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Skills for Care: Recruiting disabled peope project overview
1. Resources to support the recruitment
and retention of disabled people
Skills for Care is currently undertaking a new project to establish how we can support social care
employers to fully utilise the skills of disabled people within their workforce. This project is part of the
‘I Care…’ recruitment and retention programme of work and links to the Recruitment and Retention
Implementation Plan developed by employers, for employers.
The social care sector is one of the few growth industries that has real vacancies despite the
current climate and offers career progression opportunities. It is an industry in which the diversity of
employees can contribute to service quality yet we know that disabled people are under represented
within the workforce.
This project aims to explore the barriers that prevent successful employment and progression of
disabled people. We will use our findings to develop sector specific resources to support adult
social care employers tap into this under represented group of potential employees to build their
businesses and deliver high quality care solutions for the range of people who use their services.
What are we doing now?
Skills for Care is working with one of our Board, Nina Osborne, who will be leading this project.
Nina has experience as both a disabled worker within the social care sector and as a social care
employer. We will be contacting interested parties and experts for their support and involvement.
The intention of this project is to build upon existing research and best practice. We recognise there
are many specialist organisations already providing information and hope to utilise their expertise
and contextualise best practice for the social care sector. The Care Providers Alliance (who chair
the Department of Health Recruitment and Retention sub-group) and a number of employer
representative organisations have already expressed an interest in supporting this project and we are
currently seeking to identify other groups who may wish to do so.
2. To ensure our work has relevance and addresses both the real and perceived barriers that block
entry and progression into the social care workforce we are devising a questionnaire that will be
sent to disabled people’s representative groups and independent networks.
What next?
The returned questionnaires will be analysed and we will consult on the findings and ascertain
where good practice lies which will challenge or redress any barriers. We will seek to engage with
adult social care employers and disabled people already working within the sector to identify a full
range of good practice case studies. These will add to Skills for Care’s range of ‘I Care...’ products
as well as forming the basis of any new resources to support social care employers to employ
disabled people.
Alongside these activities will be the core resources that already exist from specialist groups. We
will ensure that where appropriate, the resources produced signpost to further information and
guidance that can add value to their recruitment and retention activities and support them to
develop a more inclusive and dynamic social care workforce.
What we will not do?
This work is about best practice in recruitment, retention and progression of disabled people within
the adult social care workforce. It is not meant to be a separate strategy that further alienates
or compartmentalises disabled people. Skills for Care has already produced a recruitment and
retention toolkit for employers and work from this project will be used to update that toolkit. This
project seeks to provide further support and guidance for employers to integrate into their wider
recruitment and retention strategies when looking at this particular aspect of diversity.
Get involved
If you would like more information about the project or you would like to become involved in the
work please contact:
Annette Baines, Skills for Care Programme Head, Recruitment, Retention and International Work -
email annette.baines@skillsforcare.org.uk or call 07866 740 642
Nina Osborne - email ninaosborne@btinternet.com or call 01905 351635