Archive for December, 2008

Sunshine Care introduce E-learning

Monday, December 15th, 2008

We will soon be offering e-learning as an alternative to traditional class room 4-day Induction Training for our Domiciliary Home Care and 24-hour Live-in Care employees.

Sunshine Care, who pride themselves on having successfully provided in-house training for many years, will be launching their new E-Induction programme, which we hope will show the huge advantages of e-learning:

Convenience: Traditional offline training normally means employees need to collectively leave the workplace; this is not the case for e-learning.
Cost: E-learning is much more cost effective as learning can be done one candidate at a time.
Time: E-learning allows you to undertake your training whenever and wherever you want.

We will be joining a number of leading care organisations who have recognised these advantages and who have recently introduced e-learning into their training.
Sunshine Care will be gradually introducing more short Health & Safety and Social Care training courses into our e-portfolio.  These will be offered out to other local care agencies and care homes as part of the new range of services offered by their new sister organisation, Sunshine Care Training Ltd.

Human Rights act has been extended to include people

Monday, December 15th, 2008

Human Rights act has been extended to include people who receive nursing and personal care in publicly funded accommodation.
The extension which came into action on December 1st will mean that under section 145 of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 providers of accommodation with care will be treated as exercising a function of a public nature. This means that people using these publicly funded care services will now be protected by the Human Rights Act, but, adult placements are not affected by this legislation.

For more information on the act and how it may effect you please click here.

In November, the Government launched a consultation on the future of adult safeguarding in England, focusing on the protection of vulnerable adults within the care system.

The No Secrets guidance which is currently in place for local authorities, the police and the NHS to helps protect vulnerable adults will be addressed, as the government now wants to ensure it keeps up with changes in the social care system, with emphasis on choice, control and the changing forms of abuse.

The key issues the government will focus on include:

·    Whether there is now a need for legislation
·    The feasibility of a national database of recommendations from serious case reviews where abuse has occurred
·    What new measures are needed in the face of increased ‘personalisation’ of care with more people now being in charge of their own care instead of local authorities
·    What new measures are needed in the face of changing forms of abuse, such as financial abuse

Care Services Minister, Phil Hope said:

I am determined to improve safeguarding of vulnerable people. We need a greater focus on prevention, a greater emphasis on safeguarding in commissioning services and support, and greater empowerment of people to determine how they wish to be safeguarded. The No Secrets guidance must be updated to make sure everyone - individuals, police, care agencies, the NHS and local authorities prevent abuse, and also recognise it and stamp it out if it does occur.

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