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Reviewed by Danielle Ellis, B.Sc. Jul 28 2023

The government has today unveiled a £600 million package to help with recruitment and retention in social care. The fund will support the social care workforce and boost capacity in social care, in turn supporting the NHS ahead of winter and through into next year.

This week the Care Minister is also writing to local authorities about preparations for winter, and NHS England has written to NHS organizations encouraging contingency planning to prepare for winter demands on the health service. The government is encouraging local health and care systems to prepare jointly for the winter months earlier this year, increasing resilience and preparedness for seasonal viruses such as flu or Covid.

The £600 million funding for adult social care includes a £570 million workforce fund over two years, distributed to local authorities and £30 million funding for local authorities in the most challenged health systems. This funding follows the social care workforce reforms announced earlier this year, and works, alongside the NHS Long Term Workforce Plan, to build a stronger overall foundation for the health and social care workforce.

It will help to improve recruitment and retention, boost workforce capacity and ensure a sustainable social care workforce fit for the future. A stronger care system will better meet care needs around the country and support the NHS for future winters, preventing admission to hospital and helping people to be discharged from hospital more quickly, cutting waiting times for A&E and ambulances.

Minister for Care, Helen Whately said:

Hundreds of thousands of older people, disabled people and their carers depend day in, day out on our social care workforce. Care workers deserve a brighter spotlight to recognise and support what they do. That's why we're reforming social care careers and backing our brilliant care workforce with millions in extra funding.

Our workforce reforms will help more people pursue rewarding careers in social care with nationally recognised qualifications. Our investment in social care means more funding to go to the front line. This matters, because support for our care workforce is the key to more care and better care.

A stronger social care system, hand in hand with our NHS, will help people get the care they need, when and where they need it.

The multi-million-pound investment will deliver tangible improvements to care and support services, benefitting millions working in or supported by care. It builds on progress the government has already made on workforce reforms set out in the Next Steps to Put People at the Heart of Care plan – backed by an initial £250million – which will enable better recognition of social care as a profession.

This includes ultimately working towards flexible, integrated career pathways between health and social care, in-line with the NHS Long Term Workforce Plan.

Melanie Weatherley MBE, Chair of Care Association Alliance said:

We are delighted to welcome the announcement of additional funding to support the adult social care workforce. It is particularly pleasing that this support covers two years, enabling the sector to develop effective longer-term initiatives.

Cllr Martin Tett, County Councils Network Spokesperson for Adult Social Care said:

The County Councils Network (CCN) very much welcomes this timely announcement by the government. The network called for this remaining funding to be provided directly to councils as soon as possible to help tackle additional inflationary costs and demand pressures which are impacting social care services this year and next.

With funding split over two years this will help councils mitigate some of the financial and workforce pressures over the next 18 months. It is also positive that the funding will be distributed through the existing Market Sustainability & Improvement Fund without further administrative burdens. Related StoriesBibliometric analysis reveals research trends connecting Alzheimer's disease and the gut microbiomeDoctors created a primary care clinic as their former hospital struggledA mom owed nearly $102,000 for hospital care. Her state attorney general said to pay up.

Oonagh Smyth, CEO of Skills for Care, said:

Support for local authorities to improve capacity in social care will help ensure that we can attract and keep more of the right people with the right skills. This is vitally important because our latest figures show that there were around 152,000 vacancies on any given day in 2022-23. Improved capacity ultimately means a better experience for the people who draw on care and support.

Alongside NHSE's letter to the NHS, DHSC has issued letters to local adult social care systems and providers to share the government's priorities for adult social care this winter, and to highlight the key actions local systems and care providers should take to protect individuals, their carers and the sector as a whole. This is to ensure a 'whole system' approach is taken to plan for the colder months and put adult social care on as firm a footing as possible ahead of winter this year.

Of the £600 million from the Next Steps to Put People at the Heart of Care plan, £570 million will be given to local authorities as 'flexible' funding to allow them to tailor it to benefit local needs. This could be by increasing the fees given to care providers, which will enable better pay for care workers, driving tangible improvements to social care for those who draw on it, or reduce pressures on the health system by increasing the capacity of social care and helping to bolster the sector ahead of winter.

In addition, as part of the government's initiative to improve care for everyone across the country, the National Institute for Health and Care Research has today launched a new £10 million per year funding program focused on social care research. The Research Program for Social Care will collect information on the people at the heart of care, providing government and the sector with clear paths on how they can improve, expand and strengthen social care for people in need of care, carers, the social care workforce, and the public.

The new program aligns with the department's new innovation and improvement unit, which is working with sector partners to establish clear priorities for innovation and research across adult social care. When fully established, the unit will look at how research can inform all aspects of policymaking and delivery of care across the sector, to ensure we learn from best practice and promote new approaches to care that can improve outcomes for the people at the heart of it. Background Information DHSC has published an accompanying policy statement here setting out details on how local authorities will receive the flexible funding to deliver these improvements as an expansion of the existing £1.4 billion MSIF. This is in addition to the historic up to £7.5 billion investment in social care the government announced in autumn 2022, as well as the government's successful international recruitment policy and its domestic national recruitment campaign, Made with Care. On £10 Million Research Fund: The Research Program for Social Care is part of NIHR's continued focus on building and improving social care research. Since 2006, the NIHR has awarded more than £200 million to social care research projects. The new program stands alongside several other high-profile endeavours to provide evidence and support researchers and social care practitioners: NIHR's School for Social Care Research, which aims to develop the evidence base for adult social care practice in England The Social Care Incubator, supported by NIHR, provides opportunities for researchers to learn about adult social care, related research and the opportunities that exist for developing research knowledge, skills, networks and projects in the sector. NIHR's Applied Research Collaborations, each of which focus on social care as part of their applied health research. ARC Kent, Surrey and Sussex is the ARC national priority lead for social care and social work. NIHR's Policy Research Units, several of which focus on social care topics including Adult Social Care, Health and Social Care Workforce, Health and Social Care Systems and Commissioning, the Economics of Health and Social Care, and Quality, Safety and Outcomes of Health and Social Care. The NIHR also runs the Health and Social Care Delivery Research Program, which funds research to produce rigorous and relevant evidence to improve the quality, accessibility and organization of health and social care services. Source:

