1 / 25

Sarah Faulkner, Head of Leadership Email: sarah.faullkner @cfwi.uk

A vision for the healthcare and public health workforce in Wessex Plan today to deliver tomorrow: What’s coming over the horizon and what does that mean for the workforce?. Sarah Faulkner, Head of Leadership Email: sarah.faullkner @cfwi.org.uk.

ull
Download Presentation

Sarah Faulkner, Head of Leadership Email: sarah.faullkner @cfwi.uk

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. A vision for the healthcare and public health workforce in WessexPlan today to deliver tomorrow: What’s coming over the horizon and what does that mean for the workforce? Sarah Faulkner, Head of Leadership Email: sarah.faullkner@cfwi.org.uk

  2. Agenda- The CfWIs work and priorities- Looking into the future- What are the big questions?- The medical workforce- Future challenges

  3. The CfWI’s workand priorities

  4. Our vision To be the national authority on workforce planning and development, providing advice and information to the NHS and social care system.

  5. Looking into the future

  6. Planning for the workforce in uncertain times

  7. How good are we at planning the future? This telephone has too many shortcomings to be seriously considered as a means of communication. The device is inherently of no value to us (Internal memo, Western Union, 1876) Worldwide demand for the car will never exceed one million, primarily because of a limitation in the number of available chauffeurs. (Research prediction, Mercedes-Benz, 1900) I think there is a world market for about 5 computers” (Thomas Watson, Chairman, IBM, 1943)

  8. What we did not want to know? "I have great, great confidence in our capital markets and in our financial institutions. Our financial institutions, banks and investment banks, are strong. Our capital markets are resilient. They're efficient. They're flexible." AND Six months later… “The market turmoil we are experiencing today poses great risk to U.S. taxpayers. When the financial system doesn’t work as it should, Americans’ personal savings, and the ability of consumers and businesses to finance spending, investment and job creation are threatened”. March 2008 Henry Paulson, the US Secretary of the Treasury

  9. Horizon scanning ‘The systematic examination of potential threats, opportunities and likely future developments, including but not restricted to those at the margins of current thinking and planning.’ Chief Scientific Adviser’s Committee, Office of Science and Technology (OST) September 2004

  10. Improving the quality of workforce intelligence

  11. Policy-sensitive modelling Workforcedata and assumptions Sensitivity analysis to identify critical parameters Horizon scanning Scenario workshops Parameters defining plausible futures Workforce model Outcomes: supply and demand Policy interventions Delphi Impact of workforce policy decisions across a range of plausible futures to select the most robust approach

  12. What are the big questions?

  13. Health: Growth in health spending grinds to a halt 28/06/2012 -  Growth in health spending slowed or fell in real terms in 2010 in almost all OECD countries, reversing a long-term trend of rapid increases, according to OECD Health Data 2012. UK Health spend c.0.1% growth p.a. for 2012 – 2015

  14. Big picture challenges:

  15. Ageing population and workforce • What does the health and social care workforce need to look like by 2025 to provide the right care for an ageing population? • How many older people specialists will be need by 2025 to adequately care for an ageing population? • How will intermediate care services be used to treat an ageing population in 2025 • How will changes to commissioning and the implementation of a single assessment process across health and social care impact on workforce numbers by 2025?

  16. Developing public health skills and workforce • What are the institutional changes in the public health sector and how will they influence in public health workforce development by 2025? • What is the influence of information and communication technologies in the development of the public health workforce by 2025? • How will changes to the public health workforce affect the rest of the health and social care sector by 2025?

  17. The medical workforce

  18. Shape of the medical workforce 2012 • ‘Shape of the medical workforce: Starting the debate on the future consultant workforce’ published 8th Feb 2012 • The CfWI is urging employers, the medical profession and policymakers in the healthcare system to start an urgent debate on the future shape of the medical workforce. http://www.cfwi.org.uk/publications/leaders-report-shape-of-the-medical-workforce

  19. Medical workforce – key issues • CfWI projections show that if the system continues to train and recruit doctors at current rates, there could be: • more fully trained hospital doctors than the current projected demand suggests will be required. • an increase of over 60 per cent in fully trained hospital doctor headcount by 2020 compared to 2010. • An estimated £6 billion spend on total consultant salary costs, an increase of over £2.2 billion on the 2010 figure, if all eligible doctors become consultants. • If services shift to a consultant-present service, there may be about the right number of trainees currently coming through the training pipeline but they are unlikely to be training in the right specialty areas.

  20. Medical workforce - opportunities • If the system does nothing now then the potential oversupply of eligible applicants for consultant posts provides a range of opportunities. These include: • to move towards a trained doctor-delivered (or present) service • to consider new service models and new roles for doctors, including in a community setting • to drive up quality through increased competition for appointments to consultant roles • to tackle the issue of data quality especially with regards to non training doctors • to actively manage the numbers of trainees.

  21. Review of medical and dental student intakes • CfWI is supporting the HENSE Review Group, which will soon make recommendations on student intakes from 2013 onwards to ensure an adequate and affordable supply of trained doctors and dentists* and advise on constraints to students from overseas • Our new approach integrates horizon scanning, plausible future scenarios, Delphi expert reviews and new system dynamics modelling and analysis *Note: this project is looking at the whole workforce, not individual specialties.

  22. Horizon Scanning

  23. Developing the workforce strategy? Developing a workforce strategy: “The biggest desired outcome of LETBs is the transition of the debate from numbers of junior doctors to a vision and strategy for changing the shape and structure of the workforce over five to ten years.“ Dr Adrian Bull, Chief Executive, Queen Victoria NHS Foundation Trust.

  24. Centre for Workforce Intelligence 209 – 215 Blackfriars Road, London SE1 8NL T+44 (0)20 7803 2600 General enquiries T +44(0)1962 814950 E enquiries@cfwi.org.uk www.cfwi.org.uk

More Related