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Modernising Healthcare Science Careers

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Title: Modernising Healthcare Science Careers


1
Modernising Healthcare Science Careers
  • Pippa Hodgson
  • Programme Manager
  • pippa.hodgson_at_skillsforhealth.org.uk

2
Skills for Health
  • Formed with the backing of the four UK health
    departments, independent health sector, voluntary
    organisations and staff associations
  • Licensed in 2004 as the Sector Skills Council for
    Health by the Sector Skills Development Agency
    under the Department for Education and Skills
  • One of 25 SSC licensed by DFES

3
Sector Skills Councils
  • Identify and articulate sector skill needs
  • Help develop more responsive provision
  • Provide the business case for skills
  • Engage employers in skills development
  • Influence skills policy

4
Skills for Health
  • UK - wide
  • Sector wide
  • Coherent UK-wide Competence Framework
  • Sector Skills Council license
  • Hosted by United Bristol Healthcare NHS Trust
  • UK-wide, multi-professional, multi-agency Board

5
Sector Skills Agreement
  • Purpose
  • Raise the quality of health and healthcare for
    the public, patients and service users throughout
    the UK through a skilled and flexible workforce
    based on nationally recognised competences

6
  • Working with UK Health Departments to
  • Deliver the vision of a health service defined by
    competence
  • Developing awards and qualifications framework
  • Supporting Modernising Healthcare Careers
  • Develop career frameworks based on Career
    Framework for Health

7
Scope of the Programme
  • Integration of HCS NOS into Skills for Health
  • Modernisation of pre-registration education,
    training and development for
  • Currently regulated groups
  • Aspirant groups
  • Development of an awards and qualifications
    framework
  • Embed HCS NOS in practice and learning across
    the career framework.
  • Further development of NOS extended roles for
    scientists working in medical areas of practice

8
4 UK Workforce Boards
Modernising Health Careers Programme Board
Governance Arrangements for Modernising
Healthcare Science Careers
Modernising Healthcare Science Careers Programme
Board
M HCS C Programme Management Group
HCS Team
Critical Dependencies
product
Physiological Measurement Work Stream
product
Life Sciences Task Force
9
Key products
  • Building Blocks e.g.
  • National Workforce Competences (NWC)
  • National Occupational Standards (NOS)
  • Applications
  • Management Products e.g.
  • Functional Map for Health
  • Health NOS Template

10
National Workforce Competences
  • Start with the question - What do people,
    patients and their carers need?
  • For use by anyone working in any role, within any
    field of practice, at all levels, in all UK
    geographical locations
  • Competences are fundamentally about the function
    being performed not who does it, where it is
    done etc
  • Patient-centred, UK-wide recognised, transferable
    competences

11
Relationships between competences
CTC Clinical Transferable Core NCTC Non-Clinical
Transferable Core
Service Area Specialised
Service Area Transferable
CTC
NCTC
12
National Occupational Standards
  • 46 disciplines
  • 10 generic functions
  • Comprising
  • Performance criteria
  • Knowledge understanding statements
  • Use as building blocks to
  • Define individual roles
  • Define team roles
  • Define education and training programmes

13
NOS Rationalisation HCS Integration
  • HCS NOS approved by SEMTA, July 2005
  • HCS NOS Integration
  • Unbundling NOS
  • Generic and specific
  • Rationalising current NOS
  • Eliminating duplication
  • Closing gaps
  • Identifying Reference Competences

14
Mapping NWC / NOS to KSF
15
Broader M HCS C Issues
  • Affordable VFM pre registration E and T
  • Define national Scope of Practice
  • Support different routes of entry
  • Education and Training programmes funded and
    commissioned fit for NHS purpose
  • Salary versus bursary
  • Opportunities for new approaches to delivery
  • Build into career pathway linked to specialist
    training
  • Clear national definition of specialist training
    and expected roles and functions

16
Modernisation Pre registration Education and
Training
  • General principles
  • Fitness for practice programmes
  • Integrated skills and knowledge
  • Defined scope of practice linked to service needs
    appropriate to level of underpinning knowledge
  • Professional (workplace) practice embedded within
    programmes/awards informed by HCS NOS and linked
    to robust assessment of competence
  • Independently assessed and QA
  • Clear APEL arrangements to facilitate fast
    tracking
  • Opportunities for common approaches to delivery
    (generic/core)

17
Approach to Modernisation of Pre-Registration
Education
  • What does service need in the next 5-10 years?
  • Think Tank
  • National Scope of Practice
  • Academic level
  • Delivery approach
  • specific packages of learning
  • Academic content
  • Professional practice
  • Independent evaluation

18
Career Framework
19
HCS Career FrameworkLevel 6
  • Staff with a high degree of autonomy and
  • responsibility performing a complex clinical /
    scientific / technical role and / or managing and
    supervising a team.
  • Specialist healthcare scientists will include
    clinical scientists in first registration jobs
    who fulfil a complex clinical and scientific
    role. They will be studying for or have attained
    a relevant postgraduate qualification or
    vocational or professional equivalent.

