to consult non-clinical special health boards, because they are not covered by the bill.

It is important that trade unions and professional bodies that represent staff who work in all the bodies to which the duties that are set out in the bill apply are able to offer their views on the guidance. Amendment 43 means that, as well as consulting health boards and the Common Services Agency, ministers must consult representatives of employees who work in relevant special health boards, integration authorities to which healthcare functions are delegated through the Public Bodies (Joint Working) (Scotland) Act 2014 and Healthcare Improvement Scotland.

Amendment 44 adds professional regulatory bodies for employees of health boards, the Common Services Agency, relevant special health boards, integration authorities to whom healthcare functions are delegated through the Public Bodies (Joint Working) (Scotland) Act 2014 and HIS to the list of those whom Scottish ministers must consult before issuing this guidance. That will cover the relevant statutory regulators such as the General Medical Council, the Nursing and Midwifery Council and the Health and Care Professions Council and ensure that they are consulted on guidance that may impact on the professional groups that they regulate.

I move amendment 42.

Amendment 42 agreed to.

Amendments 43 to 47 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Section 4, as amended, agreed to.

Section 5—Application of duties to certain Special Health Boards

Amendments 48 to 65 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Section 5, as amended, agreed to.

After section 5

The Convener

The next group is on the role of Healthcare Improvement Scotland in relation to staffing. Amendment 66, in the name of the cabinet secretary, is grouped with amendment 66A.

Jeane Freeman

In the stage 1 debate, I committed to lodge an amendment to make the role of Healthcare Improvement Scotland clear. Amendment 66 extends HIS’s existing quality assurance and improvement role by inserting new sections into the National Health Service (Scotland) Act 1978 setting out that HIS will be responsible for monitoring the discharge by every health board, relevant special health board—meaning a special health board that provides clinical healthcare services to patients—and the Common Services Agency of their duties under all parts of the bill. Amendment 66 has the full support of HIS and has been drafted in consultation with it.

Proposed new section 12IH of the 1978 act places a duty on HIS to monitor the compliance of boards and the Common Services Agency with the staffing duties introduced by the bill, including the new real-time assessment and risk escalation duties under amendment 17.

Proposed section 12IJ places a duty on HIS to monitor

“the effectiveness of the common staffing method”

and the way in which boards and the agency are using it. HIS must additionally, as and when it considers it appropriate, carry out discrete reviews of the common staffing method with a view to publishing and submitting to ministers a report recommending changes to the common staffing method, if required. Ministers may then, by the regulations already provided for under proposed new section 12IB(4), amend the common staffing method.

HIS must have regard to the guiding principles in carrying out a review. In doing so, it must consult a range of stakeholders, as listed in section 12IJ(3). Ministers will also have the power to direct HIS to carry out such a review of the common staffing method.

Further to that, proposed section 12IK sets out that HIS may also develop, and recommend to ministers

“new or revised staffing level tools and professional judgement tools”

for use as part of the common staffing method, in relation to any kind of healthcare provision. Ministers may then, by regulations already provided for under proposed new section 12IB(3), prescribe the use of said tools as part of the common staffing method. In developing any new or revised tools, HIS must collaborate with the bodies mentioned previously and must again have regard to the guiding principles. Similarly, ministers may direct HIS to develop a new or revised staffing level tool or professional judgment tool.

10:30  

In recognition of the view of stakeholders—in particular, the Allied Health Professions Federation—that there is a need to look at the development of multidisciplinary tools, proposed new section 12IL places a duty on HIS, when developing a new or revised staffing level or professional judgment tool, to

“consider whether the tool should apply to more than one professional discipline.”

It also gives HIS a power to recommend to ministers that an existing tool should be multidisciplinary. HIS will be under a duty to monitor the effectiveness of any staffing level tool or professional judgment tool that has been prescribed by ministers under section 12IB(3). That would include any new or revised tool.

Proposed new sections 12IM and 12IN aim to ensure that HIS is given access to the support and—crucially—to the data that are necessary to carry out its new functions under the bill. Proposed section 12IM requires health boards, relevant special health boards and the agency to give HIS

“such assistance ... as it requires in the performance of its functions under sections 12IH to 12IL.”

Proposed section 12IN gives HIS a power

“in pursuance of its functions under sections 12IH to 12IL”

to

“serve a notice on a Health Board, relevant Special Health Board or the Agency requiring the Board or the Agency ... to provide HIS with information about any matter specified in the notice”

by a specified date. Ministers will also have a power under proposed section 12IO to issue statutory guidance to HIS and to boards about those new provisions.

Finally, but importantly, the existing powers of HIS to inspect NHS services are extended to include the enforcement of those new functions by amendment to section 10I of the 1978 act. HIS is fully aware of that amendment and is happy with the provisions that are set out in it.

Amendment 66A is unnecessary, as ministers can already direct HIS to carry out a review of the common staffing method under proposed new section 12IJ(4) or to develop a new or revised staffing level tool or professional judgment tool under proposed section 12IK(5). That could include a direction that HIS look at particular matters, including staff absences and bed occupancy levels. However, I do not think that the amendment would do any particular harm, so I will not stand in Mr Briggs’s way if he wishes to press it.

I move amendment 66.

Miles Briggs

I welcome the fact that the cabinet secretary has lodged amendment 66, and I think that we are both trying to achieve the same thing in our amendments.

I was specifically looking to allow ministers to prescribe what could be included because of our original discussions about the multidisciplinary approach, which is very different from multidisciplinary tools. Given the different workforces, how we take that issue forward is important.

I am happy to move amendment 66A. I hope that we will finally get something workable in the bill at stage 3.

I move amendment 66A.

Amendment 66A agreed to.

Amendment 66, as amended, agreed to.

Before section 6

The Convener

Amendment 110, in the name of David Stewart, has already been debated with amendment 84.

David Stewart

Following a helpful discussion with the cabinet secretary, I will not move amendment 110.

Amendment 110 not moved.

Section 6—Duty on care service providers to ensure appropriate staffing

The Convener

The next group is on the duty on care service providers to ensure appropriate staffing. Amendment 7, in the name of Alex Cole-Hamilton, is grouped with amendments 111, 112 and 67.

Mike Rumbles

As I said, I will speak to Alex Cole-Hamilton’s amendments this morning, but I also want to speak to amendment 67, in the name of the cabinet secretary.

All the amendments in the group are intended to improve the bill; indeed, I think that, whichever way we go, it will be an improvement. However, I think that Alex Cole-Hamilton’s amendments are—if I can put it this way—more comprehensive and effective than the cabinet secretary’s amendment. Section 6(1) says:

“Any person who provides a care service must ensure that at all times suitably qualified and competent individuals are working in the care service in such numbers as are appropriate for ... the health, wellbeing and safety of service users”.

Amendment 7, in the name of Alex Cole-Hamilton, seeks to add the phrase “and staff” to that, which I think is really important and is supported by the Royal College of Nursing. Amendment 7, along with amendments 111 and 112, which seek to change the phrase

“the provision of high-quality care”

in section 6(1)(b) to “the provision of safe and high-quality care and services”, provides a far more comprehensive approach than the cabinet secretary’s choice in amendment 67 to add to section 6(1)

“(c) in so far as it affects either of those matters, the wellbeing of staff.”

After all, amendments 7, 111 and 112 cover health, wellbeing and safety.

I do not need to say any more. Alex Cole-Hamilton’s far more comprehensive amendments build on the important intention behind section 6, and I hope that there will be unanimous support for them.

I move amendment 7.

Jeane Freeman

I appreciate the valid aim of amendment 7, which seeks to ensure that staff wellbeing is considered in ensuring adequate numbers of staff. However, as I said last week in relation to amendment 3, we must be mindful that employment and health and safety law are reserved matters and are not for this Parliament to deal with. I also stated in respect of amendment 3—I will restate it again for the sake of clarity—that an almost identical provision to this amendment already exists in health and safety legislation, and we would not want to replicate in the bill any duty that already exists in primary legislation.

With this bill, we seek to ensure safe, high-quality services. Success will create a virtuous circle of better outcomes for patients together with improved wellbeing for staff; indeed, evidence demonstrates that one can affect the other. We already have as a guiding principle

“ensuring the wellbeing of staff”

and, again for the sake of clarity, I point out that throughout the bill we express concern about and put in place provisions to ensure the health and safety of staff.

As I have said, I am not averse to the aims of amendment 7, but I will move amendment 67 as a replacement that I believe answers the committee’s request in its stage 1 report to include staff wellbeing in the duty on care service providers to ensure appropriate staffing. As with amendment 15, which, unfortunately, was not agreed to but which dealt with the health context, amendment 67 seeks to keep the bill’s primary focus on the welfare of service users, while considering staff wellbeing in terms of how it impacts on the service itself.

I turn to amendments 111 and 112. Section 6 provides that:

“Any person who provides a care service must ensure that at all times suitably qualified and competent individuals are working in the ... service in such numbers as are appropriate for ... the health, wellbeing and safety of service users, and ... the provision of high-quality care.”

Under amendment 111, any person who provided a care service would have to ensure that such numbers must be working as would be appropriate for the provision of safe and high-quality care. I therefore have no concerns with the amendment, given the bill’s clear aims to secure safe and high-quality care.

Under amendment 112, such numbers must be working as would be appropriate for the provision of high-quality care and services. Although that duplicates what is already provided, as the care is the service, I will not stand in members’ way if they wish to agree to the amendment.

I therefore ask the committee to support amendment 67 and not to support amendment 7.

Brian Whittle (South Scotland) (Con)

I seek clarity from the cabinet secretary. She highlighted that the primary concern is the wellbeing of patients at all times. However, I am concerned that we should also consistently look after the health of our healthcare professionals. I assume that the cabinet secretary would agree with that, but I am not sure that that will be the case under amendment 67. I think that one goes hand in hand with the other—looking after the health of our healthcare professionals is key to looking after the health of patients.

Jeane Freeman

I am not going to disagree with Mr Whittle, and I have already said that I will not stand in the way of amendments 111 and 112. I have also made the point that, elsewhere in the bill, we have clear provisions that show our commitment to the health, wellbeing and safety of staff. My primary point is that the bill’s focus is on the quality of the provision for those who receive it. There is multiple evidence of that virtuous circle that I spoke about and that, in order to achieve that, we have to ensure the health, wellbeing and safety of staff.

We might be dancing on the head of a pin here. I do not have a problem with amendments 111 and 112; my concern is with amendment 7, which I believe replicates legislation when it is not necessarily in our power to do so.

George Adam (Paisley) (SNP)

I want to talk first about the positives. I can support amendments 111 and 112 and, obviously, amendment 67. However, I have an issue with amendment 7, which is similar to the issue that I raised last week and which the cabinet secretary has raised today. Although we welcome what amendment 7 tries to do, there is a potential problem with competency, as it moves into reserved issues of health and safety. I mentioned the issue last week and I mention it again now, as I have concerns about it. We need to be mindful of that point.

Mike Rumbles

I am surprised that such a red herring has suddenly appeared in the debate. The point about health and safety legislation is a red herring. The cabinet secretary might not be particularly well advised on the issue, because amendment 7 does not trespass on health and safety law; if it did, we could not have what is already in the bill, which refers to the

“wellbeing and safety of service users”.

We cannot draw a distinction and say that the safety of service users is not to do with health and safety law but then say that, with the staff, their safety is about health and safety law—it is not.

Sandra White

I think that Mike Rumbles is mixing things up slightly. Obviously, it is about health and wellbeing, but we are talking about legislation that is reserved—that is the point.

Mike Rumbles

I am sorry, but the member misunderstands my point, which is that the cabinet secretary has introduced the bill, which talks about the “safety of service users”. If that contravened health and safety legislation, it could not be in the bill.

Sandra White

But I think—

Mike Rumbles

I have given way already on the point. Amendment 7 would include staff—the people who work in the organisation—as well as the people who use the service. Health and safety legislation applies to everybody who uses a facility, whether or not they are members of staff, and the detail of health and safety law is in health and safety legislation. Amendment 7 does not contravene health and safety legislation; if it did, section 6 would be incompetent. I would like to put that red herring to rest.

Sandra White

It is employment law.

George Adam

Exactly.

The Convener

Order, please. Mr Rumbles, are you pressing amendment 7?

Mike Rumbles

I am, indeed, because it will improve the bill dramatically.

The Convener

The question is, that amendment 7 be agreed to. Are we agreed?

Members: No.

The Convener

There will be a division.

For

Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)

Against

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Doris, Bob (Glasgow Maryhill and Springburn) (SNP)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)

The Convener

The result of the division is: For 4, Against 4, Abstentions 0.

I will use my casting vote in favour of the amendment.

Amendment 7 agreed to.

Amendments 111 and 112 moved—[Mike Rumbles]—and agreed to.

10:45  

Amendment 67 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Section 6, as amended, agreed to.

After section 6

The Convener

The next group is entitled “Care services: risk management procedure”. Amendment 113, in the name of David Stewart, is the only amendment in the group.

David Stewart

Amendment 113 seeks to ensure that care sector providers have in place appropriate processes for the assessment and management of the risk that is associated with staffing levels, as my amendment 107 sought to do for health services in part 2 of the bill.

Having spoken to stakeholders in the sector, including Scottish Care, I have lodged an amendment that is slightly more pared down than amendment 107.

Risk management escalation procedures are there partly to protect staff and employees who will have to find solutions to staffing challenges in real time. The procedures will give them clear guidance on steps that they can take.

Sandra White

Will the member take an intervention?

David Stewart

Can I just finish this and then come back to you?

The Convener

There will be an opportunity to make a contribution once Mr Stewart has finished what he wants to say. I will allow him to take an intervention.

David Stewart

It was suggested that prescribing the steps that must be taken by employees, who are already stretched and hard working, could have the unintended consequence of placing significant responsibilities and bureaucratic burdens on them, which is why amendment 113 places the responsibility on providers to set out risk management procedures that allow flexibility for local contexts.

Risk management procedures must be standard policy, and the amendment seeks to standardise them as much as possible with regard to staffing the sector.

I move amendment 113.

Sandra White

I have consulted and received feedback from various organisations, including the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities—I assume that other members also received a copy of COSLA’s feedback—and the social work department in Glasgow. COSLA says that the amendment would put an added burden on care services, particularly smaller ones, and that it would create another “layer of bureaucracy”. The feedback was that, if the provision came into force at the same time as the consultation on care services was going on, it might jeopardise any agreement that is made with care services. Further, there was feedback that the amendment does not elaborate on what good care services would be if it was agreed to, and that it would be an additional burden with regard to scrutiny.

I ask David Stewart to take on board the points from COSLA, service users in my constituency in Glasgow and the head of the social work department in Glasgow City Council. I thank him for lodging the amendment, because it is good to have a debate on the issue, but perhaps, as I asked him earlier, he could speak to the cabinet secretary and not press the amendment.

David Stewart

I respect COSLA and all the players in the care sector. I had discussions with a number of them. It is an important amendment, but I am happy to listen to the points that the cabinet secretary might make on it.

Jeane Freeman

I am mindful that the risk escalation procedure that I have proposed for health settings has been developed through detailed work with representatives of nurses, midwives, medics and allied health professionals. Given its importance, I would be reluctant to apply a similar process to care service providers without working closely with them to ensure that it is proportionate and effective.

I have no issues with the intention of Mr Stewart’s amendment 113. However, in terms of its scope, the way in which it is drafted means that it would cover the full range of care providers that fall within section 47(1) of the Public Services Reform (Scotland) Act 2010. That includes childminders, of whom there are more than 5,000 registered in Scotland and who mainly work individually. As worded, amendment 113 would require each childminder to have an escalation policy. I am sure that is not Mr Stewart’s intention. I am also sure that the committee would agree that that would be disproportionate.

