MiP Conference: “The NHS depends on managers like Sandie”
MiP chief executive Jon Restell told delegates the very survival of the NHS depended on managers working under intense pressure and “walking a tightrope between compassion and resources”.
Restell spoke about a day he spent with MiP member Sandie Belcher, acute care co-ordination centre manager at South West London and St George’s Mental Health Trust.
“That day I spent at Springfield Hospital won’t leave me in a hurry,” he said. “It affected me deeply… Acute psychiatric healthcare gives you life at its most raw, saddest, and most uplifting.”
Restell described how Sandie and her team worked under intense pressure to manage emergency admissions across five London boroughs. “I can only describe what I felt as pride and awe,” he said.
“And I remember wondering if I could even start to do this job.”
Restell warned NHS leaders not to repeat the mistakes of the Lansley reforms during the next round of upheavals triggered by STPs. “People like Sandie will lose their jobs. The NHS will lose their skills, and will need to re-hire and plug the gaps at huge cost. And people like Sandie will lose their focus on the job in hand,” he said.
He also called on employers to consider what they could do for managers like Sandie: “Give her a do-able job, train her, listen to her, reward her fairly, and treat her with compassion and justice.”
Related News
-
Government proposal for sub-inflation pay rise “not good enough”, says MiP
Pay rises for most NHS staff should be restricted to an “affordable” 2.5% next year to deliver improvements to NHS services and avoid “difficult” trade-offs, the UK government has said.
-
Unions refuse to back “grossly unfair” voluntary exit scheme for ICB and NHS England staff
NHS trade unions, including MiP, have refused to endorse NHS England’s national voluntary redundancy (VR) scheme, describing some aspects of the scheme as “grossly unfair” and warning of “potentially serious” tax implications.
-
Urgent action needed retain and recruit senior leaders, says MiP
NHS leaders are experiencing more work-related stress and lower morale, with the government’s sweeping reforms of the NHS in England a major factor, according to a new MiP survey.