
There are warnings social care in North Yorkshire is facing an imminent staffing crisis after health officials revealed a worrying drop in the number of people coming forward for vacant jobs.
Richard Webb, director of health and adult services at North Yorkshire County Council, said the sector is facing “unrelenting” pressures and that it had reached “tipping point” over recent weeks with a 70% drop in applications for the around 1,000 jobs currently vacant.
He said the NHS has also not escaped the staffing problems which existed before the pandemic but have only been exacerbated by the virus outbreak.
Nationally, social care looks after around 400,000 people in care and nursing homes – three times the number in NHS hospital beds.
There are also around 640,000 people receiving care in their own homes.
Richard Webb says there are a number of factors causing the shortfall in staffing and that the solutions will need long term changes.
Independent Care Group (ICG), a non-profit organisation which provides services in North Yorkshire and York, has raised concerns that as these numbers continue to rise, there may soon not be enough staff to care for the elderly and most vulnerable in society.
ICG chair, and Scarborough care home boss, Mike Padgham said in a statement:
“We are approaching a crisis point where there simply won’t be enough people to go out and provide care to people at home and to those living in care and nursing homes.
“Care providers are facing a daily battle to cover home calls and care home shifts and it can’t go on.”
Mike Padgham is also calling on the government for short-term help and to also accelerate its long-delayed plans to overhaul the social care sector which ministers have pledged to publish by the end of the year.
A specific tax to help find the extra billions needed in funding and directing more cash straight to care homes are all ideas which have previously been brought to table, but these have never come to fruition.
The county council is urging people to consider careers in social care as part of its Make Care Matter campaign.
For more information go to www.northyorks.gov.uk/careandsupport
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