I ask Mr Stewart not to press amendment 113, so that we can work together to lodge a replacement at stage 3 that is drafted in such a way as to meet his intention but not to be so wide in its scope.

The Convener

I call David Stewart to wind up and press or withdraw his amendment.

David Stewart

In light of the contributions from Sandra White and the cabinet secretary, I am happy to go away and think again about amendment 113, particularly with colleagues in COSLA. I am happy to seek to withdraw my amendment.

Amendment 113, by agreement, withdrawn.

Section 7—Training of staff

The Convener

Amendment 114, in the name of David Stewart, is in a group on its own.

David Stewart

Amendment 114 seeks to ensure that, should the Scottish ministers mandate the use of a staffing tool by care services, they take responsibility for adequately resourcing the training required. The margins of social care providers are tight, and full-time staff numbers are limited. It is important that resources are there to reimburse staff for training that they are obliged to undergo. Similarly, care providers should not be forced to pay for additional training time out of squeezed resources.

As we have seen with the implementation of the living wage for social care workers and overnight carers, new policy and standards from the Scottish Government must be backed up by resources if they are going to make a difference at ground level. The financial memorandum makes reference to funding the training associated with implementing the use of the tools. Amendment 114 merely makes explicit in the bill the obligation on the Scottish ministers to fund the training. That would be important if costs end up higher than was estimated in the financial memorandum.

I move amendment 114.

Sandra White

Once again, I thank David Stewart for his amendment 114, which clarifies some points with regard to funding. Again, I have spoken to COSLA and others, and I am sure that all members have had the letter from COSLA.

COSLA and others ask that funding by commissioners is further considered, as, obviously, the commissioning authorities fund the care sector. COSLA would like to go through the process with commissioners fully.

I ask that the issue is taken into consideration. COSLA is, as always, willing to work with others on this, so I ask that David Stewart does not press amendment 114. The cabinet secretary may have something to add.

Emma Harper

I have a question that David Stewart might be able to answer in his summing up. Does his amendment 114 assume that all training is delivered away from the place of service provision? In my experience, a lot of training is delivered at the bedside, the place of care or the place of residence. Amendment 114 would create a narrow approach that does not enable the diversity of training provision to be widely appreciated.

Jeane Freeman

I appreciate what Mr Stewart is intending to achieve with amendment 114. We all agree that it is entirely right that care staff are properly trained, and I believe that that is recognised in section 7.

Amendment 114, however, is fundamentally flawed, in that the Scottish Government does not directly fund or contract with care service providers. They are private providers, who are contracted by local authorities, integration authorities and health boards. When such providers are contracted and the Scottish Government has a policy approach, as it has for the real living wage, funds are provided to those who contract with care service providers. Should the funds not be passed on, that is a matter between the Scottish Government and those to whom we provide the funds, such as local authorities. We do not have a direct contracting arrangement with care service providers.

We have set out in the financial memorandum our expectation to fund the initial training for using a staffing method. However, I cannot see how the Scottish Government could ensure that everyday training costs for private providers—and for every kind of training, not just training in the use of any new staffing methods—were resourced and allocated on a year-in, year-out basis. That would be entirely contrary to the existing funding framework and the way that funding for care service providers operates.

On that basis, I ask members not to support amendment 114.

The Convener

I call on David Stewart to wind up and press or withdraw amendment 114.

David Stewart

This is a very important issue. To have fully funded training is essential. On the living wage, I point out that we have seen in practice that, although paying the living wage is Scottish Government policy, some carers are not getting it, so there is clearly a problem in the system. However, I think that we generally all agree on the overall principle. I am happy not to press amendment 114 on the basis that I can come back at stage 3 after perhaps having some further contributions from providers and the Scottish Government.

Amendment 114, by agreement, withdrawn.

Section 7 agreed to.

Section 8—Ministerial guidance on staffing

Amendments 68 to 71 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Section 8, as amended, agreed to.

Section 9 agreed to.

Section 10—Functions of SCSWIS in relation to staffing methods

The Convener

The next group of amendments is entitled “Staffing methods for care services: development and review”. Amendment 115, in the name of Miles Briggs, is grouped with amendments 116, 72 to 74, 76, 79, 79A and 125.

Miles Briggs

Amendment 115 seeks to amend proposed new section 82A of the Public Services Reform (Scotland) Act 2010, on development of staffing methods. It would change the Care Inspectorate’s power to develop and recommend staffing methods for care homes and other care services, as specified by Scottish ministers, to an obligation to do so. Any new tools should be developed and tested in collaboration across the sector: that is what I seek to achieve with amendment 115.

With regard to the bill as a whole, we will need to consider at stage 3 how we can ensure that the bill works for people who are involved in social care.

I will be happy to hear any comments on amendment 115.

I move amendment 115.

Jeane Freeman

I assure members that the Government wants development of a staffing method and tool for care homes for older people, as we state in the policy memorandum. The Care Inspectorate is ready to support that development.

However, I ask members not to support amendment 115. As the approach that is outlined in the bill will be successful only with the co-operation and active participation of the care sector, it must be collaborative. There cannot be an imposed solution, which is what the word “must” in amendment 115 suggests. Collaboration will be crucial to the success of part 3 of the bill. On that basis, I ask Miles Briggs not to press amendment 115.

Members might have gained the impression that the Care Inspectorate has abandoned staffing numbers in care homes. It has, in fact, changed its approach. Rather than relying on historical ratios, it is requiring providers to carry out assessments of individual dependency and is aggregating that information and determining on a regular and dynamic basis what implications it has for staffing profile and numbers. That approach anticipates what will be required as the tools develop, and it should be welcomed.

I have nothing to say on amendment 116.

I turn to my amendments in the group. Section 10 will insert in the Public Services Reform (Scotland) Act 2010 proposed new section 82A, which will empower the Care Inspectorate to develop staffing methods for care services, working together with the persons who are listed in subsection (2) of that proposed new section. Following conversations with relevant stakeholders, we have ensured that amendment 72 will add the Scottish Social Services Council to that list, and that amendment 73 will add every health board.

11:00  

Amendment 74 fulfils a request of the Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee that all guidance in connection with the bill that is issued by Scottish ministers be published. As members are aware, at present there are no tools or staffing methods in use for social care. Amendment 79 will give the Care Inspectorate the power to review and redevelop such tools and methods once they have been developed. In doing so, Social Care and Social Work Improvement Scotland must collaborate, have regard to ministerial guidance and develop staffing tools in the same way as it would if it were developing a new staffing method. Ministers will also be able to direct the Care Inspectorate to redevelop a staffing method, if necessary.

In addition, proposed new section 82BB of the 2010 act in amendment 79 will require the Care Inspectorate, in developing, reviewing and recommending a staffing tool, to consider whether the tool should be multidisciplinary, thereby making provision consistent with regard to the new functions for Healthcare Improvement Scotland.

Amendment 76 is consequential on amendment 79 and will enable ministers to require, through regulations, use of any redeveloped staffing method that is recommended by the Care Inspectorate.

I am happy to support amendment 79A, which has been lodged by Monica Lennon.

Finally, in relation to Alison Johnstone’s amendment 125, I ask for clarification on several issues. Is it her intention that this proposed new section 82BC of the 2010 act would be restricted to reporting on supply to care service providers, or is it intended to apply more widely? I do not believe that that is clear from the amendment. If it is intended to apply only to care service providers, who does she have in mind when she refers in the amendment to “medical practitioners”? That would generally be understood to apply only to registered doctors. However, I presume that that is not who Alison Johnstone has in mind in relation to care. I also point out that care homes are private sector services and that Scottish ministers have no locus in employment or recruitment in the private sector. How does Alison Johnstone anticipate her proposal working in practice? I find the lack of clarity on certain points in amendment 125 troubling, and would therefore struggle to accept it, given that, if it were agreed to, it would become part of primary legislation. However, I will be happy to work with Alison Johnstone on an amendment for stage 3, if she is willing. I therefore ask her not to move the amendment.

I ask members to support my amendments in the group.

The Convener

I call Monica Lennon to speak to amendment 79A, and to other amendments in the group.

Monica Lennon

Amendment 79A relates to the powers of the Care Inspectorate. It would ensure that the inspectorate can review not only use of a staffing tool, but whether suppliers are complying with the general duty under section 6 to provide appropriate staffing levels. The purpose of the amendment is to clarify that the remit of the Care Inspectorate to consider staffing levels is not limited by the existence or otherwise of a staffing tool. Current inspections by the Care Inspectorate consider staffing levels already, as policy. Therefore, the amendment should not place any additional burdens or obligations on providers or on the wider social care sector.

I welcome the support of the cabinet secretary for amendment 79A.

The Convener

I welcome Alison Johnstone to the committee and invite her to speak to amendment 125 and other amendments in the group.

Alison Johnstone (Lothian) (Green)

Amendment 125 is similar to amendment 90, which concerned health services and was agreed by the committee last week. Amendment 125, too, recognises that workforce and workload are inextricably linked, and aims to ensure that the Government has considered all the relevant information that is available to it when it commissions training places for those for whom it can commission training places and who work in the care sector.

We know that care homes now care for people with far greater and more complex illnesses than they used to, including people with palliative and end-of-life needs. That means that they face increased challenges around caring for people with dementia, frailty, mobility problems and so on, and that there is a need for specialist input on nutrition and hydration.

It is significant that 65 per cent of care home residents are now assessed as requiring nursing care. In 2007, only 10 per cent of care home residents had a physical disability or a chronic illness: the figure is now 38 per cent. In the same period, there has also been a 44 per cent increase in men over the age of 95 living in care homes, and a 15 per cent increase in women over the age of 95 living in care homes.

The care home workforce data tells us that there are staff vacancies in 77 per cent of services. Therefore, my amendment 125 seeks to ensure that we give the same consideration to the care sector—which is clearly facing significant challenges—that we are giving to ensuring that there are appropriate staff in the NHS. If it is helpful, I am open to working with the cabinet secretary to progress a form of words for stage 3 that would meet with everyone’s approval.

Emma Harper

I am interested to see how the proposal would develop. In relation to Miles Briggs’s amendment 115, I am concerned that the imposition of any tools that are developed and that are nurse focused would not work in a multidisciplinary team approach. Many care homes have nursing staff, but as I mentioned before, residential care homes are people’s homes, therefore I am keen to look at collaboration and a multidisciplinary team approach. Currently, NHS nurses go to care homes to provide nursing assessments and care, and they provide services in a nursing capacity, but I am keen not to put anything in the bill that would in any way restrict the flexibility of the development of team working—multidisciplinary team collaboration—because that will be key when we look at how to develop care in the future.

Sandra White

My concerns are similar to Emma Harper’s, and they have already been raised in relation to amendment 115. My big issue is with the change from “may” to “must”, which is too prescriptive. I ask Miles Briggs to think about that. I refer again to the feedback from COSLA and others. I put on the record that David Williams, whom I have mentioned, is not only the chief officer of Glasgow city health and social care partnership, but is chair of the health and social care integration chief officers group.

I apologise to Alison Johnstone for raising concerns about her amendment 90, which has been agreed by the committee, but I am pleased that she is looking at the issue in the care sector by way of amendment 125. It needs to be looked at, but I feel that the amendment should not deal only with nursing staff. She mentioned that there are people who need nursing care in care homes: equally, there are people in care homes who do not necessarily need a nurse there all the time. Therefore, we have to consider having flexibility, so I am pleased that Alison Johnstone has said that she will be happy to work with the cabinet secretary, and perhaps the committee, as the bill moves to stage 3, because I think that the matter of amendment 125 needs a wee bit more clarity.

George Adam

I agree with my colleagues, and I will mention additional points that Scottish Care raised, in particular in relation to amendment 115. Scottish Care said that it needs flexibility and an appropriate set of tools, not the imposition of a patient acuity tool. That is interesting because it is Scottish Care that deals with care homes day in and day out. I am summarising points that it made.

Scottish Care also mentioned a failure to understand that care homes are non-clinical environments. That has been misunderstood, even during today’s discussions. It is also concerned that amendment 115 would create a tick-box list of clinical issues that pays no regard to new outcomes, which would take away from the belief that we all share, that we need to have person-centric values at the core of everything that we do.

When we look at the issues that have been raised by people in the sector, we can see why amendment 115 presents a difficulty, but it could be worked on between now and stage 3. We have to make sure that there is a joint-working collaborative approach, as Emma Harper said, because the bill is not just about nursing staff—it is about everyone who works in the sector. That is one of the most important parts of the bill.

Bob Doris (Glasgow Maryhill and Springburn) (SNP)

Alison Johnstone has made reasonable points. There is something in her amendment 125 and on the need to get the correct staffing mix in care homes. I am inspired to speak about palliative care, which is a particular interest of mine, and the skills mix.

Sometimes, non-nursing staff in care homes are worth their weight in gold. Different care homes have different models for palliative and end-of-life care. I am slightly nervous about being prescriptive about staffing levels in the various disciplines. However, I appreciate the need to capture the skills-mix demands on care homes in order to ensure that suitable professionals are being trained, and for workforce planning purposes.

There is definitely something in Alison Johnston’s amendment 125, but maybe not in the form that it is written. The matter is worth exploring further.

The Convener

I invite Miles Briggs to wind up, and to press or seek to withdraw amendment 115.

Miles Briggs

As we head towards stage 3, we must look at what we are trying to achieve. It is important to highlight that COSLA, in its submission, does not support the inclusion of the social care workforce in the bill.

Given what the cabinet secretary has said, I am happy not to press amendment 115 and will lodge something at stage 3.

Amendment 115, by agreement, withdrawn.

Amendment 116 not moved.

The Convener

The next group is entitled “Staffing methods for care services: content and frequency of use”. This is the last group of amendments, although we have a number of questions to put thereafter.

Amendment 117, in the name of Miles Briggs, is grouped with amendments 118, 119, 75, 120, 121, 77, 78 and 122.

Miles Briggs

Amendment 117 is about assisting the development of staffing methods for care services and would require the Care Inspectorate to

“develop indicators of clinical quality”

for adult care home services. However, the sector must commit to developing a tool that is not too restrictive and fits with the person-centred outcome-focused approach that the social care sector wants as we move towards integration.

Amendment 122 is about the potential development of a staffing method for nursing homes. As Bob Doris mentioned in relation to workforce planning, further engagement and collaboration will be needed to build collective support to develop new tools, given that no tools exist. Any new tool that is developed should pay special attention to the environment of various care homes.

I move amendment 117.

Jeane Freeman

I understand the desire that the Care Inspectorate should develop and use indicators of clinical quality for care home services for adults. That would require any tool that is developed in care to be partially or wholly focused on clinical measures. That does not fit with the person-centred, non-medicalised and outcomes-focused approach to social care that is our aspiration through integration. I wonder whether the amendment was intended to refer to “clinical and quality” rather than “clinical quality”. If that is Miles Briggs’s intention, it might be that we can work further on the amendment to make that clear.

I have committed to the staffing method being developed by the sector. The amendments are too restrictive, as they make assumptions about what the tool would be. I ask the committee not to support amendments 117 and 118.

The existing common staffing method and tools for health were developed with the nursing, midwifery and—in the case of the emergency care tool—medical professions. The people representing those professions were not told that the method or tools that they developed must take particular things into account; it was for them to decide in their professional judgment what was appropriate. If amendment 119 is agreed to, the same opportunities will not have been afforded to the care sector. In those circumstances, it will be difficult for us to argue that the sector is being treated with the equity and respect with which I know we all wish it to be treated to ensure the successful delivery of integrated health and social care.

