The National (Scotland)

Nearly two-thirds of NHS staff were unaware of new safe staffing levels legislatio­n, survey finds

- BY LUCY GARCIA

ALMOST two-thirds of NHS staff didn’t know about new legislatio­n on safe staffing levels according to a survey carried out during the month before it came into effect, a survey has found.

The survey, from the union Unison also found that 89% had not received training on the regulation­s, which began on April 1. Meanwhile, about eight in 10 staff said they did not have confidence in the existing procedures for dealing with staffing levels.

The survey was carried out in March with 3781 people responding. The Health and Care (Staffing) Act was passed in the Scottish Parliament in 2019 but its implementa­tion was delayed, in part due to the pandemic. It is the first legislatio­n in the UK to set out requiremen­ts for safe staffing levels across both the health and care sectors.

However, Unison said many incidents of short-staffing are not being reported because recording tool, Datix, is timeconsum­ing and cumbersome.

Matt McLaughlin, Unison Scotland’s head of health, said: “The Government had more than four years to prepare for this, yet guidance was only made available four days before it became law.

“There’s a direct link between staffing levels and high-quality outcomes for patients. Our members repeatedly tell us they do not have enough staff or enough time to give patients the care they need and deserve. In wards where they do meet staffing requiremen­ts, there is often not the correct skill mix to meet patients’ needs. This puts patients’ safety at risk and puts staff in unacceptab­ly stressful situations.

“The reality is that staff don’t believe things are safe and NHS staff are left picking up the slack while no one holds their hospitals accountabl­e.”

He added: “The Scottish Government does not have a true picture of the scale of the short-staffing situation in the NHS as incidents are chronicall­y under-reported – staff simply do not have the time.

“And an obvious weakness is that key support staff are not included. The Act is potentiall­y a powerful tool for driving up standards but it can only make a difference if people know how to use it.”

A Scottish Government spokespers­on said: “Draft statutory guidance was available to all NHS staff from June 2023. The Scottish Government are grateful to Unison for its support in drafting the statutory guidance.

“The Government does not expect staff to receive training on the new legislatio­n. They will, however, have received training on the systems and processes needed to comply with their duties.

“For many health boards, these systems and processes were already in place and therefore further training may not have been necessary.”

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