GOV.UK

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Father Ted co-creator Graham Linehan denies harassing transgender woman

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Father Ted co-creator Graham Linehan denies harassing transgender woman

Father Ted co-creator Graham Linehan has pleaded not guilty to harassing a transgender woman and damaging her phone.

The Bafta-winning writer, who also came up with TV sitcoms The IT Crowd and Black Books, appeared at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on Monday to deny the charges of harassing Sophia Brooks on social media and damaging her mobile in October.

Linehan, 56, who created the three-season sitcom Father Ted in the 1990s with fellow Irish writer Arthur Mathews, said in a post on X in April that the allegations were related to an incident at the Battle of Ideas conference in London on 19 October.

Court documents show Linehan is charged with harassing the alleged victim, a transgender activist, by posting abusive comments about her on social media between 11 October and 27 October, and damaging her phone to the value of £369 on the day of the conference.

Outside court after the short hearing, he wore a T-shirt with a picture of a Daily Telegraph front page with the headline ‘Trans women are not women’, and said: “For six years, ever since I began defending the rights of women and children against a dangerous ideology, I have faced harassment, abuse and threats.

“I’ve lost a great deal, but I am still here, and I will not waver in my resolve.”

Read more from Sky News:
Green Party co-leader denies split over trans rights
Thousands attend trans rights protests following Supreme Court ruling

Deputy District Judge Louise Balmain told Linehan his trial would take place on 4 September this year at the same court.

Linehan has become a strong vocal critic of the trans rights movement in recent years.

He was freed on bail with the condition not to contact the complainant directly or indirectly.

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Sports

1st female Grand National champ Blackmore retires

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1st female Grand National champ Blackmore retires

Rachael Blackmore, the first female jockey to win the Grand National, announced her retirement from horse racing with immediate effect on Monday.

Blackmore, 35, confirmed the decision on social media saying her “days of being a jockey have come to an end.”

In 2021, Blackmore made history by becoming the first female to win the Grand National in the race’s 182-year history.

She rode the Henry de Bromhead-trained Minella Times to the trailblazing victory at Aintree which came 44 years after Charlotte Brew became the first woman to ride in the world’s most famous steeplechase.

The Irishwoman was also the first female jockey to win the Champion Hurdle, doing so aboard Honeysuckle, the same year as her Grand National triumph.

She then clinched another historic first when she guided A Plus Tard to the Cheltenham Gold Cup in 2022.

“I feel the time is right,” Blackmore said in a post on social media.

“I’m sad but also incredibly grateful for what my life has been for the past 16 years. I just feel so lucky, to have been legged up on the horses I have, and to have experienced success I never event dreamt could be possible.”

Blackmore won 575 of her 4,566 career races. Her last victory came aboard Ma Belle Etoile in Cork on Saturday.

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UK

London Underground stations shut and lines suspended as power cut hits Tube

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London Underground stations shut and lines suspended as power cut hits Tube

A power outage caused major travel disruption on London’s Tube network on Monday, stretching into rush hour.

The Elizabeth, Bakerloo, Jubilee and Northern lines were among the routes either suspended or delayed, with several stations closed and passengers forced to evacuate.

A spokesman for Transport for London (TfL) said there was an outage in southwest London for “a matter of minutes” and “everything shut down”.

National Grid confirmed a fault on its transmission network, which was resolved in “seconds”, but led to a “voltage dip” that affected some supplies.

The London Fire Brigade said the fault caused a fire at an electrical substation in Maida Vale, and it’s understood firefighters destroyed three metres of high-voltage cabling.

Piccadilly Circus
Image:
The scene in Piccadilly Circus as passengers were evacuated

That came just weeks after a fire at the same substation, which saw elderly and vulnerable residents among those moved from their homes.

But today’s fire – between Cunningham Place and Aberdeen Place – is understood to have involved different equipment to the parts in the 29 April incident.

TfL’s chief operating officer Claire Mann apologised for the disruption, adding: “Due to a brief interruption of the power supply to our network, several lines lost power for a short period earlier this afternoon.”

Passengers told Sky News of the disruption’s impact on their plans, with one claiming he would have had to spend £140 for a replacement ticket after missing his train.

He said he will miss a business meeting on Tuesday morning in Plymouth as a result.

Another said she walked to five different stations on Monday, only to find each was closed when she arrived.

Lines suspended and stations shut – as it happened

“Only on the last station did I find out it was a power outage affecting the entire Underground, after I approached ticketing staff,” she said.

“Again, no announcement made. So I looked for bus alternatives. In total, I spent two hours stranded in central London. Horrible experience.

“I feel bad for people who possibly missed their flights.”

TfL staff have said they are working to restore the entire network, with some disruption extending into Monday night.

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