11:15  

In seeking to change the wording in proposed new section 82A(5) of the 2010 act from “may” to “must”, amendment 119 would prejudice what would have to be in any staffing method that might be developed. As a result, it would contradict the reassurances that I have given the sector that any staffing methods that are developed for care settings would be developed by the sector, for the sector. Although I take the point that, in the early stages, COSLA did not wish social care to be covered in the bill, we have had significant discussions, important assurances have been given and COSLA has been willing to reconsider its view. Given its experience of and its role in delivering social care, we respect its judgment as well as that of the care sector, and it is now supportive of our approach and is working with us on developing this tool with the Care Inspectorate. Should amendment 119 be moved and agreed to, I will lodge an amendment at stage 3 to ensure flexibility in these provisions with regard to the staffing method.

As I mentioned previously in relation to amendments 94 and 95, I am concerned by the lack of clarity on what is meant by “professional and improvement organisations” in amendment 120. As with amendments 94 and 95, I would prefer to include something in guidance that allowed for greater clarity and flexibility.

Written evidence to the committee from MND Scotland and others highlighted the position of carers and their families and emphasised the importance of their voice. Amendment 75 seeks to clarify that taking their comments into account on the general appropriate staffing duty is one of the elements that may be included in any staffing method that is developed by the Care Inspectorate under proposed new section 82A of the 2010 act.

Amendment 121, in the name of David Stewart, seeks to require that ministers ensure that adequate resources are allocated to the Care Inspectorate to enable it to develop staffing methods for care services. The financial memorandum to the bill already clearly sets out the financial support for the Care Inspectorate. I am of the view that this is a matter not for primary legislation but for the normal executive duties of Government, and that it is for scrutiny by members from across the Parliament as part of the budget process, not for scrutiny by the courts, which is what a statutory duty could lead us to. On that basis, I ask David Stewart not to move amendment 121.

Amendments 77 and 78, which relate to the frequency of use of any staffing methods for care services that are prescribed through regulations that are made under proposed new section 82B of the 2010 act, cover similar ground to previous amendments 18 and 22 on the frequency of use of the common staffing method in the NHS. Proposed new section 82B provides the Scottish ministers with a power to prescribe the use of a staffing method that has been developed by the Care Inspectorate, with section 82B(2)(c) setting out that the regulations may specify the frequency of use of staffing level tools. It does not allow ministers to prescribe the frequency of use of a staffing method as a whole.

Although a staffing method and tool for care settings has yet to be developed, the expectation is that a method and tool would not be run separately. That is reflected in the requirement in proposed new section 82A(4) for any staffing method that is developed by the Care Inspectorate to include the use of staffing level tools. It is therefore the Scottish Government’s intention that the staffing method and not just the tools be used at a specified frequency. Accordingly, amendment 78 seeks to remove proposed new section 82B(2)(c), while amendment 77 sets out a replacement power for the Scottish ministers to prescribe in regulations the frequency at which the staffing method as a whole, not just the tools, is to be used. As with the health provisions, as well as providing clarity that Scottish ministers can specify the frequency with which a staffing method for care services, and not just the tools, should be used, these amendments also remove any possible suggestion that a tool can be used separately from a staffing method or that a staffing method can be followed without using a tool.

Amendment 122 is, I believe, based on a proposal from the RCN, which is keen for the views of a senior nurse to be sought if a staffing method and tool is developed for care homes for adults. As I have already said, a tool or method has yet to be developed for that sector, and the amendment makes assumptions about the aspects of care that will be covered by a staffing method. It is unlikely to be supported by the sector, as it is too restrictive. I ask the committee to reject amendment 122.

I ask the members of the committee to support the amendments in my name.

David Stewart

Amendment 121, in my name, is similar to amendment 114, which we discussed earlier, and concerns the resourcing of training in the use of new staffing tools. Amendment 121 places an obligation on the Scottish Government to fully resource and fund the development of tools for the social care sector, should it be considered that they are required. In the financial memorandum, there is reference to the cost of developing the tools being £200,000 per annum over three years, including contributions to the development from the sector. It is acknowledged that development of tools for the sector could be complicated and that it is possible that the time and cost required could be more than is estimated. Should that be the case, organisations in the sector should be appropriately reimbursed, and amendment 121 merely makes the obligation on the Scottish ministers explicit in the bill.

Sandra White

I will speak to some of the amendments in the group. I have looked at this and spoken about it before, and the evidence that I have been given is that amendment 117, in the name of Miles Briggs, would be restrictive, because it says that the Care Inspectorate

“must develop indicators of clinical quality”

for adults. I believe that focusing on clinical measures does not fit in with the person-centred approach to delivering health and social care that, as the debates and contributions have indicated, underpins integration. Amendment 118 also looks at that possibility. People should be spoken to and worked with collaboratively. I therefore cannot support amendments 117 and 118.

David Stewart has explained that amendment 121 is similar to amendment 114, to which I also spoke, and the cabinet secretary also mentioned that the Scottish Government does not give money to care homes. Some of them are private and support has to go through commissioning by local authorities. I therefore have reservations about amendment 121 that are similar to those that I had about amendment 114, which David Stewart withdrew.

Amendment 122 is the most substantive of the amendments. It requires nursing homes to have a staffing pool and to seek the views of a registered nurse. I share the cabinet secretary’s views on that. Multidisciplinary staffing teams are used in care homes. We heard evidence that there are various levels of ability. We also have older nurses who have more experience in multidisciplinary nursing. Health and Social Care Scotland rejects

“singling out one element of the multi-disciplinary staffing team for professional treatment. In the spirit of integration, we would hope that tools would be developed in a collaborative way.”

We need a multidisciplinary and integrated perspective and a collective approach to tools that would work in that context. The restrictiveness of amendment 122 does not lend itself to that approach. I would like to discuss the issue further with Miles Briggs and others.

Bob Doris

I second David Stewart on the subject of making sure that there are adequate resources and funds available for training across the sector, which is a very important aim. As someone who is not a permanent member of the committee, I am wondering whether the wider issue that we are trying to get at is ensuring consistency in the quality of the training opportunities that are delivered across the sector, irrespective of whether a service is provided by a local authority or is procured through the third sector. If that is the desired aim, perhaps amendment 121 is not the way to achieve it, although it raises an important issue. I will listen to the rest of the debate carefully.

Emma Harper

I will respond on amendment 122. I find it interesting that we might require registered nurses who have no affiliation with a care home to come in and decide how a staffing method would be used or implemented. As Bob Doris said in making the point on palliative care, there are many experienced people across a wide range of care home settings who are able to provide that support and care.

Some of the care homes in my area have only eight beds, while others have 50-odd beds. There is a wide variety of care delivery and we should not be prescriptive or inflexible given that we are trying to collaborate in health and social care integration, taking a multidisciplinary team approach. In my area, great work is being done by paramedics, too.

The Convener

I call Miles Harper to wind up. [Laughter.]

Miles Briggs

That is a first.

Emma Harper

What a combo!

The Convener

I am sorry—I meant Miles Briggs. It has been a long morning.

Miles Briggs

Thank you, convener—for trying to put me off.

I have heard the points that have been made on the amendments in my name. Amendment 118 was looking to where there is a lack of consistent data on the quality of care. We should be collaborating with the sector so that we can move that forward at stage 3. The polling of professionals is important and I have had conversations with the cabinet secretary on that point. It is another area where we can make progress at stage 3.

Amendment 121, in the name of David Stewart, is important, as are the points that it raises. When the bill is passed, there will be costs that the sector will have to meet. It is not clear how that will be done in relation to either private or publicly funded care home places.

There is an opportunity at stage 3 to bring all those aspects together and I hope that we can achieve that on a cross-party basis.

Amendment 117, by agreement, withdrawn.

Amendment 118 not moved.

Amendments 72 to 74 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Amendment 119 not moved.

Amendment 75 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Miles Briggs

I will not move amendment 120 on the understanding that we will return to the issue at stage 3.

Amendment 120 not moved.

The Convener

Amendment 121 has already been debated with amendment 117.

David Stewart

I agree with the points that were made by Miles Briggs and, in order to have an improved amendment at stage 3, I will not move amendment 121 now.

Amendment 121 not moved.

11:30  

Amendments 76 to 78 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Miles Briggs

On the understanding that we will have another opportunity to improve matters at stage 3, I will not move amendment 122.

Amendment 122 not moved.

Amendment 79 moved—[Jeane Freeman].

Amendment 79A moved—[Monica Lennon]—and agreed to.

Amendment 79, as amended, agreed to.

Alison Johnstone

I believe that, in a truly integrated health and care sector, we should not commission places solely for one part of that sector. I believe that clinical care is often essential to the person-centred care that we all seek, so I do not think that it is an either/or situation. Given what colleagues and the cabinet secretary have said, I will not move amendment 125, but I look forward to working with colleagues on an amendment that can be lodged at stage 3.

Amendment 125 not moved.

Section 10, as amended, agreed to.

Sections 11 to 14 agreed to.

Long title agreed to.

The Convener

Thank you very much, colleagues. That ends stage 2 consideration of the bill. I thank the cabinet secretary and her officials, as well as the members who joined us for that item.

We will consider the rest of our business in private.

11:32 Meeting continued in private until 11:40.  

5 February 2019

Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill with Stage 2 amendments

Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill printing changes after the Bill as amended at Stage 2

Additional related information from the Scottish Government on the Bill

More information on the powers the Scottish Parliament is giving Scottish Ministers to make secondary legislation related to this Bill (Supplementary Delegated Powers Memorandum)

Stage 3 - Final amendments and vote

MSPs can propose further changes to the Bill and then vote on each of these. Finally, they vote on whether the Bill should become law

Scottish Parliament research on the discussion of the Bill

Debate on the proposed amendments

MSPs get the chance to present their proposed amendments to the Chamber. They vote on whether each amendment should be added to the Bill.

Documents with the amendments considered at this meeting held on 2 May 2019:

Video Thumbnail Preview PNG

Debate on proposed amendments transcript

The Presiding Officer (Ken Macintosh)

The next item of business is stage 3 of the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill. For dealing with amendments, members should have the bill as amended at stage 2, the marshalled list and the groupings of amendments.

The division bell will sound and proceedings will be suspended for five minutes before the first division, and the period of voting for the first division will be 30 seconds. Thereafter, I will allow a voting period of one minute for the first division after a debate. Members who wish to speak in the debate on a group of amendments should press their request-to-speak buttons as soon as possible after I call the group.

Section 1—Guiding principles for health and care staffing

The Presiding Officer

Members should refer to the marshalled list. Amendment 1, in the name of the cabinet secretary, is grouped with amendments 42 and 2 to 4.

The Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport (Jeane Freeman)

I will speak to my amendments on the bill’s guiding principles.

Amendments 1 and 3 relate to amendments that were lodged by Alex Cole-Hamilton at stage 2. The duty to ensure appropriate staffing in proposed new section 12IA of the National Health Service (Scotland) Act 1978 sets out that

“every Health Board and the Agency”

have the duty

“to ensure at all times that suitably qualified and competent individuals ... are working in such numbers as are appropriate”

to ensure

“the health, wellbeing and safety of patients and ... the provision of safe and high-quality health care”.

In part 3 of the bill, there is an equivalent duty for

“any person who provides a care service”.

Sections 2 and 3 of the bill set out that every health board, in complying with proposed new section 12IA, and any person who provides a care service, in complying with section 6

“must have regard to the guiding principles”.

As such, the principles and general duty are intrinsically linked. Those who must follow the general duty must also have regard to the guiding principles.

As the bill is worded currently, a health board will be legally required to do the same thing twice. I want to avoid confusion for the people who are expected to understand and carry out the duties that are set out in the bill, so I gently suggest that we do not need to triplicate legal duties in order for them to take effect. I therefore ask members to support my amendments that aim to correct that matter.

Amendment 2 is a technical amendment that aims to correct section 1(1)(b) so that it refers to “those main purposes”, rather than to “the main purpose”. That will show that there are two main purposes of staffing for health and care services, following Monica Lennon’s insertion at stage 2 of section 1(1)(a)(ii), which refers to ensuring

“the best health care outcomes for service users.”

Amendment 4 is a technical amendment that clarifies that the definition of standards and outcomes for service users in section 10H of the 1978 act refers specifically to section 10H(1). That would be consistent with the specific reference to section 10H(1) in section 12IB(2)(b). I welcome Monica Lennon’s amendment 42.

I move amendment 1.

Monica Lennon (Central Scotland) (Lab)

Amendment 42 seeks to clarify that one of the main purposes of health service staffing is to ensure the best health and care outcomes for service users. The aim of my amendments at stage 2 was to ensure that the guiding principles placed the necessary focus on achieving the best outcomes for service users, which is a position on which I am sure we can all agree. I have welcomed the further discussions that have taken place to enhance that principle. Amendment 42 will ensure that all health and care service providers, including, for example, housing support services, are taken into account.

Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD)

I am grateful to the Scottish Government for meeting me after stage 2 to clarify the points that have been made. I signal the support of the Liberal Democrats for the amendments in the group.

Amendment 1 agreed to.

Amendment 42 moved—[Monica Lennon]—and agreed to.

Amendments 2 to 4 moved—[Jean Freeman]—and agreed to.

Section 3—Guiding principles in care service staffing and planning

The Presiding Officer

Group 2 is on commissioning of care services. Amendment 5, in the name of the cabinet secretary, is grouped with amendments 43 and 44.

Jeane Freeman

Section 3(1) imposes a duty on care service providers to

“have regard to the guiding principles”

when they carry out the duty in section 6. Section 3(2) is about the planning and commissioning aspects, and relates to when arrangements are being secured to allow a care service to be delivered operationally by another person. The guiding principles already apply, given that commissioners need to have regard to the principles under section 3(2)(a). Amendment 5 clarifies that commissioners are also obliged to have regard to the fact that care service providers need to take the guiding principles into account.

14:30  

With that in mind, I ask members to support amendment 5, which will correct the bill. I believe that the amendment provides the clarity that is needed to assist the people who need to understand and implement the legislation.

I am also happy to support David Stewart’s amendments 43 and 44.

I move amendment 5.

David Stewart

At stage 1, the committee heard from groups in the social care sector that were concerned that the bill places all its focus on care providers and does not adequately recognise the impact that commissioning decisions on funding resources have on staffing levels. I therefore lodged a stage 2 amendment seeking to place a duty on commissioners of care to ensure that providers are given appropriate resources under contract. That would have required them to take into account some of the factors that providers have to consider when setting staffing levels.

Following the raising of some concerns by the Government and local authorities, I agreed to further discussions on how the same principles could be agreed. The products of the discussions are amendments 43 and 44.

Amendment 43 would require local authorities and integration authorities to satisfy themselves, prior to agreeing a contract for care, that the contract for financial agreement will give providers

“adequate resources for the provision of ... appropriate”

staffing levels. In doing so, they will have to consider for themselves the same factors that care service providers are required to take into account under the duty that will be placed on them by section 6.

Amendment 43 also includes provision for local authorities and integration authorities, when determining whether providers are to be given adequate resources, to determine what the impact of entering the contract would be on the totality of resources—namely, the impact on the resources that would be available for other services.

It is my understanding that the provisions would mean that no local authority or integration authority should enter a contract or financial arrangement for provision of the care service when it believes that such an arrangement would leave it short of resources for delivery of other services for which it is responsible.

