SHOCK MOVE AS NHS SPENDS £30m HIRING AGENCY STAFF

Nurses told to work for free to save their jobs

By Ryan Crighton and Catriona Webster

Published: 06/10/2010

Nurses are being asked to work extra shifts for free to save their jobs – as health boards across Scotland spend up to £30million hiring agency staff.

Almost 4,000 NHS jobs, including more than 1,500 nursing and midwifery posts, will be axed this year due to cutbacks, according to Health Secretary Nicola Sturgeon.

But last night it emerged that the country’s 14 health boards have set aside a combined £30million for temporary nurses and theatre staff over the next four years.

NHS Grampian hopes to save £385,000 by asking staff at Aberdeen Royal Infirmary’s surgical unit to take on one more shift each month – for no extra money.

The agency staff contract, which has just been awarded, will see nine firms provide workers to fill staffing gaps as health boards – including NHS Tayside and NHS Highland – deal with the spending crisis in the public sector.

The contract will last for two years, with the option of extending it for two more.

Last night the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) Scotland raised fears that the deal could reverse efforts to cut reliance on agency workers.

RCN associate director Norman Provan said: “Nursing teams have led the way in recent years by changing the way in which their work is managed so that reliance on costly agency staff has been reduced. As health boards cut costs by not replacing staff when they leave, we will be monitoring them to ensure they do not reverse the trend of recent years and begin relying too heavily on agency nursing to fill the gaps.

“If health boards do realise that they need to fill the gaps created by their unsustainable cost-cutting tactics, they must recruit additional permanent staff in the best interests of patient care.”

Labour shadow cabinet member Richard Baker added: “It looks like different parts of the NHS are not talking to each other. When NHS Scotland is spending £30million on a contract to provide agency nurses it seems ridic-ulous that NHS Grampian is asking their nurses to work an extra shift for nothing.”

An Aberdeen company is one of the nine firms which will share the contract. H1 Healthcare Solutions – which trades as PCSG Healthcare – said it could take on up to 250 health workers during the duration of the deal.

An NHS Scotland spokes-man said the contract replaced an agreement which was about to expire. He said the number of agency nurses being used was falling, and that trend would continue.

He added: “Whilst agencies will always have a role in providing supplementary staff, this only supplements internal efforts to meet the staffing requirements.”

The RCN has also voiced concerns about NHS Grampian’s plans to share an extra 188 12-hour shifts between its nurses. It is understood that nurses in the surgical unit at ARI would receive an extra 15 minutes unpaid break per day to compensate for the extra shift.

One angry ARI nurse, who did not want to be named, said: “Everyone is unhappy about these changes. We’ve been asked to meetings but the feeling is: if we contest it, they won’t care. We’ve been given 90 days to comply.

“They are trying to save money but the added pressure is all on the nurses, it’s coming out of our pockets. We are being asked to work for nothing.”

Another said: “The thing the nurses are worried about is patient care. We already have skeleton staffs because of the recruitment freeze, so we don’t get our breaks.”

Colin Poolman, the RCN’s local officer for Grampian, said members were furious about the plans. “This change in working arrangements is clearly to the detriment of our hard-working and over-stretched members who are bearing the brunt of the cuts being made by NHS Grampian,” he said.

Tory health spokeswoman and Highland MSP Mary Scanlon said the plans were the first time she had ever heard of a public body asking staff to work for free.

A spokesman for NHS Grampian said the measures will help secure jobs.

He said: “The proposal is to move from 13 to 14 shifts in a month in the surgical one division of ARI. It will potentially save £385,000 which is very important in the current financial climate. The alternative would be to employ fewer staff.”