20
HCS Career FrameworkLevel 7
  • Experienced clinical / scientific / technical
    professionals who have developed their skills and
    theoretical knowledge to a very high standard,
    performing a highly complex role, and continually
    developing the clinical, scientific or technical
    practice within a defined field and / or having
    management responsibilities for a small section
    or department.
  • They will have their own caseload or work area
    responsibilities and will be studying for or have
    attained a masters or higher level postgraduate
    qualification or vocational or professional
    equivalent.

21
Clinical Science Scope of Practice - i
  • Plan a range of investigations / procedures /
    processes to support and improve patient care in
    the context of patient, samples and/or
    technology.
  • Perform a range of specialist scientific /
    clinical investigations / procedures / processes
    to support patient care in the context of the
    patient, samples and/or technology
  • Plan and prospectively review / instigate patient
    treatment or management programmes for groups or
    individuals and/or technologies.

22
Clinical Science Scope of Practice - ii
  • 4. Report and interpret results of
    investigations, procedures or processes for
    patients / samples / measurements / technology
  • 5. Monitor report on progress of the patient
    conditions / technology and the need for further
    intervention.
  • 6. Apply and maintain and be capable of setting
    quality standards, control and assurance
    techniques, including restorative action, assure
    high quality interventions across all clinical
    scientific and technological activity.

23
Clinical Science Scope of Practice - iii
  • 7. Provide clinical and/or scientific advice and
    information to healthcare and other
    professionals, patients and their carers to
    support effective assessment, diagnosis,
    management and treatment of patients and/or
    patient services.
  • 8. Communicate clinical and/or scientific
    knowledge to a range of audiences, including
    professionals and patients

24
Clinical Science Scope of Practice - iv
  • 9. Plan, organise and prioritise own work
    activities, practices and tasks
  • 10. Undertake peer reviewed research and
    disseminate results.
  • 11. Using Knowledge Management techniques
    including critical appraisal undertake audits and
    service development to improve quality of service
    provided.

25
Academic Level
  • Debate re Clinical Scientists
  • Vocational masters v Professional Doctorate
  • Ref Qualifications Framework relating to
    England, Wales and Northern Ireland.
  • Masters demonstrate self-direction and
    originality in tackling and solving problems, and
    act autonomously in planning and implementing
    tasks at a professional or equivalent level
  • Doctorate continue to undertake pure and/or
    applied research and development at an advanced
    level, contributing substantially to the
    development of new techniques, ideas, or
    approaches

26
Possible learning packages general
  • Audit
  • Communication
  • Data Information Management
  • Ethics
  • Health and Safety
  • Key skills for health
  • Management
  • Maths and statistics
  • Multidisciplinary/multi-professional/team working
  • NHS Policy, Priorities Organisation
  • Personal Development
  • Problem solving
  • Quality Management
  • Research Development
  • Statistics data analysis
  • Underpinning Science incl. anatomy, physiology,
    cell biology

27
Possible learning packages common
  • Specimens and samples
  • Equipment and technology
  • Reporting results
  • Analysis of data
  • Knowledge of disease processes
  • Communicating with patients carers
  • Quality
  • QA, Clinical Governance, QC, interpretation of
    quality data
  • Service improvements related to area of work

28
Possible learning packages specific
  • Equipment and technology
  • Science applied in own work area
  • Plan, perform, interpret, report, review, advise
  • Knowledge of disease processes specific and
    detailed
  • Knowledge of Human Body systems specific and
    detailed
  • Skills, including professional practice -
    limitations, scope, SoP, etc

29
ModalitiesLife Sciences
  • Clinical Biochemistry, Immunology, Paediatric
    Metabolic Biochemistry and Toxicology
  • Haematology, Transfusion, Tissue Banking,
    Histocompatibility and Immunogenetics
  • Microbiology, Virology, Bacteriology, Mycology
    and Parasitology
  • Molecular Genetics and Cytogenetics
  • Embryology and Andrology
  • Cellular Science, Electron Microscopy, Molecular
    Oncology, Immunohistochemistry and Myology

30
Clinical ScientistsPathway in reality
31
New Clinical Scientist Career Pathway
  • Pre reg E and T linked to run through nationally
    defined HST
  • Designated training numbers based on projected
    consultant requirements
  • Majority expected to practice at consultant level
    some step off similar to medics

32
One Suggestion
Entry Quality BSc or higher Exit Professional
Doctorate HPC Registration
33
Entry PhD Exit MSc HPC Registration
34
HCS AQ Framework
Experience, Continuing Professional Development
Work based learning, vocational awards
Professional Masters and Doctorate Awards
Professional practice
Royal College Awards
Research Masters/ PhD
Specialist training
Honours Bachelors Programmes
Intermediate Programmes
Levels
Entry Level
Widening entry
35
HCS AQ Framework
Membership of Royal College of Pathologists
Research Masters/ PhD
Professional Masters and Doctorate Awards
Experience, Continuing Professional Development
Work based learning, vocational awards
Honours Bachelors Programmes
Intermediate Programmes
Entry Level
36
  • www.skillsforhealth.org.uk
  • Pippa Hodgson
  • pippa.hodgson_at_skillsforhealth.org.uk
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