The draft of amendment 43 came from the Government. Therefore, before I move it, I ask the cabinet secretary what she understands the effect of the amendment will be.

Jeane Freeman

Local authorities should consider proposed new sections 3(2B)(a) and 3(2B)(b) when planning or securing the provision of a care services.

Proposed new section 3(2B) would require local authorities, when determining what constitutes “adequate resources” under proposed new section 3(2A), to have regard to

“the factors listed in section 6(2)(a) to (e)”

of the bill, and to have regard to

“the effect of securing the contract, agreement or arrangements on the resources available for the provision of all other services (including care services) for which the local authority ... is responsible.“

That consideration would happen before finalising any contract, and the provision will not prohibit the local authority from entering into a particular contract. Both parties will enter into the contract having agreed the terms and conditions of that contract.

We have all recognised the complexity and difficulty of finding a suitable provision on this issue. Should Mr Stewart, on reflection, believe that amendment 43 does not offer the improvement that he is seeking, I will not object if he seeks to withdraw it. That said, I wish to draw members’ attention to the fact that the bill still provides that commissioners must have regard to the guiding principles and duties that the bill places on providers in their planning and commissioning of services.

The Presiding Officer

Mr Stewart, would you like to come back in? It is unusual, but you may.

David Stewart

I thank the cabinet secretary for her answer. Under the bill, commissioners must have regard to the duties on care providers. I am reluctant to see that being undermined. With permission, Presiding Officer, I seek to withdraw amendments 43 and 44.

The Presiding Officer

The amendments have not been moved, so there is no need to withdraw them. However, the point is noted.

I say to members that the way in which groups are normally managed, the person who moves the first amendment in the group gets the chance to speak. Other members then get one chance to speak on their amendments in the group, if any, and to all the other amendments in the group. The mover of the first amendment then gets to conclude. I am afraid that it is therefore not possible to have interaction such as we have just seen unless the cabinet secretary or somebody else requests to speak. However, I am flexible, so it was fine in this case.

I am just explaining the rules to make sure that you all know them.

I turn to—[Interruption.]

The Presiding Officer

I call the cabinet secretary to indicate whether she wishes to press or to seek to withdraw amendment 5.

Jeane Freeman

I will press amendment 5.

The Presiding Officer

I have officials to keep me straight on the rules, too—as is quite clear.

Amendment 5 agreed to.

Amendments 43 and 44 not moved.

The Presiding Officer

Group 3 is on reporting on staffing by care services. Amendment 6, in the name of the cabinet secretary, is grouped with amendments 45, 46, 39 and 39A to 39D. If amendment 6 is agreed to, I cannot call amendments 45 and 46, due to pre-emption.

Jeane Freeman

I was pleased to have the support of all parties at stage 2 for effective reporting on the progress of our staffing approach. Effective planning of staffing will feed into and support workforce planning at local and national levels. I particularly welcome Monica Lennon’s focus on ensuring transparency around the challenges that will be faced when carrying out the duties in the bill.

Amendment 39 will insert in part 3 of the bill a new section that will place a duty on ministers to publish an annual report on staffing levels in care services, particularly on the numbers of specific health professionals working in such services.

I am pleased to support amendments 45, 46, 39A, 39C and 39D in Monica Lennon’s name, and 39B in Alison Johnstone’s name.

I note that amendment 46 would remove subsections (7) to (9) from section 3. On that basis, I am content that the reporting duty on local and integration authorities in section 3(6) remain in the bill. Therefore, when we have concluded the debate on this group of amendments, I will not press amendment 6, which is in my name. I move it now merely in order that we can get into that debate.

I move amendment 6.

The Presiding Officer

The cabinet secretary has moved amendment 6, so I will ask her to seek to withdraw it later.

I call Monica Lennon to speak to amendment 45 and the other amendments in group 3.

Monica Lennon

Just keep me right, Presiding Officer.

At stage 2, I lodged amendments with the aim of establishing reporting requirements on local authorities in relation to the duties that the bill will place on them as commissioners of care. The amendments were intended to aid scrutiny of the new duties on staffing levels that the bill creates.

The cabinet secretary’s amendment 6 would move reporting duties on care service staffing levels into part 3 of the bill.

I welcome amendment 39 and the clarity that it gives on where information on care service staffing levels can be found. However, I remain of the opinion that some reporting should be required of local authorities and integration authorities because the bill still places specific duties on them. Therefore, I ask members not to support amendment 6, which is in the cabinet secretary’s name, and instead to consider my amendments 45 and 46.

Amendment 46 will clarify that local authorities need make available only information on how they have complied with their duties publicly. That recognises that local authorities are accountable to their local electorates.

Amendment 45 will remove the reporting duties on ministers covered by the cabinet secretary’s amendment 5; it will also remove detailed outcomes from reports, because that might not always be possible through commissioning structures.

I have lodged a number of other amendments that aim to strengthen amendment 39. Amendments 39A and 39D would ensure that the discharge of staff training requirements on providers under section 7 are also included in Scottish ministers’ reports. That is important because future staffing tools that are mandated for use by Scottish ministers are likely to come with additional training requirements, so their implementation should be captured in staffing reports.

At stage 2, the cabinet secretary made it clear that, given current commissioning structures, Scottish ministers do not directly contract with care providers and therefore cannot directly provide private providers with certain funding. Despite that unsatisfactory position, the cabinet secretary also stated at stage 2 that the Scottish Government has policy approaches that come with financial commitments; for example, the living wage. In such instances, it is a matter for the Scottish Government and those who are in receipt of funding, such as local authorities, between them to decide whether the money is correctly passed on.

Amendment 39C would require ministers’ reports to include information on the steps that they have taken to ensure that such money is passed on so that providers have access to funding to assist in discharging their duties under the bill.

I am grateful to the cabinet secretary for her comments and for providing clarity on amendment 6. I think that it was amendment 6. This is not straightforward, Presiding Officer.

I will be moving the amendments in my name.

Alison Johnstone (Lothian) (Green)

Amendment 39B would require the Scottish ministers to set out how the information that will be contained in its annual reporting on care services will inform future workforce planning. At stage 2, I lodged an amendment that aimed to ensure that the Government would consider all relevant information available to it when it commissions training places for people who work in the care sector. We know that care homes now care for people with more complex illnesses than was previously the case, including people who require palliative care, and that there is a need for specialist input on aspects of care including nutrition and hydration.

My stage 2 amendment sought to ensure that, in relation to the care sector, which is facing significant challenges, and particularly at this time of focus on integration, we give the same consideration to ensuring that there are appropriate staff as we do in relation to the national health service. I did not press that amendment at stage 2 because of members’ concerns that it was too prescriptive, but I know that we all agree that it is absolutely essential that we have appropriate and safe staffing levels in the care sector.

Importantly, amendment 39B will ensure that Scottish ministers take account of the reporting on staffing in care services that will be established by amendment 39 when

“determining the future supply of ... registered nurses”

and other health and care professionals.

I will vote for amendments 45 and 46, in the name of Monica Lennon, because I agree that it is still a worthwhile and useful endeavour for local authorities and integration authorities to publish the proposed information.

The Presiding Officer

I ask the cabinet secretary, having moved amendment 6 to allow debate on the group, to wind up on the group and to say whether she wants to press or withdraw the amendment.

Jeane Freeman

I will not press it.

Amendment 6, by agreement, withdrawn.

Amendments 45 and 46 moved—[Monica Lennon]—and agreed to.

Section 4—NHS duties in relation to staffing

The Presiding Officer

Group 4 is on the duty on health boards and care services to ensure appropriate staffing: staff wellbeing. Amendment 7, in the name of Alex Cole-Hamilton, is grouped with amendments 8, 9, 37 and 38.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

It gives me pleasure to speak to the amendments in my name in this group and in support of the other amendments in the group. At stage 2, I was gratified when members of the Health and Sport Committee agreed to amendments in my name that expanded the scope of the bill and the definitions of safety that are used in it. Unsurprisingly, the bill was first drafted with the safety of patients in mind, and that should be the starting point for any such legislation. However, during the stage 1 evidence, the committee was told a compelling story about a situation on a mental health ward when the Royal College of Nursing phoned the duty charge nurse one night to ask whether the ward was safely staffed and the charge nurse said, “We’re safe for the patients but not for us.” The point is that the ward operated on an attack-response basis and there was insufficient staffing that night to allow staff to protect each other if something occurred.

So it was that I, with the help of the RCN, drafted amendments to increase the consideration of the safety of staff in the bill, and those amendments were agreed to at stage 2. I am grateful to the Government for bringing to my attention potential problems in relation to the devolution settlement, in that the amendments that were agreed to at stage 2 strayed into health and safety at work legislation, which is of course reserved. Working with the Government, I have constructed amendments 7 and 9 in my name, which absolutely retain the meaning of the original stage 2 amendments but recognise the nuances of the devolution settlement.

I offer the support of the Liberal Democrats for the other amendments in the group.

I move amendment 7.

Jeane Freeman

I thank Mr Cole-Hamilton for taking the time to speak to me about the amendments that he inserted at stage 2. We share the view that the wellbeing of staff is of paramount importance, and I welcome his amendments 7, 9 and 37.

My amendments 8 and 38 are intended to remove the words “and services” from the general duties for health and care services. Those words were inserted at stage 2, but they are unnecessary as healthcare is already defined in proposed new section 12IG of the National Health Service (Scotland) Act 1978 as

“a service for or in connection with the prevention, diagnosis or treatment of illness”.

Further, the care service is already defined in section 9 as

“a service mentioned in section 47(1) of the Public Services Reform (Scotland) Act 2010”.

The words “and services” therefore create unnecessary duplication, so I ask members to support amendments 8 and 38.

Amendment 7 agreed to.

Amendment 8 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Amendment 9 moved—[Alex Cole-Hamilton]—and agreed to.

14:45  

The Presiding Officer

Group 5 is on the duty on health boards to ensure appropriate staffing: agency workers. Amendment 47, in the name of Anas Sarwar, is the only amendment in the group.

Anas Sarwar (Glasgow) (Lab)

What amendment 47 seeks to do is pretty clear from its wording; it seeks to ensure value for money for our health boards and NHS Scotland more widely. We have seen agency staff being paid whole-time equivalent salaries that are four times as much as we pay NHS staff. Amendment 47 would at least set the principle of a cap so that such payments do not go above 150 per cent of a whole-time equivalent NHS salary. It would leave protection for emergency situations in which health boards have to employ people from agencies at salaries above that rate, but it would also ensure that there is a responsibility to publish the reasons why that has happened, the number of occasions on which it has happened and what the trends behind that are. There would also be a ministerial responsibility to update on why those situations have occurred.

We have had very positive interaction with the Government since lodging a similar amendment at stage 2, which I did not press in order that we could have further interaction with the cabinet secretary. I am pleased with how that interaction has gone and I hope that, given that we have accepted all the Government’s suggested amendments to our amendment, the cabinet secretary will support amendment 47.

I move amendment 47.

Jeane Freeman

I am grateful to Mr Sarwar for working with me and my team since stage 2 on the amendment.

I am still of the belief that the bill as amended will drive the necessary changes in the way in which staffing decisions are made to reduce the use of agency staff. In developing and scrutinising the legislation, both the Government and Opposition members have considered the whole-system approach to staffing decisions. By that I mean that we have looked beyond the evidence-based staffing tools and methodologies and considered how decisions are taken at every level of the organisation.

There has also been a focus on how those decisions are fed back to the staff who have informed them. That is why I, Miles Briggs, David Stewart and others have put a significant amount of effort into working with our stakeholders to finalise the provisions on real-time assessment of staffing, escalation processes and appropriate clinical advice. It is that system of effective and informed governance that will drive the changes that we all wish to see. In ensuring that staffing decisions are taken based on workload and taking into account appropriate clinical evidence, we will move towards the appointment of a sustainable staffing establishment. It will also ensure that, if agency staff are used, that is as part of an appropriate risk-mitigation approach.

I absolutely appreciate the intention behind Mr Sarwar’s amendment 47 and I thank him again for taking the time to discuss it further with me. I think that there are some difficulties with the drafting of amendment 47 and that the requirements on boards could be considered to be ambiguous, but I believe that that can be clarified in the statutory guidance that will accompany the bill. In this instance, it is my view that the value of the intention outweighs those points of difficulty and I am therefore happy to support amendment 47.

Anas Sarwar

I welcome all the content of the cabinet secretary’s response. I think that we both have the exact same intention and therefore I welcome her support for my amendment.

Amendment 47 agreed to.

The Presiding Officer

Group 6 is on staffing assessment and risk escalation by health boards. Amendment 10, in the name of the cabinet secretary, is grouped with amendments 48 to 59, 11, 12, 60 to 62, 20 and 23.

Jeane Freeman

I welcome all the amendments in this group lodged by Mr Briggs and Mr Stewart and I thank them for their collaborative work on the provisions. I also thank the members of the escalation working group, who have put a significant amount of effort into ensuring that the provisions work for all staff groups and across our healthcare system.

My amendments are fairly technical in nature. Amendment 10 inserts the word “safe” into section 12IAA(2)(a)(ii) so that it is consistent with the wording in the general duty for health following the addition of that wording by Mr Cole-Hamilton at stage 2.

Amendment 11 inserts reference to the new paragraph added through David Stewart’s amendment 59 into the list of those staff members who must be notified of every decision made in relation to risk so that all those who have been involved in attempting to reach a decision on the mitigation of a risk under this section should be notified of the final decision reached and should have the opportunity to record disagreement with that decision if they wish.

Similarly, amendment 12 inserts reference to the new paragraph to section 12IAB(2)(d)(iv), so that those who have provided clinical advice in any part of the procedures put in place under the section should be notified of the decision reached and, again, should have the opportunity to record disagreement with that decision if they wish.

Amendment 20 amends section 12IE, which is entitled “Reporting on staffing”, to include reference to section 12IABA, on the duty to have arrangements to address severe and recurrent risks, inserted by David Stewart’s amendment 62; section 12IABB, on the duty to seek clinical advice on staffing, inserted by Mr Briggs’s amendment 63; section 12IAD, on the duty to ensure adequate time is given to clinical leaders, inserted by my amendment 18; and section 12IAE, on the duty to ensure appropriate staffing and training of staff, which was inserted at stage 2 by Ms Johnstone. That will ensure that health boards and the agency must include information on their compliance with those duties in the reports that they are to provide to ministers on an annual basis.

Finally, amendment 23 sets out that ministers can issue guidance under section 12IF on the new duty to have arrangements to address severe and recurrent risks imposed by the new section 12IABA.

I move amendment 10.

David Stewart

I thank the cabinet secretary for the very helpful meetings that we had about planning these amendments to make sure that we have a stronger bill.

The Royal College of Nursing, representatives of which I welcome to the gallery, made it clear from the start of the bill process that the bill will be effective only if it deals with how to manage day-to-day staffing levels, not just with setting expected staffing establishments. For that reason, I was glad to see the introduction of provisions on risk assessment and escalation by the Government at stage 2.

My amendments 48 to 51 and 53 to 60 make only minor changes to those successful provisions from stage 2. The purpose of the amendments is purely technical; they are aimed at strengthening the risk assessment and escalation processes that have been established. To that end, I will speak to the amendments according to their purpose rather than in chronological order.

Amendment 48 ensures that any risk assessment procedures include a method by which staff members may notify responsible individuals of possible risk, closing a potential gap in the procedures that currently exist.

