
The Modernization of the Nursing Workforce: Valuing the healthcare assistant is based on recently completed research exploring the role of healthcare assistants (HCA) in acute hospitals. Whilst a support role working alongside registered nurses has been a longstanding feature of the NHS, the contemporary HCA role has become increasingly central to the process of health service modernization. The role is now assuming even greater importance as the ramifications of financial constraints, restructuring and other pressures on the NHS play out. The issue is becoming increasingly relevant as the government has commissioned an independent review into the role of healthcare assistants, the Cavendish Review, which uses this book extensively. The HCA role is unregulated and low paid, but by taking-on direct care tasks from registered nurses, the role has become politically sensitive. The HCA remains a cheap and flexible source of labour, but the unregulated role encourages dilemmas and public scrutiny over risk and patient safety. The book explores how public policy reform of the health service feeds through to impact upon the management and structure of the healthcare workforce. More specifically, the book provides a timely evidence base for the extended and growing use of the HCA role. The book draws upon a multi-method research design from four geographically located hospital trusts in England, which during a three year period saw over 270 staff interviewed, focus groups and interviews with over 100 patients, some 275 hours of ward-based observation, and detailed survey responses from over 3,000 members of staff and hospital patients. The unusual richness of the data allows a definitive examination of who undertakes the HCA role, its shape, nature and diversity, along with the consequences for those with a stake in the role - hospital managers, the assistants themselves, the patients they care for and the nurses they work alongside, making The Modernization of the Nursing
This book investigates the evolving role of healthcare assistants (HCAs) within the National Health Service (NHS) and the implications of their increasing responsibility in acute hospital settings. The authors, Ian Kessler, Paul Heron, and Sue Dopson, utilize extensive empirical data gathered from four English hospital trusts to analyze how public policy, financial constraints, and workforce restructuring have transformed the HCA position. Their research provides a critical examination of the tension between the HCA's status as a flexible, low-cost labor source and the risks associated with an unregulated workforce performing direct patient care.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and policymakers recognize this work as a foundational text for understanding the complexities of the HCA role within the NHS. Readers frequently note the academic rigor and the significant depth of the primary research, which provides a necessary evidence base for ongoing debates regarding patient safety and workforce regulation.
Page Count:
260
Publication Date:
2012-01-01
ISBN-10:
0191651869
ISBN-13:
9780191651861
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!