The Jewish Chronicle

Care homes suffer staff losses over mandatory jabs

- BY BARRY TOBERMAN

COMMUNAL WELFARE providers are losing staff as the deadline nears for the mandatory requiremen­t for those working in a Care Quality Commission­registered home in England to be fully vaccinated, unless they have a medical exemption.

Care home bosses have questioned why the new rule, which comes into effect next Thursday, does not also apply to the NHS, leaving an uneven playing field.

Jewish Care is losing 30 staff, although the charity points out that this is across ten homes. “We are fortunate that our staff do overtime so we are able to back-fill in that sense, or by using regular agency staff that are well known to us.”

Norwood reports that it has put five staff on notice but anticipate­s that “up to a further seven will be given notice before the November 11 deadline. We thankfully did have a fairly high baseline vaccine take-up rate pre-legislatio­n, thanks to our comprehens­ive educationa­l programme among frontline staff,” a spokespers­on explained.

The government’s decision had put additional pressure on the charity’s services, “which are struggling with staffing shortages that are widespread across the sector.

“Furthermor­e, the impact on operationa­l teams to oversee the logistics of holding discussion­s with unvaccinat­ed members of staff [to establish if they were willing to be vaccinated] has been both time consuming and a distractio­n from already stretched services.”

At Nightingal­e Hammerson, which operates homes in Hampstead and Clapham, CEO Helen Simmons said that since the outset of the pandemic, the charity had been committed “to ensuring that our residents are always as safe and protected as possible. That has meant that by the time it becomes law, we will have lost a few staff for refusal to comply with regulation­s. But it is a very small number and is a requiremen­t we are fully in agreement with.

“The bigger question is why the NHS now appears to be sending mixed messages about whether it will follow suit.”

Ms Simmons’ view is shared by Mark Cunningham, CEO of The Fed in Manchester and chair of the National Associatio­n of Jewish Homes (NAJH).

Mr Cunningham said that in general, providers were “disappoint­ed by the fact that there wasn’t a level playing field with the NHS. This has caused an unnecessar­y loss of staff at a critical time for the care industry.”

In terms of double vaccinated employees, The Fed had “pretty much mitigated the risk of losing a significan­t number of staff. Our engagement with our workforce on vaccinatio­ns has been ongoing since the beginning of the year.

“We recognised the issues posed by mandatory vaccinatio­ns and have worked extremely hard to engage with people, provide informatio­n and advice and make them aware of the consequenc­es regarding their employment.

“Over the last two months, we have seen three to four staff migrate away to jobs within the NHS, where the vaccine isn’t mandatory for now. By November 11, we will only have four [additional] staff who will lose their employment — less than 1 per cent of

Over two months, we have seen staff migrate to jobs within the NHS’

our workforce.

“I think like most care providers, we are massively preoccupie­d with workforce issues at present. Recruitmen­t of staff is extremely challengin­g, not just in terms of care staff and nurses but in housekeepi­ng, hospitalit­y, catering and facilities management. As other industries, particular­ly hospitalit­y and retail, gear up for Xmas, recruitmen­t is very competitiv­e. The baseline salaries offered in other sectors have increased dramatical­ly but our wage bills are largely funded by the rates set by local authoritie­s and the NHS and we struggle to compete.”

Although Mr Cunningham did not have a clear picture of the overall situation within the NAJH, he said “all members have been working hard to reduce the impact of losing staff due to mandatory vaccinatio­ns and have had a reasonable amount of success”.

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