Amendments 49, 53 and 54 alter the precise definition of the individuals and management structures involved in the process so that non-clinical managers who bear responsibility for staffing levels can be included in the procedures. That said, the role of clinical experience and advice in staffing decisions cannot be overlooked. It is therefore protected by amendments 55 and 57, which put a requirement on decision-making individuals in the structure to seek and have regard to clinical advice.

Amendments 56 and 58 empower the individuals involved to take decisions on how to mitigate any risk that is identified and escalated. Amendment 59 allows for the escalation of any risk up the management chain as far as necessary and potentially up to board level.

Amendment 60 ensures that there is an opportunity and process for individuals to request a review of a decision on risk, should they be concerned or dissatisfied by the final outcome. Risk assessment notification procedures are only of use if staff are aware of them and they can be utilised. For that reason, amendment 51 requires health boards to proactively encourage and enable staff to make use of the procedures. In the same vein, I can confirm that we support amendments 52 and 61, lodged by Miles Briggs, which similarly ensure that staff are equipped to use the procedures.

Finally, amendment 62 seeks not to alter, but to add to the provisions that are already in place. As important as real-time risk assessment and escalation are, it is crucial that they are not used purely for firefighting on the ground. Health boards and those who scrutinise them should be able to have an overview of the risks to their staffing levels, especially if those risks are substantial and likely to recur. Where there are long-standing vacancies across a number of key posts in our health service, day-to-day assessment and mitigation will not be satisfactory or sufficient.

Therefore, amendment 62 establishes a requirement for health boards to keep a record of the most significant and potentially recurring risks, as well as to put in place a plan for how those will be managed. The majority of health boards should already have a similar process in place for risks to staffing. Amendment 62 merely makes the requirement clear and should provide a mechanism for linking the situations staff have to deal with on the ground to higher-level monitoring and planning.

Miles Briggs (Lothian) (Con)

Amendment 52 relates to amendment 105, which I lodged at stage 2. However, unlike that amendment, amendment 52 takes account of the fact that only those individuals with lead professional responsibility will be responsible for carrying out the staffing assessment procedures and so it sets out that those individuals are to be given the training and resources necessary to carry them out.

Similarly, amendment 61 provides that individuals with lead professional responsibility and other senior decision-makers are to be given the training, time and resources necessary to carry out the risk escalation procedures detailed in section 12IAB. I ask members to support both amendments 52 and 61.

The Presiding Officer

As no other members wish to speak, I invite the cabinet secretary to wind up.

Jeane Freeman

I have nothing further to add, Presiding Officer.

Amendment 10 agreed to.

Amendments 48 to 51 moved—[David Stewart]—and agreed to.

Amendment 52 moved—[Miles Briggs]—and agreed to.

Amendments 53 to 59 moved—[David Stewart]—and agreed to.

Amendments 11 and 12 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

15:00  

Amendment 60 moved—[David Stewart]—and agreed to.

Amendment 61 moved—[Miles Briggs]—and agreed to.

Amendment 62 moved—[David Stewart]—and agreed to.

The Presiding Officer

Group 7 is on clinical role and advice in health board governance. Amendment 63, in the name of Miles Briggs, is grouped with amendments 18, 18A and 18B.

Miles Briggs

Amendment 63 is an alternative to amendment 123, on the role of the designated person, which I lodged and then withdrew at stage 2.

I have had a number of discussions with the cabinet secretary to agree an alternative approach to ensure that the bill captures the crucial role of clinical advice in relation to the decisions that are made by boards under the various duties that are placed on them by the bill.

Rather than requiring health boards to designate a person, amendment 63 seeks to put them under a duty to put in place arrangements to ensure that clinical advice is sought in relation to staffing decisions and any arrangements that they put in place in relation to staffing, such as the development of a risk escalation process under section 12IAB of the 1978 act, and to have regard to that advice.

When a board makes a staffing decision that goes against clinical advice, that must be noted, and those who provided the advice must be informed. Boards must also identify any risks that might arise as a result of that decision and take appropriate action to mitigate them.

Amendment 63 also provides for an internal reporting procedure, which is an important element in relation to board transparency and accountability. Senior clinical professionals would report to the members of the board at least quarterly on the extent to which—in their view—the board was complying with its duties under the bill. The inclusion of the phrase “at least” would allow them to submit reports to the board at any time if they felt that it was not meeting those duties. I ask members to support this alternative approach.

I move amendment 63.

Jeane Freeman

Again, I start by expressing my gratitude to Mr Briggs for working with me following the stage 2 proceedings. As he said, amendment 63 seeks to amend the bill by placing health boards under a duty to put in place arrangements to ensure that they seek clinical advice from senior clinical professionals, and to have regard to that advice in reaching any decision on staffing.

I agree with Mr Briggs on the importance of ensuring that the professional voice is heard. That is already woven throughout the bill, but I believe that amendment 63 strengthens the approach and is the appropriate way to ensure that health boards must seek that professional advice, while ensuring that the accountability for decisions remains with the board. I am therefore happy to support amendment 63.

Amendment 18 in my name will remove and replace proposed new section 12IAD of the 1978 act. I fully recognise the unique role of the senior charge nurse and agree that it is important that the role is protected. However, I do not believe that the existing wording of section 12IAD—which does not take account of the multidisciplinary teams or allow for flexibility with regard to the size of the team and the service delivery model—is the best way to achieve that.

It is not always appropriate to require health boards to make all senior charge nurses 100 per cent non-case load holding. One example of many would be on the Shetland Isles, where a number of community nursing teams are spread over the islands, with between two and eight members of staff in each. Two senior charge nurses currently provide clinical leadership across all those teams. As currently drafted, section 12IAD would not allow for that model and would require a senior nurse in each team to be 100 per cent non-case load holding. Each of those nurses would have to be backfilled. That approach is not sustainable and would not allow health boards to develop models of care that suit their local needs and their patients.

Because the definition of “caseload holding” is tied to the wider requirement to meet patient needs and not to the more specific requirement to provide direct patient care, I do not believe that it delivers the intention of ensuring that senior charge nurses have protected time to fulfil their clinical leadership role, and I imagine that it would be difficult for boards to identify senior nurses who were not required to meet patient needs. I am also aware of stakeholder concerns that a requirement for a fully non-case load holding senior nurse in every rostered location could have the unintended consequence of diverting resources away from other clinical team leaders.

For those reasons, it is essential that we replace the existing section 12IAD with a provision that works in all clinical settings. Therefore, I have worked with Ms Johnstone and stakeholders from a number of professional groups to develop an amendment that applies to not just senior charge nurses but whomever the appropriate clinical team leader is for a team of staff, be that a midwife, an allied health professional, a nurse or a doctor.

Amendment 18 seeks to recognise the unique roles and responsibilities of all clinical team leaders and to ensure that they receive adequate time to discharge their leadership responsibility and their other professional duties. It will provide flexibility for the appropriate amount of time to be allocated, depending on the local context, the size and nature of the team, and the healthcare setting. I ask members to support amendment 18.

I am content with Ms Johnstone’s amendments 18A and 18B to my amendment 18, and I welcome her support for it.

Alison Johnstone

Amendments 18A and 18B have come about as a result of discussions with the Royal College of Nursing, allied health professionals, the Royal College of Midwives and the Government.

At stage 2, as members heard, I was successful in amending the bill to ensure that senior charge nurses will have the time that they need to carry out their important clinical leadership roles. The results of a freedom of information request from the Royal College of Nursing to NHS boards show that, of the 911 whole-time equivalent senior charge nurses that were identified in September 2017, only 115 were non-case load holding. I listened to what the cabinet secretary said, and I am sure that she will agree that there are many occasions when it is entirely appropriate for senior charge nurses to be non-case load holding. We must ensure that that is the case when that is appropriate.

I am pleased that we now have a proposal that all healthcare professionals are content with, but I was happy to push my stage 2 amendment, because nurses make up 42 per cent of the NHS workforce. My new amendments have been welcomed by nurses, midwives and allied health professionals. They seek to make absolutely sure that all lead professionals will have sufficient time and the resources that they require to carry out their leadership role and that that role is fully recognised.

Amendment 18A seeks to amend amendment 18 to ensure that clinical leaders have the resources that they require, as well as the time, to satisfactorily discharge their leadership responsibilities. Similarly, amendment 18B seeks to clarify that clinical leaders need sufficient time to “lead” the delivery of healthcare because, arguably, all healthcare professionals and staff “contribute to” its delivery.

Amendment 63 agreed to.

The Presiding Officer

Group 8 is on the duty on health boards to ensure appropriate staffing: numbers and training of healthcare professionals. Amendment 13, in the name of Alison Johnstone, is grouped with amendments 15, 17 and 19.

Alison Johnstone

Proposed new section 12IAC of the 1978 act will ensure that enough student places are offered to train a workforce that will better ensure that we deliver the healthcare that will meet Scotland’s changing needs. Amendment 13 seeks to acknowledge that there are factors that are outwith the Scottish ministers’ control, but still requires them to take “all reasonable steps” to ensure that there are sufficient numbers of registered healthcare professionals.

Amendment 15 seeks to add a stipulation that the Scottish ministers must take into account variation in staffing needs that are caused by differences in geographical areas. The healthcare needs of rural populations often differ greatly from those of more urban communities. Our rural and island NHS boards face particular challenges around recruitment and retention, and amendment 15 will ensure that the Scottish ministers have regard to rural-specific issues in their determinations.

Amendment 17 seeks to clarify what is expected of the Scottish ministers in reporting to Parliament on the provisions in question and setting out the extent to which ministers’ compliance with the duty to comply with section 12IAC has enabled health boards to comply with their duty to ensure appropriate staffing under section 12IA.

Section 12IAE places a duty on NHS boards to ensure that employees receive the time to carry out continuing professional development. NHS governance standards already state that employers will give time to staff for CPD but, as we are all too well aware, that time is often lost because of the demands on staff and their time. Amendment 19 will ensure that employees will receive sufficient time and resources to undertake training, but it will allow health boards to take a reasonable approach in determining what is appropriate training and resourcing.

I move amendment 13.

Jeane Freeman

I welcome Ms Johnstone’s amendments, and I am grateful that we were able to work on them. In particular, I am pleased about the recognition of the open-ended nature of section 12IAE, which was inserted by her amendment at stage 2. Amendment 13 will ensure that health boards must ensure that appropriate time is provided for training, provided that continuity of staff and high-quality services are maintained. I offer my support for her amendments.

Amendment 13 agreed to.

The Presiding Officer

Group 9 is on the application of duties in the bill to special health boards. Amendment 14, in the name of the cabinet secretary, is grouped with amendments 16 and 24 to 35.

Jeane Freeman

New section 12IAC of the 1978 act, which places a duty on the Scottish ministers to ensure that sufficient numbers of staff are available to every geographical health board and the Common Services Agency to enable them to comply with the general duty, was inserted at stage 2 by Alison Johnstone. My amendments 14 and 16 will ensure that that duty also applies to clinical-facing special health boards, meaning the State Hospitals Board for Scotland, the Scottish Ambulance Service, NHS 24 and the national waiting times centre board.

Amendments 24 to 35 will ensure that the new sections that are being inserted through stage 3 amendments, along with new section 12IAE on the training of staff, will also apply to those special health boards.

I move amendment 14.

Amendment 14 agreed to.

Amendment 15 moved—[Alison Johnstone]—and agreed to.

Amendment 16 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Amendment 17 moved—[Alison Johnstone]—and agreed to.

Amendment 18 moved—[Jeane Freeman].

Amendments 18A and 18B moved—[Alison Johnstone]—and agreed to.

Amendment 18, as amended, agreed to.

15:15  

Amendment 19 moved—[Alison Johnstone]—and agreed to.

The Presiding Officer

Group 10 is on the duty to follow the common staffing method for healthcare. Amendment 64, in the name of Miles Briggs, is grouped with amendments 65 to 69, 21 and 22.

Miles Briggs

I have met the cabinet secretary to discuss the amendments that were made to the bill at stage 2, and her skills of persuasion have convinced me that further amendment of new section 12IB of the 1978 act is required to make it clear that setting the staffing establishment is not the only purpose of the common staffing method and to avoid any duplication that might cause confusion among those responsible for carrying out the method. I made it clear at stage 2 that it was never my intention to prevent the common staffing method from being used for other purposes, such as supporting the redesign of services.

With that in mind, amendments 64, 68 and 69 would remove new sections 12IB(1A) and 12IB(1B) of the 1978 act, which were placed in the bill by an amendment of mine at stage 2, and instead alter new section 12IB(2)(d) so that it states that, having followed the steps in the common staffing method, the health board is to decide “what changes (if any) are needed as a result to its staffing establishment, and to the way in which it provides health care.” A definition of the term “staffing establishment” is provided.

Amendment 65 clarifies that the measures for monitoring and improving the quality of healthcare that are published as standards and outcomes by the Scottish ministers under section 10H(1) of the 1978 act and that are to be taken account of as part of the common staffing method include any measures that are developed as part of a national care assurance framework.

Amendment 67 would make a minor change to the common staffing method. At stage 2, I lodged an amendment, which was agreed to by the committee, that added a new step in the common staffing method that requires health boards to take account of the experience of using the real-time assessment and risk escalation processes in new sections 12IAA and 12IAB of the 1978 act. It seems to me that the new linked duty in David Stewart’s amendment 62, which we have already debated, to have arrangements in place to address severe and recurrent risks, should also be included in that step in the common staffing method. Therefore, amendment 67 would add into the new step a reference to new section 12IABA.

I ask members to support all my amendments, and I move amendment 64.

David Stewart

I have only one minor amendment in the group. At stage 2, a number of additions and alterations were made to the bill in order to make explicit, and to protect, its multidisciplinary nature. Staff groups for which there is not yet a staffing tool had expressed concern that using the existing tools might draw resources away from other staff groups—an unintended consequence of not yet having multidisciplinary tools in place. At stage 2, therefore, I lodged an amendment that would require the impact on other staff groups to be taken into account in using the common staffing method to establish staffing levels.

Amendment 66 seeks only to alter the wording of that addition. The language of the bill refers to the tools that should be used for different types of “health care” rather than different types of professions, and amendment 66 would change the wording of my stage 2 addition to reflect that. The original purpose would remain the same: that the delivery of services for which a staffing tool did not yet exist should not be overlooked or understaffed by appropriate professionals so that statutory establishments could be met elsewhere.

Jeane Freeman

I am pleased to offer my full support to Mr Briggs’s amendments 64, 68 and 69.

Amendment 22 is consequential to Mr Briggs’s amendment 68 in that it amends the words “staffing levels” in new section 12IF of the 1978 act—“Ministerial guidance on staffing”—to “staffing establishment” for the purpose of consistency.

Amendment 21 is a technical amendment to clarify that guidance may cover a step in the common staffing method that was inserted at stage 2.

I support Mr Briggs’s amendments 65 and 67 and Mr Stewart’s amendment 66, which provide helpful clarifications of the common staffing method that is set out in new section 12IB of the 1978 act.

The Presiding Officer

As no other member wishes to speak to this group, I call Miles Briggs to wind up and to press or withdraw amendment 64.

Miles Briggs

I have nothing further to add, Presiding Officer.

I press amendment 64.

Amendment 64 agreed to.

Amendment 65 moved—[Miles Briggs]—and agreed to.

Amendment 66 moved—[David Stewart]—and agreed to.

Amendments 67 to 69 moved—[Miles Briggs]—and agreed to.

Amendments 20 to 23 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Section 5—Application of duties to certain Special Health Boards

Amendments 24 to 35 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Section 5A—Role of Healthcare Improvement Scotland in relation to staffing

The Presiding Officer

Amendment 36 is grouped with amendment 70.

