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Developing and Supporting Associate Practitioners (Band 4). Ian Legg Blood Sciences Manager Mid Yorkshire Hospitals Trust. Where Mid Yorks was in 2005. 2005 – Mid Yorks most overspent Trust in England Years of Attrition via job freezes Chief / Senior and BMS staff labelling samples
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Developing and Supporting Associate Practitioners (Band 4) Ian Legg Blood Sciences Manager Mid Yorkshire Hospitals Trust
Where Mid Yorks was in 2005 • 2005 – Mid Yorks most overspent Trust in England • Years of Attrition via job freezes • Chief / Senior and BMS staff labelling samples • No-one had time to address CPA/MHRA • Management consultants appointed – need more staff • CPA / MHRA inspections – need more staff • We needed “Pairs of hands” • Our solution must be found within budget.
MLA to BMS gap • Huge gap between MLA and BMS • Higher turnover of MLAs and “freezes” created top heavy structure. • BMS staff spending significant time doing less complex tasks • MLAs did not have scientific education for more complex tasks • Limited scope for progression within Pathology
Analysing Job Roles • Fundamental review of what is required • Younger BMS staff particularly unhappy doing lower tasks • MLA JD only required “good secondary education” • Intermediate “technical” role became obvious • Fitted in with DH philosophy at the time. • We want to deepen the Specialist BMS role to expand our test range.
What’s in a Job? • Core Job – what the job was designed to do • what you’re paid for • Lower Tasks – Tasks you need to do because there are insufficient support staff • BMS labelling samples / data input • “Aspirational Tasks” – when aiming for a higher role • Tasks that stretch / what one’s training for.
Skills Gap • We all have great MLA’s • We also have Scientifically challenged MLA’s • When you say “Do you understand?” “Oh yes” • But what do they understand? • Complex Scientific language in an SOP is akin to Swahili. “Hatari – Carcinogenic” • How could you tell the best MLA’s? • By their leaving parties!
Associate Practitioner • Technical support for BMS staff • Good Science education HNC, Foundation Degree or BSc. • A stepping stone for MLAs • A proving ground for a multitude of Qualification • A recruiting ground for the future • Paid enough to stay!
Changing Cultures • 2005 – MYHT had Job Freezes, loss of support roles, frozen training budgets, central control of staff levels • New Hospital – Workforce redesign • Opportunities to existing MLA staff • Recruiting to new roles of support staff • Reduction in tedium. Increased help • 2009 – New evening work, BMS demand Associate practitioner support. • 2010 - Business Units – We can do what we want within budget, no longer told who we can employ.
The New Generation of BMS • High Expectations. • Less happy working through the low end jobs • Less likely to sacrifice social life for unsocial working hours • High levels of debt • Do not feel that the NHS owes them anything • Some degree of “waiting out the recession”
What do AP’s do? • Generic APs • Working across Blood Sciences • Loading samples, consumables and reagents • Basic QA • Basic Maintenance • Generate technically correct results • Immunology AP • Near Patient Testing AP.
Qualification Current and Projected • Biomedical Sciences Degree (accredited) • Biomedical Sciences Degree (non-accredited) • Variety of Science degrees • A Non-EU “lab technician” • We have 3 MLAs doing their Science HNC • We are looking forward to Bradford’s Foundation Degree
Fitting the Future • My vision is that an experienced AP with 2 years practice could join year 3 of the part time BMS BSc. • As Science graduates become a scarcer commodity, we will have a pool of suitable staff • The best will be put forward as trainee BMS • A significant number will happily sit at this grade for their career (The eternal Junior A)
What’s the real benefit • Staff able to work to grade • Staff able to get on with their own jobs • Progression possible for any grade to move up • Slower progression through the wider laboratory gives a broader understanding. • Mimics the ONC / HNC which produce a very stable and loyal workforce • Motivation – it’s worth aiming higher
£-s-d • Over the next 5 years I expect my budget to be cut by 20% in real terms • 80% my budget are Staff costs • PBR will go and straight competitive tendering will replace it • I need to be able to drive down costs whilst upholding the Quality Standards • Improved utilisation of all grades in conjunction with process modelling will drive down costs • Skill mix is key to us surviving the future.