Health & social care in the community
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Health Soc Care Community · May 2019
What does Brexit mean for the UK social care workforce? Perspectives from the recruitment and retention frontline.
The UK's departure from the European Union (Brexit) is likely to result in greater immigration and employment restrictions on European Union/European Economic Area (EU/EEA) nationals within the United Kingdom. EU/EEA citizens constitute a significant proportion of the current social care workforce. Research evaluating the impact of Brexit on social care has highlighted potentially severe future workforce shortfalls, but has not engaged in detail with the experiences of social care personnel involved in day-to-day recruitment and retention activities. ⋯ A key finding is that, irrespective of whether they employ EU/EEA workers or not, research participants have deep concerns about Brexit's potential impact on the social care labour market. These include apprehensions about future restrictions on hiring EU/EEA nurses, as well as fears about increased competition for care staff and their organisation's future financial viability. This article amplifies the voices of managers as an under-researched group, bringing their perspectives on Brexit to bear on wider debates on social care workforce sustainability.
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Health Soc Care Community · May 2019
Solidarity or dissonance? A systematic review of pharmacist and GP views on community pharmacy services in the UK.
There has been a strong policy emphasis over the past decade on optimising patient-centred care and reducing general practitioners' (GPs') workload by extending community pharmacy services and collaboration between pharmacists and GPs. Our aim was to review current evidence of pharmacists' and GPs' views of extended community pharmacy services and pharmacists' roles in the United Kingdom (UK). A systematic review was undertaken looking at UK studies investigating pharmacists' and/or GPs' views of community pharmacy services or roles from 2005 to 2017. ⋯ Pharmacists and GPs perceived a number of barriers to successful implementation and integration of pharmacy services. Moreover, collaboration between pharmacists and GPs remains poor despite the introduction of extended services. Overall, extending community pharmacy services require quality-driven incentives and joint working between community pharmacists and GPs to achieve better integration within the patient's primary care pathway.
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Health Soc Care Community · May 2019
Home care service utilisation by people with dementia-A retrospective cohort study of community nursing data in Australia.
Progressive aged care reforms are shifting dementia care into the community. These efforts have been shown to prevent transition to residential aged care facilities and hospitals. There is a paucity of studies examining the utilisation of home care services for people living with dementia. ⋯ When examining an individual's episode of care, people with dementia were more likely to require acute care (RR 1.07, 95% CI [1.01-1.14]) and be discharged from home care with personal care services (RR 1.46, 95% CI [1.24-1.72]). People with dementia were less likely to be referred from a hospital (RR 0.73, 95% CI [0.69-0.77]), achieve their home care goals (RR 0.91, 95% CI [0.87-0.94]), or die while in receipt of home care services (RR 0.82, 95% CI [0.72-0.94]). Our findings suggest that people with dementia have different socio-demographic characteristics and interactions with home care services compared to people without dementia.