Jeane Freeman

Amendment 36 is a technical amendment that adds to the list of duties, at new section 12IH of the 1978 act, that Healthcare Improvement Scotland “must monitor the discharge” of

“by every Health Board, relevant Special Health Board”

and the Common Services Agency. That will ensure that HIS will have oversight of the discharge by health boards of every aspect of the legislation. Having worked with Miles Briggs prior to today, I am also happy to support amendment 70, which is in his name.

I move amendment 36.

Miles Briggs

Since stage 2, I have had helpful discussions with the cabinet secretary around how Healthcare Improvement Scotland will review and develop staffing tools in the health service and what evidence and guidance it will take into account while doing so. I hope that amendment 70 reflects that and ensures that the development of staffing tools and methods continues to be based on the best available professional guidance and clinical evidence.

Therefore, I ask members to support amendment 70.

The Presiding Officer

As no other member wishes to speak to this group, does the cabinet secretary wish to add any comments in winding up?

Jeane Freeman

I have nothing further to add, Presiding Officer.

Amendment 36 agreed to.

Amendment 70 moved—[Miles Briggs]—and agreed to.

Section 6—Duty on care service providers to ensure appropriate staffing

Amendment 37 moved—[Alex Cole-Hamilton]—and agreed to.

Amendment 38 moved—[Jeane Freeman]—and agreed to.

Section 7—Training of staff

The Presiding Officer

Amendment 71, in the name of Monica Lennon, is grouped with amendments 72 to 78.

Monica Lennon

In February, the fair work convention’s report “Fair Work in Scotland’s Social Care Sector 2019” found that the social care sector is not consistently delivering fair work and that its ability to do so is hindered by the current funding and commissioning structures. We know that the bill will not produce the additional caring staff that Scotland needs, but Scottish Labour believes that improving conditions in the sector would be a key step to addressing the social care challenges that Scotland currently faces.

Section 7 requires care providers to provide their staff with appropriate training for their jobs and suitable assistance in completing that training, and those provisions are an encouraging recognition of the need to support care service workers better. The guiding principles of staffing in section 1 contain the provision that staffing should

“be arranged while ... ensuring the wellbeing of staff”.

Amendments 71 to 78 in my name would add to those provisions along fair work principles. The bill does not contain any definition of “wellbeing”, but I would argue that my amendments go some way towards defining the standards required by wellbeing, as they would see care service workers properly reimbursed for costs that are incurred through the course of their work, be they uniform and clothing costs, travel costs for journeys between service visits, fees for necessary professional registrations or the costs of any training that workers must undergo. It is not acceptable that staff are still required to pay out of their own pocket for such items.

Amendment 75 would place on a statutory footing the Scottish Government’s current policy commitment to care service workers being paid a living wage, while amendment 77 defines such a living wage using language that is lifted straight out of the Scottish Government’s own Procurement Reform (Scotland) Act 2014. Amendment 76 and consequential amendment 78 would ensure that care service workers are given contracts with clearly defined hours, which would give them the security that a zero-hours contract could never offer.

The bill acknowledges that staffing is central to the delivery of “safe and high-quality” health and care services, and amendments 71 to 78 are in line with that principle. The social care that service users want and need cannot be delivered by staff who are overworked, stressed, struggling to get by and at risk of burn-out, and I know that the cabinet secretary understands and, indeed, agrees with that sentiment. I believe that the amendments would give Scottish workers in care services a guarantee of fair work.

Since I lodged the amendments last week, a number of organisations have expressed to me and colleagues their view that such standards should definitely be in place. However, I have appreciated the opportunity to talk to the cabinet secretary and her officials about these amendments, and I have taken on board their concerns that some of them fall outside the Parliament’s legislative competence. Moreover, the cabinet secretary has, in our discussions, confirmed that she is supportive of the principle that the amendments aim to meet, and I know that many others in the chamber concur with that view. I am not clear as to how my amendments substantially differ from the apparent workers’ rights provisions in sections 1 and 7, but I acknowledge the Scottish Government’s concern, and I do not want the debate to become about setting one legal opinion against another, given that there is so much in the bill that we can support and, indeed, which we have already supported.

The cabinet secretary has indicated to me that, as an alternative, she will ensure that guidance accompanying the bill will make clear that these fair work standards are to be followed in the delivery of care services. If the cabinet secretary is willing to make a clear commitment to the chamber today with regard to these standards and to producing alongside the bill guidance that follows these fair work practices in care commissioning and delivery, I will be content not to move my amendments. [Interruption.]

I was not sure whether the cabinet secretary was going to come in at that point. If I have her commitment, I will not press—

The Presiding Officer

I suggest that Monica Lennon move amendment 71. If, in her response, the cabinet secretary agrees with the member, she can withdraw her amendment then.

Monica Lennon

I am happy to do so. I move amendment 71.

Alex Cole-Hamilton

Colleagues will remember the case of my constituent George Ballantyne, who spent 150 nights in Liberton hospital after he was declared fit to go home. That was partly due to a deficiency in the availability of social care provision in Edinburgh. There is a crisis in social care in the nation’s capital and I am therefore compelled by Monica Lennon’s arguments. We need to do more to recognise fair work in the social care sector, and we need to make the profession attractive to people right from the early days of primary school so that they can direct their careers that way. Unless we start to make these kinds of changes, we will reap the whirlwind of that crisis in our social care sector.

As I have said, I am happy to support Monica Lennon’s amendments, but if she does not press amendment 71 or move the other amendments in the group, I, too, want the cabinet secretary to make a commitment to addressing this issue in guidance backing the bill.

Jeane Freeman

I welcome the intention behind Monica Lennon’s amendments. As a Government, we have done what we can within the powers that we have to encourage every organisation, regardless of size, sector or location, to ensure that all staff receive a fair level of pay and, where possible, to pay the real living wage. We are committed to fair work. Payment of the real living wage and becoming accredited can make a difference to the lives of people working in Scotland; it benefits the economy and sends a positive signal to the wider community. I completely accept that it is also an important factor in the recruitment and retention of staff in this important sector.

15:30  

We have condemned and continue to condemn exploitative business practice and, as members are aware, our fair work action plan, which was developed with the Scottish Trades Union Congress, was published in February this year.

However, for as long as employment law remains reserved to the United Kingdom Parliament, the next steps that many of us in the chamber would want to take are restricted. That means that Ms Lennon’s amendments are strictly outwith the competence of this Parliament. Nonetheless, we have demonstrated that, regardless of that barrier, we will push for changes.

I am grateful to Ms Lennon not only for lodging her amendments but for indicating her intention not to press them, provided that the assurance that I can give her is satisfactory. I believe that, if the amendments were passed, it would be inevitable that the entire piece of legislation would be referred to the UK Supreme Court because we would have strayed into reserved areas. I know that no one in the chamber who supports what the bill intends to achieve for our staff in health and social care would wish for that to happen.

I am more than content to offer Ms Lennon the assurance that the fair work principles that are set out in her amendments will be included in the guidance that supports the implementation of the bill. I will return to the Health and Sport Committee with the draft guidance to consult it on this and other matters relating to the guidance. I hope that that assurance is enough for Ms Lennon and I urge her not to press her amendments but to work with me when we are constructing the guidance.

The Presiding Officer

As no other members wish to speak, I ask Monica Lennon to wind up.

Monica Lennon

I thank Alex Cole-Hamilton and the Scottish Liberal Democrats for their support on this matter. Indeed, I think that there has been support across the chamber.

Building on the constructive talks that I have had with the cabinet secretary and the remarks that she has just made, I welcome her strong commitment and strong assurance and I look forward to the guidance coming before the Health and Sport Committee. I am sure that colleagues on the committee will do a good job of ensuring that the guidance fully takes on board the points that were made in the amendments and I appreciate the cabinet secretary’s commitment on that.

Amendment 71, by agreement, withdrawn.

Amendments 72 to 78 not moved.

After section 7

Amendment 39 moved—[Jeane Freeman].

Amendment 39A moved—[Monica Lennon]—and agreed to.

Amendment 39B moved—[Alison Johnstone]—and agreed to.

Amendments 39C and 39D moved—[Monica Lennon]—and agreed to.

Amendment 39, as amended, agreed to.

Section 10—Functions of SCSWIS in relation to staffing methods

The Presiding Officer

Group 13 is on staffing methods for care services. Amendment 79, in the name of David Stewart, is grouped with amendments 80 to 82, 40 and 41.

David Stewart

The amendments all relate to the staffing tools that might be developed for the care sector. Amendments 80 to 82, which Miles Briggs lodged, would ensure that professional and clinical guidance, as well as any accepted care indicators, could be taken into account in the development of such tools. That seems sensible and appropriate.

Amendment 79, which is in my name, would establish parity with health services under part 2. As we have discussed, it is crucial in health services that risks to staffing levels can be identified, appropriately escalated and mitigated. The same point applies to social care services.

I recognise that, unlike the health service, the social care sector is made up of a range of providers whose size and services vary. For that reason, it would be inappropriate to set out in primary legislation precise procedures on staffing risk for all providers to establish and follow, as has been done for the health service in part 2. The different staff and management structures across the care sector make it unlikely that it would be possible to craft even a general process that worked for everyone.

Amendment 79 includes the option to build risk management guidance into staffing tools that are developed for care services. Importantly, the amendment would allow flexibility in how risk management procedures were developed for different care services.

I move amendment 79.

Miles Briggs

Amendment 80 relates to my stage 2 amendment 122, which I did not move. As with staffing methods in health services, it is crucial for the professional voice to be at the core of staffing methods in care services. To recognise the diversity of the staff groups that provide care, amendment 80 sets out that a staffing method that is recommended for use by care service providers may take account of

“recommendations of senior care sector or health care professionals with qualifications and experience that are appropriate to the care services in question”.

As staffing methods are developed, that will ensure that consideration is given to who is best placed—be that a nurse, a care worker or an allied health professional—to provide advice on staffing decisions that are based on the method.

Amendments 81 and 82 relate to my stage 2 amendments 117 and 120. Given that not all care providers provide clinical care, it would not be appropriate to have clinical quality indicators for all care services. It is important to remember that the care setting is often someone’s home. Amendment 81 therefore provides that any staffing method that is developed and recommended for use in care services may take into account

“such indicators or measures relating to the quality of care as”

the Care Inspectorate

“considers appropriate”.

My amendment 70 provided that, in developing new or revised staffing tools for health settings, Healthcare Improvement Scotland must have regard to relevant evidence and professional guidance. Amendment 82 would create a parallel provision on the care side, so that the Care Inspectorate should also consider, when developing new staffing methods for care services in collaboration with stakeholders, whether appropriate evidence and professional guidance should be included in the method.

I ask members to support my amendments.

Jeane Freeman

I thank David Stewart and Miles Briggs for working with me following stage 2 to produce their amendments as alternatives. I am happy to support amendment 79, in Mr Stewart’s name, and amendments 80 to 82, in Miles Briggs’s name.

Amendment 40 was lodged to introduce a regulation-making power to allow ministers to amend the list, in section 82A(5) of the Public Services Reform (Scotland) Act 2010, of what a staffing method for care services may include at the Care Inspectorate’s discretion. Amendment 41 was lodged to make that power subject to the affirmative procedure.

It would be inappropriate to specify absolute requirements for the development of staffing tools and methodologies for the care sector. Such tools and methodologies have not yet been developed, and I have consistently given the care sector the commitment that they will be developed by and for the sector. It should be up to those who are involved in developing methods to determine their content.

Amendment 40 was lodged to ensure that flexibility was maintained. I am pleased that, following our discussions at stage 2, members agree that flexibility is important and have not sought to be overly prescriptive in what must be included in a staffing methodology for the care sector. As I have already let the Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee know, I therefore intend not to move amendments 40 and 41, as they are no longer required.

Amendment 79 agreed to.

Amendments 80 to 82 moved—[Miles Briggs]—and agreed to.

Amendment 40 not moved.

Section 11—Care services: consequential amendments

Amendment 41 not moved.

The Presiding Officer

That ends consideration of amendments.

As members will be aware, I am required by standing orders to decide at this stage whether in my view any provision of the bill relates to a protected subject matter—that is, whether the bill affects the franchise for Scottish parliamentary elections. It is my view that the bill does not and therefore does not require a supermajority at stage 3. I know that Mr Swinney is fascinated to hear that.

Members will be delighted to hear that we have made very rapid progress through the bill. I will consult business managers and we will almost certainly move to bring forward decision time. We will suspend briefly before we resume for the stage 3 debate.

15:42 Meeting suspended.  

 

 

 

 

15:52 On resuming—  

2 May 2019

Final debate on the Bill

Once they've debated the amendments, the MSPs discuss the final version of the Bill.

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Final debate transcript

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Linda Fabiani)

The next item of business is a debate on motion S5M-17127, in the name of Jeane Freeman, on stage 3 of the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill. I ask those who wish to speak in the debate to press their request-to-speak buttons.

The Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport (Jeane Freeman)

The bill will put into legislation a system-wide approach to supporting and empowering staff across the health and care system to assess and respond to the workload associated with the delivery of high-quality patient care. I start the debate by thanking the organisations and members across the chamber who have so constructively contributed to the development and improvement of such important legislation.

The Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill is grounded in, and builds on, the excellent approach to workload planning led by our nurses and midwives. This morning, I was fortunate to be at Forth Valley to see how that approach works to develop and improve safe care and quality care.

The development of the staffing methodology and specialty-specific tools has been innovative, evidence-based and, importantly, a professionally led approach. Scotland has led the way in developing those tools and methodologies for nursing and midwifery. Now we can become world leading by enshrining the approach in legislation and extending its core principles across our health and care system.

The legislation matters to our national health service and healthcare staff, but it also matters to patients and those who receive social care. We see the crucial link between safe staffing, the utilisation of the multiple skills of the multidisciplinary team and the quality and safety of the service received. It is a critical component of a safer healthcare system for the people of Scotland.

At the recent international forum on quality and safety in healthcare that was held in Glasgow, we welcomed leaders of healthcare systems from across the world. When we hear the head of Healthcare Denmark say,

“I have been following Scotland for the last ten years and have seen major changes and outstanding outcomes that we do not see anywhere else in the world at a system level”,

I think that our healthcare staff should be very proud of the work, effort and experience that they have applied to get us to this point.

When I opened the stage 1 debate, I talked about the opportunities that the bill offers us as a critical component in the safety and quality landscape. I very much appreciate the valuable work that the members of the Health and Sport Committee and health spokespeople from all parties have put into the bill at every stage. Although we may have disagreed at points, I know that we all had a shared intention: that the legislation should recognise the importance of dynamic workload assessment to inform professional judgment on skill mix, recognise the need to meet the demands of that workload and recognise the critical importance of the clinical and professional voice in all that. We all recognised the importance of an evidence-based approach, founded on the needs of the patient or service user, to contribute to our planning of the workforce locally and nationally.

I know that we all wanted legislation that would work for the whole system—across all health and care settings—and work for and be respectful of our key partners, be they professional bodies, local authorities or care providers. We agree that high-quality care is possible only when we recognise the importance of the multidisciplinary team and the valuable experience and expertise that each of the roles brings to that.

Together with Miles Briggs and David Stewart, we have made significant changes to the bill that set out that health boards must have in place clear processes to allow those on the front line to carry out real-time assessment of staffing needs and effectively mitigate risks.

The legislation will ensure that the voice of the professionals—be that the midwife and doctor on a busy labour ward, the nurse and the physiotherapist working together in the community, or the executive nurse or medical director at board level—will be heard and will influence staffing decisions. The legislation will promote a continuing culture of transparency and engagement with staff, helping to create and sustain the conditions that staff need to use their experience and expertise to drive continuous improvement in our health and care service, while always keeping the individual in receipt of that care at the centre of delivery.