Reader's Comments

Would it not be better if management cut out their own perks and pay the nurses, after all they are the ones doing the real work. How many thousands of pounds are wasted each year on the top management. The hospitals are over run with top heavy executives, less of them and more nurses would be a better option for a hospital. Treating a hospital as a business is fine up to a point, but to ask nurses to work for free is bordering on total lunacy. Lose at least a couple of the ones at the top and you will have more money to pay the working staff,
minnie mo
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I agree with mo, but at the same time doing 14 shifts instead of 13 would mean an average week of around 42hrs if you were to exclude 4 as holidays so the hours are not excessive compared to other industries. But before I am shot down in flames, I do realise what a fantastic job the nurses do, and in an ideal world they would be better paid....Sturgeon needs to focus on getting an health service that is joined together and runs as one unit and not as it is at the moment with far too many levels of management at each facility. Instead of the political parties scoring points against one another, they should give her an hand to sort out the mess.
Richard Hall
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Too Many greedy pigs at the top.... http://www.pressandjournal.co.uk/Article.aspx/1566007?UserKey=
Lord Lucan
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It is an absolute disgrace that nurses should be asked to work extra shifts for no pay. Does this proposal also mean that the nurses would be responsible for the additional costs involved for getting to and from work further eroding their paypacket. The use of agency staff has been on the go for a long long time and Richard Baker and co should look and hard at who was responsible for the their introduction rather than the usual sniping from the sidelines. Raymond Thomson
raymond thomson
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Across the UK, the NHS has the highest number of high earners, with more than 26,000 people on more than £100,000. Of those, nearly 6,500 earn more than Mr Cameron. The top NHS earner is a GP on at least £475,000 and seven out of the top 10 in the NHS are GPs.................. I don't see any nurses mentioned in this clip from an earlier media column
Lord Lucan
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Tnere is no doubt that the NHS,in line with all large organisations, is dramtically over-managed. Swingeing cuts in this area should be used to fund nursing posts.
Ron Campbell
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What a stupid idea. I strongly suggest a top down & bottom up review of the working practises in the hospitals. Far too many highly overpaid skilled managers are doing very little & far too many of the low skilled are also doing very little. Trained Nurses & the Midwifes already work through their breaks.......
Fiona Wilson
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Nurses & midwifes will leave the industry & who will then care for our sick....
Fiona Wilson
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My wife works as a nurse at ARI, she never gets tea, or full lunch breaks and very regularly works hours extra on her shifts. She is supposed to get 'time back' in leiu of these 'extra' hours but given that the work cant be done in the alloted hours, how are they ever going to get the time back.good old NHS management, take advantage of those who allow their moral duty of care to overide all else.
Dave Robb
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When I worked in ARI I usually did about 2 or 3 extra hours every shift. I was due about 150hrs by time I left. After 15 years in the NHS (ARI + GP work) I've had enough and now work in the private sector. It's the best thing I ever did. How about the chief executive taking a pay hit- they get paid more than the prime minister!
Karen Urquhart
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Troughing tasbards, mak ye seek. They'd rether see ye deed than gee up a shilling! Peer nurses...
manniewe naeclue
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Makes you want to vote UKIP when you think about that £42 million a day we hand over to the EU, remember thats the low estimate. Also the ring fenced foreign aid, not to mention the mass immigration thats still taking place, and the cost that it brings with it. All that child benefits getting cut, but we will still be paying it for kids who have never set foot in the country. This is the madness you have voted for folks, make sure you change it at the next elections...UKIP....
Steven Thomson
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I myself work in ARI as a staff nurse and find this latest proposal simply outragious! We staff nurses are left utterly exhausted after our weeks work, even more so now that we are forced to work with very little staff.The fact we are working so short staffed adds even more to the stress we are constanlty under, trying to balance the huge workload whilst ensuring patient saftey. Ive never heard the likes ... being asked to work a 12 hour shift for FREE. We are being forced into "accepting" this proposal, afterall what is the alternative- we are not being offered one! This means staff who are part-time have to arrange child care AND pay for it to come in and do an extra 6 hours per week for NOTHING! and what about those staff who commute?- not only have they to do an extra shift but have to PAY to do it! I find the whole situation very diaheartening. Our hardworking and good nature is being taken advantage of!
staff nurse
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Oh And My wife works at ARI and I concur with the extra hours limited breaks if any, and all led by two unions that back labour to the hilt, and are to some extent partly responsible for this mess. I wonder how many management posts within ARI are Common Purpose ones. Created to push the Marxist agenda. Please Google Common Purpose or the Bilderbergs, its really happening folks, the destruction of nation states to create a one world government where we will have no say on anything, look at the EU thats one big part of the Jigsaw. UKIP
Steven Thomson
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Forgot to mention the new time directives that came from errrrmmm the EU thats right...costing a fortune and putting patients lifes at risk. Vote UKIP.
Steven Thomson
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Forgot to mention the new time directives that came from errrrmmm the EU thats right...costing a fortune and putting patients lifes at risk. Vote UKIP.
Steven Thomson
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Voting UKIP is obviously the answer since all of our problems arise as a direct result of our excessive contact with Europe. Hmmmm, perhaps a slightly simplistic viewpoint, Steven.....
Tom Di Canari
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