1 / 25

Fitness for work advice and certification

Fitness for work advice and certification. Dr Philip Sawney AOHNP(UK) Symposium 13 May 2004. Fitness for work advice & certification. DWP’s role Overview of current system Reform - Issues and challenges. DWP and People of working age. DWP Minister for Work Jobcentre Plus HSC/E

alton
Download Presentation

Fitness for work advice and certification

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Fitness for work advice and certification Dr Philip Sawney AOHNP(UK) Symposium 13 May 2004

  2. Fitness for work advice & certification • DWP’s role • Overview of current system • Reform - Issues and challenges

  3. DWP and People of working age • DWP • Minister for Work • Jobcentre Plus • HSC/E • Strategy - To promote work as the best form of welfare whilst protecting the position of those in greatest need • Policy lead on: ‘statutory certification’; incapacity benefits; vocational rehabilitation • Working Age • Sickness absence costs = £10 bn /year (CBI estimate); • Expenditure on IB = £12 bn /year • 24% of GP consultations are work related

  4. Fitness for work - Statutory framework • Medical evidence regulations - DWP guidance • Forms Med 3; Med 5 • Social security regulations • NHS (GMS Contracts) regulations – including new GP contract • DDA and H & S law

  5. Fitness for work medical advice – underlying principles • Integral part of clinical management of patients of working age • Start from premise that return to work is optimal health outcome • Recognise the link between clinical care and the patient’s work • Appropriate diagnosis and management • Consider alternatives to ‘unfit for work’ • Avoid unnecessary medicalisation of ‘absence’ from work • Support positive expectations re: working lives

  6. Health benefits of working Work : • generates self esteem • reduces dependency • enhances social identity Work environments: • develop social networks • acquire, retain and develop skills

  7. Impact of being out of work: evidence Patients: • Have reduced confidence and self esteem • Have increased morbidity and mortality - particularly mental health • Have disability greater than underlying impairment the effects begin at 6 - 12 weeks

  8. Med 3 Warning: this form may seriously damage your health

  9. Fitness for work advice and certification “Absence from work attributed to a health condition, injury or disability” • GP - patient axis • Issue with quality of advice • Knowledge of workplace • Shortfall in professional training • Lack of employer focus

  10. GP views • “Poor understanding and training; many GPs are ambivalent about this work” - Hitchcock & Ritchie 2001 • “Some dislike perceived ‘gatekeeper’ role and admit to poor practice” - Hussey et al BMJ 2004 • “Area of work which creates confrontation with patients” • “GPs estimate that 30% of patients off sick could return to work” - Dr Foster April 04

  11. Employer’s views • “GPs tend to see ‘work’ as harmful” • “GPs are overprotective of patients and distrustful of the motives of others” • “Need to end the so-called sicknote culture” • “Only 10% of employers think GPs provide effective support” IRS employment review - March 04

  12. Employee (patient) views • Non-medical factors strongly influence ‘fitness’ and capacity for work • Need for timely access to professional advice from trusted source • “63% expect to turn to their GP for advice on fitness for work and rehabilitation” - ONS Omnibus Survey 2004

  13. The GP as ‘advocate’ • Setting long term health beliefs and attitudes • Need to consider the longer term effects of worklessness for the patient • Distinguish between ‘own occupation’ [which GP certifies] and work in general • Advocacy can be used as a barrier to communication • Need to more positive expectations about patient’s working lives

  14. Raising awareness Doctors • Statutory guidance • Desk aids • DVD • Website / Online learning • Professional meetings • Direct case related feedback Employers • HSE guidance on absence management • New website for employers

  15. Guidance, advice & training for doctors Guidance/advice: IB204 & Desk aids IB204 ‘A Guide for Registered Medical Practitioners’ Contains the rules & background information about sickness certification & report writing for certifying medical practitioners

  16. Web site

  17. Online learning

  18. Reform of fitness for work advice and certification • Need to balance: • Patient Access • Quality of advice • Cost/affordability • Context • New NHS GP contract [‘quality targets’ ] • Pathways to Work strategy – find an approach which better supports work retention / rehabilitation • Legislation and structure of UK ‘benefits’ system (including Statutory Sick Pay)

  19. A new model ? • Based on employer-employee axis • Employee and management have the primary responsibility to initiate a timely return to work • Role of healthcare professional confined to providing patient with factual information on restrictions or limitations arising from the diagnosed condition and other supporting advice as appropriate • Management control of sick leave is through workplace culture and timely return to work programs

  20. Reform difficult ! • Would require a different approach by all stakeholders • Major training requirement • Fostering a greater awareness of rights and responsibilities including legal (eg DDA and Health & Safety Law)

  21. Take GPs out of the loop ? • Primary care remains point of clinical care/advice to people of working age • Risk of setting up a dual system – supported by public funding • Resource limitations not confined to GPs

  22. Helping patients return to work after illness or injury. Vision General Practitioners, Hospital Specialists, Occupational Health specialists and Employers working together to facilitate optimal workplace rehabilitation for all ill or injured persons. The key elements of a return to work plan • Communication • Recognition of obstaclesto a return to work • Knowledge of support services • Active management (rather than a passive ‘wait and see’ approach) • A positive outlook • A patient centred approach

  23. Advice on fitness for work by other healthcare professionals ? • Joint research: • DWP [lead] • Dept of Health • Cabinet Office • Steering group of key stakeholders • Fieldwork in progress • Report – 2004 • Issues = roles; training; workload

  24. Sickness Certification - the future ? • Need for excellence in medical care and support/encouragement for rehabilitation • A more rounded view of advocacy re: advice and communication with employers and OHPs • Likely to be a ‘mixed economy’ of specialist advice provision Driver for change should be improved health and work outcomes for patients

  25. More information www.dwp.gov.uk/medical • Guides - IB 204, deskaids, Disability Handbook • updates and hot topics • on-line training material • information about medical aspects of UK benefits • research / literature reviews

More Related