Of course, a great deal more work is to come to ensure that the staffing method and tools for health settings are kept up to date with advances in the way that care is delivered, to develop the multidisciplinary tools and to work with and support the care sector and local authority, third sector and private care providers to take the core methodology and build an approach that works for them. There is learning from health that can be shared with the care sector in that regard; I am also sure that there will be learning from the care sector to share with health, which is exactly as it should be.

In passing the bill, I firmly believe that we will be supporting our health and care staff to meet the commitment that I know that they deliver on every single day; to apply their skills, expertise and compassion to deliver high-quality, safe care; and to find ways to improve how care is delivered, regardless of where it is delivered. I am very pleased to move the motion in my name.

I move,

That the Parliament agrees that the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill be passed.

15:58  

Miles Briggs (Lothian) (Con)

This may sound a bit like an Oscar awards speech. I thank a number of organisations and people who have helped, including my Scottish Conservative research team, the Royal College of Nursing Scotland, the Allied Health Professions Federation Scotland, the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities, Scottish Care and all those health professionals who have contacted me. I also thank the Health and Sport Committee team, the Scottish Parliament’s legislation team and the Scottish Government’s Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill team.

Scottish Conservatives believe that the most valuable resource in our national health service is its people, and we want the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill to do all that it can to help them with their lives and jobs. Therefore, the amendments that I lodged focused on several themes: a duty to seek clinical advice on staffing, improving real-time assessment and risk escalation procedures, and improving staffing methods for care services.

Scottish Conservatives believe that it is essential for the professional voice to be heard throughout the legislation, hence my amendment 63 on a duty to seek clinical advice on staffing. Now that that amendment has been agreed to, the professional voice will be heard in all areas of the bill, including the duty to ensure appropriate staffing, having arrangements in place to address severe and recurrent risks and ensuring that adequate time is given to NHS clinical leaders for the training that they need, with resources to enable that. The amendments will aid the bill’s whole-systems approach, which the cabinet secretary outlined. The bill needs to be as effective as possible, and ensuring that the professional voice is heard throughout it is a step forward in achieving that.

I also lodged amendments that looked to improve real-time assessment and risk escalation procedures. The amendments will ensure that staff with lead professional responsibility are trained and given sufficient time and resources to identify and mitigate risk. For other employees, the health board or agency will be under a duty to raise awareness of the escalation process and to encourage staff to identify and report risks that are caused by staffing inefficiencies. Real-time assessment is part of that.

Scottish Conservatives put forward numerous amendments that focused on staffing methods in care services. Throughout the Health and Sport Committee’s discussions and evidence gathering on the bill, it was clear that there are opportunities to develop tools in partnership with the care sector. That was an important part of how I wanted the bill to progress, so I am pleased that my amendments will ensure that the appropriate people and organisations are involved in developing tools in future.

During the Health and Sport Committee’s consideration of the bill, all members recognised that some care settings are people’s homes and that that requires a different focus and staffing complement. I am pleased that that has now been recognised, and I hope that we will see the progression of the tools as soon as possible, when guidance is brought forward. The bill provides the acute sector with opportunities now, and I hope that we progress the opportunities for the care sector as soon as possible.

As I said during the stage 1 debate,

“Scottish Conservatives recognise that our health and social care workforce faces a number of key challenges. With or without legislation, unless we urgently resolve the staff shortages across NHS Scotland, safe staffing levels will remain a dream instead of a reality.”—[Official Report, 6 December 2018; c 54.]

I hope that the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill will provide a critical contribution to driving the necessary improvements in cultural and organisational change that we need to meet the challenges and the expectations of health and social care staff across Scotland. We all agree on the principal objective of the bill, which is to provide improvements to deliver safe, effective and person-centred services and outcomes for people across Scotland. We now need the Scottish Government to ensure that it delivers that.

16:02  

Monica Lennon (Central Scotland) (Lab)

I congratulate the cabinet secretary and her officials, the Health and Sport Committee and the committee clerks, the legislation team and all the organisations that have put so much work into not just driving forward the bill but improving it. That is a great reflection on everyone. I also thank the many people in the public gallery who have followed the debate, particularly the Royal College of Nursing representatives.

Scottish Labour welcomes the bill as amended. It is vital that we have safe levels of health and social care staff, so we welcome all attempts to ensure that we get them. No one has claimed that the bill is a panacea. Our NHS workforce is working under serious pressure and workforce planning has been poor. Scotland’s fragile social care sector is facing a staffing and funding crisis. Scottish Labour continues to believe that the Scottish Government must urgently take action to address those on-going issues.

Alongside many stakeholders, Scottish Labour raised significant concerns about the bill at stage 1, so we are pleased that it has been substantially improved since then. I am pleased about the positive impact that Scottish Labour amendments will have for those working in the health and social care sector and ultimately for those who they care for.

It is important that NHS patients and people who are cared for by social care services are central to the bill. That belief is shared by staff, who commit their working lives to the health and wellbeing of others. My amendment 42 will ensure that the guiding principles of the bill focus on the outcomes for service users.

To have a positive impact, it is vital that workforce and workload planning are considered jointly. My amendments increase the public reporting requirements in the bill and, together with Alison Johnstone’s amendments, mean that the bill now takes into account workforce planning as well as workload planning.

I am glad that we have been successful in strengthening the links between the bill and national workforce planning.

On robust risk assessment and escalation procedures, David Stewart’s amendments will help to embed multidisciplinary principles into the planning of staffing levels. Anas Sarwar’s amendment 47 will ensure that, in principle, there will be a welcome cap on agency fees and that clearer information will be available on agency staff use.

Social care staff do valuable and rewarding work, but they often face difficult working conditions, with low pay and insecure work. My amendments 71 to 78 aimed to ensure that they would be paid at least the Scottish living wage, would have secure hours, would not be employed on zero-hours contracts, and would be reimbursed for travel, training and registration fees and uniform costs that are directly related to their work. I am pleased that the cabinet secretary agrees with me that social work terms and conditions must be drastically overhauled to improve the sustainability of the sector, and I am also pleased that they will now be included in guidance that will come before the committee.

Scottish Labour welcomes the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill and backs any opportunity to ensure safe staffing level for our vital health and care staff. The legislation is a step towards fixing the workforce crisis in our health and social care services, which sees staff being overworked and undervalued. However, I remain concerned that that crisis will not be resolved by the bill alone. In order to make real, sustainable change happen, our health and social care services need radical policy decisions that are backed up by investment.

16:06  

Alison Johnstone (Lothian) (Green)

I thank the numerous organisations that have provided briefings and support during stages 2 and 3 of the bill’s passage. I also thank members of the Royal College of Nursing, whose input during the process has been invaluable. As Monica Lennon said, representatives of the college are present in the gallery today. I also thank our allied health professionals and the Royal College of Midwives. Most important, however, is that I thank all the people who work in health and social care—from consultants to cleaners—for the work that they do every day.

Greens support the aims of the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill, and welcome the debate. As the Royal College of Nursing has said, it presents an opportunity to get the right number of staff, with the right skills, in the right place, so that patients and residents receive safe and effective care. There is a clear link between safe staffing levels and delivery of high-quality healthcare. A study by Anne Marie Rafferty, who is a professor of nursing policy, revealed that patients and nurses in hospitals in which there are favourable patient to nurse ratios had consistently better outcomes than those in hospitals with less favourable ratios.

Greens also support the guiding principles for health and care staffing, including respecting the dignity and rights of service users, ensuring the wellbeing of staff, and taking account of the views of staff and service users. We must do all that we can to support those who devote their working lives to caring for Scotland’s people. During the bill’s passage, we have carefully considered how the legislation will impact on them. That is key, because the evidence that has come from people who currently work in health and care services emphasises that the legislation is timely and necessary.

The RCN’s report “Safe and Effective Staffing: Nursing Against the Odds” revealed that 51 per cent of respondents reported a staffing shortfall in their previous shift, and 46 per cent said that they were not able to provide the quality of care that they would like to receive if they were patients.

Similarly, the British Medical Association conducted a survey of doctors, which showed that 62 per cent felt that rota gaps and lack of doctors were affecting their ability to deliver safe patient care.

In 2018, a report by Scottish Care revealed that 77 per cent of surveyed care homes had vacancies. Such stark figures stress that the protections that will be introduced by the bill will be vital to the delivery of safe and high-quality patient care.

We must continue to strive for real integration, and to give the care sector the attention that we give the NHS. Although they were either withdrawn or not moved, I welcomed Monica Lennon’s amendments 71 to 78, which aimed to improve conditions for people who work in the sector. They presented a welcome opportunity to raise important issues.

The most recent statistics show that 5.1 per cent of nursing and midwifery posts and 4.9 per cent of allied health professional posts are vacant. Although those figures represent an increase in staffing levels from the previous year, six territorial NHS boards reported a reduction in the number of qualified nursing and midwifery staff who were in post. There is also still considerable disparity between health boards that needs to be addressed.

As she did when she was Minister for Social Security, Jeane Freeman has worked hard to seek cross-party input and consensus, which I appreciate. We need a well-staffed NHS for patients and for the people who work in it. Workload and workforce are inextricably linked. Working in an overstretched and overstressful environment is not sustainable.

The bill alone will not create more health and care professionals. It will not address the fundamental shortages that are being experienced across the sector. However, it is a starting point. Work must continue in order that we ensure that Scotland has the health and care staff that it needs. I am certain, however, that the bill will play a key role in ensuring that our health and social care services are appropriately staffed, and that staff can deliver the best standards of patient care.

16:10  

Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD)

On the margins of this meeting, the cabinet secretary confided to me in private that she was looking for another consensus bill. I think that she has found it, so I congratulate her on her achievement. She worked very hard between stage 2 and stage 3 to reach accommodation on a range of tensions that existed at stage 2, which I think she has achieved.

I also pay tribute to Kirsty Williams, who is a Liberal Democrat member of the National Assembly for Wales who stewarded a similar bill through it. I leaned on her guidance in developing my understanding. I thank the clerks, the witnesses in the stage 1 process and, in particular, the members of the RCN, who started briefing members of our committee two and a half years ago on what they wanted to happen. I hope that they are pleased today. I thank Sarah Atherton, in particular. She is a friend and colleague of long standing, who was readily available to provide technical briefings on which we, as newcomers to aspects of this, relied heavily. I also thank the allied health professionals.

From the outset, it was clear that the bill needed to be slightly more than it was when it was originally drafted. It recognises the new strata in which we deliver health and social care. There is a multidisciplinary focus like never before. The integration of health and social care means that we need to think outside silos and to recognise that what applies to a clinical staff team might also apply to a social care staff team.

Alison Johnstone referred to the very scary survey of staff attitudes and beliefs, and to staff’s view that patient care had been compromised on their most recent shift. Obviously there will be a resource imperative, but the bill does something to give the staff the tools that they require to ensure that services are adequately staffed not just for the safety of patients, but for the safety of the staff cohort.

There is much about the bill that matters. It provides the facility to ensure that the voice of practitioners and nurses on the ground, who understand the wards that they occupy and their needs, is heard. Expertise matters in planning and understanding what a dynamic shift environment looks like. It is important to make sure that services are staffed accordingly, that there is planning for risk and that staff have faith in the process and faith that their views will be listened to. In normal times, that might be about ensuring that ideas from the grass roots about improving staffing are listened to, extrapolated from and taken forward across the NHS. At the more serious end of the spectrum, it is about ensuring that whistleblowers are treated well and dealt with appropriately.

The bill that we will pass into law today will mean that changes are felt in the quiet wards across the NHS, and in the noisy ones, too. Giving senior staff the time and space to get their heads around the planning and overview of the wards and areas of work in which they find themselves is one of the most significant and important changes that we are enacting. I congratulate Alison Johnstone on securing amendments on that. Those provisions will provide an important strategic overview, which will enhance staff safety and patient safety.

Allowing change to germinate from the grass roots works in any organisation: our NHS, social care structure and allied health professional structure are no different. The bill provides the opportunity for that to happen.

At first reading, it seemed that the bill was about a toolkit, but it is about so much more than that. It has been great to be part of its development, not least to hear about where it will take our workforce. More important, it has been a reminder of the importance and commitment of the workforce that it will serve. Those staff do so much for us; it is about time that we started doing something for them. In the pages of the bill, we achieve something of that.

The Deputy Presiding Officer

We move to the open debate, in which just one member will speak.

16:14  

Emma Harper (South Scotland) (SNP)

I have enjoyed working on the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill since joining the Health and Sport Committee. The aim of the bill, as set out in the policy memorandum, is

“to provide a statutory basis for the provision of appropriate staffing in health and care settings, thereby enabling safe and high quality care and improved outcomes for service users”

—and all patients. The policy memorandum states:

“Provision of high quality care requires the right people, in the right place, with the right skills at the right time to ensure the best health and care outcomes for service users and people experiencing care.”

I fully agree with that and I know that the amendments that were lodged by the Government and by members of parties across the Parliament will allow that aim to be achieved.

It is clear that members have engaged in a process that has achieved cross-party agreement. We discussed staffing tools, continuous professional development, issues around case-holding and non-case holding senior charge nurses, and many other issues related to acute and community care, and the requirement for a multidisciplinary team approach to providing appropriate health and care staffing.

I am pleased that amendments 18,18A and 18B were agreed at stage 2. We had wide-ranging debate in the committee at stage 2. The cabinet secretary provided an excellent example of team working from Shetland, which requires the local team to be case-holding. I want to offer another example of that: senior charge nurses often provide direct patient care in the perioperative environment. For example, when surgery is extended or complications occur, the experience or expertise of the senior charge nurse might be required to provide the immediate care assistance that is needed when someone’s belly is open on the operating table.

I would like to thank everyone who provided evidence to the committee—whether it was written or provided at evidence sessions. It was all well-informed, and it helped committee members to come to informed conclusions. I also commend the committee clerks and the Scottish Parliament information centre team. Miles Briggs has mentioned all the people who provided the committee with information. I, too, am grateful to all the organisations that provided briefings that helped to inform debate. I have had lots of phone calls and direct advice from the Royal College of Nursing, chief nursing officers from NHS Dumfries and Galloway and NHS Ayrshire and Arran, and representatives from Scottish Care.

I was a new MSP for South Scotland when the First Minister announced the Scottish Government’s intention to enshrine safe staffing in law at the Royal College of Nursing congress in Glasgow in 2016. I was so new that only about a month before that I had been providing direct patient care. My work as a nurse educator and as a perioperative nurse, with 30 years’ clinical experience in America, England and Scotland, has helped to inform my scrutiny of the bill at the committee stage.

When I started nursing 30 years ago, we still had Nightingale wards, with rows of beds on either side. That certainly had some positives, particularly in relation to staffing. However, there were also negatives, including there being no personal space or privacy. Curtains are not walls and every voice and noise is heard in multi-occupancy rooms. There is also greater risk of hospital-acquired infection.

The bill enables a rigorous evidence-based approach to decision making on safe and effective staffing. It takes account of the health and care needs of patients and service users, assists in exercising of professional judgment and promotes a safe environment for patients and staff. Scotland is leading the UK with our groundbreaking evidence-based approach to nursing and midwifery workload and workforce planning.

The bill also puts in place a framework to support the systematic identification of the workload that is needed to improve outcomes and to deliver high-quality care. In introducing the bill, the Scottish Government, aided by experts from across health and social care, has understood the workload that is generated in any given setting and circumstance and, therefore, the skills that are required and the staff mix that will provide them.

I thank again all those who provided evidence to the committee. I also thank all those who work in health and social care across Scotland: they do a fantastic job every day.

16:19  

David Stewart (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)

This has been an excellent—albeit short and snappy—debate. There have been a lot of insightful and well-informed speeches from across the chamber. I am impressed to see how many SNP back benchers are here, because I understand that last night was their Christmas party. [Interruption.] I am very impressed by their dedication in turning up. I understand that there was a run on paracetamol at the local shop, but I will not go there.

As a member of the Health and Sport Committee, I took an active part in the questioning of all our witnesses, who included the cabinet secretary. [Interruption.] I am being heckled by the Deputy Presiding Officer behind me. However, to paraphrase the conclusion of the committee’s stage 1 report, nobody can object to the bill’s guiding principles of having the right people with the right skills in the right place at the right time to ensure the highest quality of care.

As Monica Lennon made clear, Labour supports the general principles of the bill. However, as Alison Johnstone and Alex Cole-Hamilton made clear, there were some areas of concern. Nonetheless, I believe that the cross-party consensus on the amendments strengthened the bill. As I said earlier, I thank the cabinet secretary—I hope that that does not damage her career—for her consensual and helpful role in ensuring that we have amendments that work for everyone.

In response to the committee’s stage 1 report, the cabinet secretary said:

“This Bill is about workload planning not workforce planning.”

Scottish Labour believes that health and social care policy should be focused on achieving the best outcomes for people and protecting staff wellbeing. As COSLA has argued, overreliance in the past on bureaucratic box-ticking exercises has not been helpful. I hope that we can avoid that.

We should also learn lessons from history. As I have raised before, the Francis inquiry report into bullying and whistleblowing in NHS England concluded that losing trained talent from the NHS led to inadequate staffing levels and poor quality of care. As the cabinet secretary knows well, there will be a statement on Thursday, to which Monica Lennon and I will contribute. I am sure that the Francis report will be picked up by the current report that the cabinet secretary has set up.

I am conscious of time and the fact that people are anxious to get away. I believe that all members in the chamber recognise the commitment and dedication of our hard-working front-line staff.

To make just a small amendment to correct my earlier comments, I think that I said “Christmas party”. I was, of course, a little bit early for that. However, it was a party nevertheless. Don’t let anyone say that I never correct the record when I am wrong.

As David Oliver, a consultant in geriatrics, said recently in the BMJ,

“Without adequate staffing in clinical roles NHS performance will decline, and services will become unsustainable. Morale will worsen, and staff will leave or choose to do less—a vicious circle. The workforce is surely the most pressing existential threat.”

In the short time that I have available, I make the key point that we cannot legislate staff into existence. However, I believe that the cross-party consensus on amendments has strengthened and improved the bill, which is the nature of this place—to ensure that legislation becomes better. There are much bigger issues that I do not have time to comment on, such as demand forecasting for future planning; the management of predictive training for front-line staff; the effect of Brexit—which will, in my view, be disastrous for NHS employment; the effect that the bullying culture in some areas may have on retention; and the strong rural element, which someone from the Highlands and Islands would of course argue.

The amended bill is a step in the right direction and Labour will support it. As Nye Bevan, the founder of the NHS, said,

“The NHS will last as long as there’s folk with faith left to fight for it.”

16:23  

Brian Whittle (South Scotland) (Con)

I am pleased to close this important and consensual debate on behalf of the Scottish Conservatives.

On first considering a bill entitled the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill—originally called the safe staffing bill—I believe that most people would instinctively think it to be entirely sensible. Of course ensuring that there are appropriate numbers of suitably trained staff in place is an entirely reasonable objective. However, as we heard in the speeches from across the chamber today, and from scrutiny of the bill in the Health and Sport Committee, crucial questions were raised as the bill developed. For example, in setting appropriate numbers of staff, it is important that the term “appropriate staff”—as well as what actions will be taken if the appropriate staffing levels are not met—is properly defined and unambiguous, so that NHS boards and the care sector know exactly what they are working to. Given the multidisciplinary nature of healthcare teams, we need to ask whether the bill is drafted in such a way as to include all facets of healthcare.

The Health and Sport Committee took evidence and questioned the cabinet secretary on the need to develop workforce planning tools and how to address that need. The technology that would be required to implement the bill as intended is not yet available and the workforce planning tools do not currently include all healthcare professions and disciplines—the evidence suggested that they are limited to nursing and midwifery. The tools are currently bolted on to the payroll platform. When I questioned the cabinet secretary in committee, she said that the required technology was under consideration, including the further development of workforce planning tools and, potentially, a platform for them to sit on. I would be grateful if the cabinet secretary, when summing up, will confirm that.

The specification of the required tools and the integrity of the platform on which they will sit should have been scoped out at the outset of the bill and, without a properly considered and implemented technical solution, the bill risks falling short of its intentions. If all that is not considered, it is in danger of being no more than window dressing and adding to a lengthy list of non-actionable targets.

As Miles Briggs and his amendments made clear, there is a need to strengthen the reporting requirements on health boards to ensure proper scrutiny, especially given the call for clinical advice to be sought on staffing bills as a prerequisite.

Underpinning the debate is the issue of staff retention and recruitment, which has been raised by several members. The Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill cannot make the differences that are intended without the appropriate number of staff overall. It is obvious that the ability to ensure appropriate staffing at any one time will be impaired by a general shortage of staff. As David Stewart noted, the Royal College of Physicians stated that we

“cannot legislate doctors into existence.”

It is difficult to argue that the projected shortfall of doctors in Scotland will not have an impact on the potential of the bill.

Outcomes were mentioned by the cabinet secretary. In general, we are looking for improved services for patients and improved quality of working environments and improved work-life balance for NHS and care staff. That is why I was pleased to see Alison Johnstone’s amendment .

We spoke in committee about the importance of time for CPD for front-line staff. Without that, the implementation of the bill will not happen. We have always stated that looking after the health of our healthcare professionals is important in delivering a quality healthcare service, as it impacts absenteeism and staff retention.

The Scottish Conservatives will support the bill, but it should not be seen as a panacea. Its success will rely on progress being made in other areas, especially the swift development of appropriate technology and data analysis, the need to give professionals a strong voice in the staffing process and tackling the not insignificant challenges of retention and recruitment.

16:28  

Jeane Freeman

I thank members for their contributions to the debate. I am glad that Mr Stewart corrected the record, but members on the SNP benches are always up for a wee party, so I am sure that we will have had more than one.

I also thank David Stewart for making the important point that our role as parliamentarians in the chamber is to make the best laws that we can and to make legislation that is appropriate for the needs of our country. With this bill, that is exactly what we are doing.

As I said when I opened the debate, I am immensely proud of the work that is carried out by our health and care staff to ensure not just that the quality of care is consistent but that it is of a high quality and is improving. The bill will improve the experience of the patient and drive the improvement of outcomes. It recognises that it is people and citizens who deliver patient experience and care, and it provides a balanced, evidence-based approach to support patients, professionals and organisational outcomes.

As members noted and as I have made clear on many occasions, there is no single thing that we need to do to ensure safe, effective, person-centred care; rather, there are a number of important steps that we need to take. This legislation, which will sit alongside our Scottish patient safety programme and our excellence in care work, is the next important piece that will ensure that we continue to drive our commitment to safe and effective patient care.

There are a number of important steps that we need to take next. The important work of making this legislation come alive—to improve outcomes for the people of Scotland and to create conditions in which our staff can flourish—continues with the development of guidance as the next step in the journey. That guidance will be drafted in collaboration with all stakeholders and will, of course, be shared with our Health and Sport Committee. It is worth noting that regulations will be laid for every new staffing tool that is developed, which will be subject to affirmative procedure, thereby allowing further scrutiny by members across this chamber to ensure that they match the intention and the principles behind the bill.

I completely take Mr Whittle’s point about digital. A great deal of work is going on, in health, on digital platforms. I make the offer to the Health and Sport Committee to come forward, in due course, to explain and present all that work, so that it can see where we are.

It is appropriate for me to conclude with a number of thank yous for support for the bill, which has taken us to the point of having a significant and important piece of legislation to which I hope we are all about to agree. I thank the Allied Health Professions Federation Scotland, the Royal College of Midwives, the Royal College of Nursing, the BMA, the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges and Faculties in Scotland, COSLA, Unison, staff group representatives, Scottish Care and representatives of integration authorities. It is an indication of the importance of this legislation that all those organisations actively contributed, along with their members, to the bill that we have before us today.

I also thank the Health and Sport Committee, the Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee and the Finance and Constitution Committee for their contributions to the development of the bill as it has gone through all the stages. Finally, I must thank the bill team, whose work has been extensive and driven by direct front-line experience and expertise. They have been unstinting, and I am certain that, without them, we would not be where we are at this moment.

Together with all of that, there is a shared commitment across the chamber to get this right for those who work in our health and social care sectors—they deserve nothing less, and nor do our patients and those who use our care services. I very much look forward to continuing this shared work with members across the chamber as we take the next steps to make this important legislation a reality.

2 May 2019

Final vote on the Bill

After the final discussion of the Bill, MSPs vote on whether they think it should become law.

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Final vote transcript

The Presiding Officer (Ken Macintosh)

There is only one question to be put, which is that motion S5M-17127, in the name of Jeane Freeman, on the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill, be agreed to. As the question is on passing a bill, there will be a division.

For

Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Adamson, Clare (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP)
Allan, Dr Alasdair (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP)
Arthur, Tom (Renfrewshire South) (SNP)
Baillie, Jackie (Dumbarton) (Lab)
Baker, Claire (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Lab)
Balfour, Jeremy (Lothian) (Con)
Beamish, Claudia (South Scotland) (Lab)
Beattie, Colin (Midlothian North and Musselburgh) (SNP)
Bibby, Neil (West Scotland) (Lab)
Bowman, Bill (North East Scotland) (Con)
Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Brown, Keith (Clackmannanshire and Dunblane) (SNP)
Burnett, Alexander (Aberdeenshire West) (Con)
Cameron, Donald (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Campbell, Aileen (Clydesdale) (SNP)
Carson, Finlay (Galloway and West Dumfries) (Con)
Chapman, Peter (North East Scotland) (Con)
Coffey, Willie (Kilmarnock and Irvine Valley) (SNP)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Constance, Angela (Almond Valley) (SNP)
Corry, Maurice (West Scotland) (Con)
Crawford, Bruce (Stirling) (SNP)
Cunningham, Roseanna (Perthshire South and Kinross-shire) (SNP)
Denham, Ash (Edinburgh Eastern) (SNP)
Dey, Graeme (Angus South) (SNP)
Doris, Bob (Glasgow Maryhill and Springburn) (SNP)
Dornan, James (Glasgow Cathcart) (SNP)
Dugdale, Kezia (Lothian) (Lab)
Ewing, Annabelle (Cowdenbeath) (SNP)
Ewing, Fergus (Inverness and Nairn) (SNP)
Fabiani, Linda (East Kilbride) (SNP)
Findlay, Neil (Lothian) (Lab)
Finnie, John (Highlands and Islands) (Green)
FitzPatrick, Joe (Dundee City West) (SNP)
Forbes, Kate (Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch) (SNP)
Fraser, Murdo (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Freeman, Jeane (Carrick, Cumnock and Doon Valley) (SNP)
Gibson, Kenneth (Cunninghame North) (SNP)
Gilruth, Jenny (Mid Fife and Glenrothes) (SNP)
Golden, Maurice (West Scotland) (Con)
Gougeon, Mairi (Angus North and Mearns) (SNP)
Grahame, Christine (Midlothian South, Tweeddale and Lauderdale) (SNP)
Gray, Iain (East Lothian) (Lab)
Greene, Jamie (West Scotland) (Con)
Greer, Ross (West Scotland) (Green)
Griffin, Mark (Central Scotland) (Lab)
Hamilton, Rachael (Ettrick, Roxburgh and Berwickshire) (Con)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Harris, Alison (Central Scotland) (Con)
Harvie, Patrick (Glasgow) (Green)
Haughey, Clare (Rutherglen) (SNP)
Hepburn, Jamie (Cumbernauld and Kilsyth) (SNP)
Hyslop, Fiona (Linlithgow) (SNP)
Halcro Johnston, Jamie (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Johnstone, Alison (Lothian) (Green)
Kelly, James (Glasgow) (Lab)
Kerr, Liam (North East Scotland) (Con)
Kidd, Bill (Glasgow Anniesland) (SNP)
Lamont, Johann (Glasgow) (Lab)
Lennon, Monica (Central Scotland) (Lab)
Leonard, Richard (Central Scotland) (Lab)
Lindhurst, Gordon (Lothian) (Con)
Lochhead, Richard (Moray) (SNP)
Lockhart, Dean (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Lyle, Richard (Uddingston and Bellshill) (SNP)
MacDonald, Angus (Falkirk East) (SNP)
MacDonald, Gordon (Edinburgh Pentlands) (SNP)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
MacGregor, Fulton (Coatbridge and Chryston) (SNP)
Mackay, Rona (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)
Macpherson, Ben (Edinburgh Northern and Leith) (SNP)
Maguire, Ruth (Cunninghame South) (SNP)
Martin, Gillian (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP)
Mason, John (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP)
Matheson, Michael (Falkirk West) (SNP)
McAlpine, Joan (South Scotland) (SNP)
McArthur, Liam (Orkney Islands) (LD)
McDonald, Mark (Aberdeen Donside) (Ind)
McKee, Ivan (Glasgow Provan) (SNP)
McKelvie, Christina (Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse) (SNP)
McMillan, Stuart (Greenock and Inverclyde) (SNP)
McNeill, Pauline (Glasgow) (Lab)
Mitchell, Margaret (Central Scotland) (Con)
Mundell, Oliver (Dumfriesshire) (Con)
Neil, Alex (Airdrie and Shotts) (SNP)
Paterson, Gil (Clydebank and Milngavie) (SNP)
Rennie, Willie (North East Fife) (LD)
Robison, Shona (Dundee City East) (SNP)
Ross, Gail (Caithness, Sutherland and Ross) (SNP)
Rowley, Alex (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Lab)
Rumbles, Mike (North East Scotland) (LD)
Ruskell, Mark (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Green)
Sarwar, Anas (Glasgow) (Lab)
Scott, Tavish (Shetland Islands) (LD)
Simpson, Graham (Central Scotland) (Con)
Smith, Elaine (Central Scotland) (Lab)
Smith, Liz (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Smyth, Colin (South Scotland) (Lab)
Stevenson, Stewart (Banffshire and Buchan Coast) (SNP)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Stewart, Kevin (Aberdeen Central) (SNP)
Sturgeon, Nicola (Glasgow Southside) (SNP)
Swinney, John (Perthshire North) (SNP)
Todd, Maree (Highlands and Islands) (SNP)
Tomkins, Adam (Glasgow) (Con)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
Watt, Maureen (Aberdeen South and North Kincardine) (SNP)
Wells, Annie (Glasgow) (Con)
Wheelhouse, Paul (South Scotland) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)
Wightman, Andy (Lothian) (Green)

The Presiding Officer

The result of the division is: For 113, Against 0, Abstentions 0.

Motion agreed to,

That the Parliament agrees that the Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill be passed.

Meeting closed at 16:34.  

2 May 2019

Health and Care (Staffing) (Scotland) Bill as passed

This Bill was passed on 2 May 2019 and became law on 6 June 2019. 
Find the Act on legislation.gov.uk

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