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The UK renal psychosocial workforce : a mapping exercise

Seekles, ML; Coyne, E; Ormandy, P; Wells, L; Bevin, A; Danbury-Lee, A

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Authors

ML Seekles

E Coyne

L Wells

A Bevin

A Danbury-Lee



Abstract

This is the first detailed workforce report in the UK that describes the provision of psychosocial care to kidney patients across 84 renal units. It presents an overview of the renal psychosocial workforce (in July 2017) and compares this to results of an earlier snapshot report written in 2002. Psychosocial care is support for psychological or social problems usually provided by professionals such as psychologists, social workers, counsellors, youth workers and welfare advisors. Studies show that kidney patients face many problems, for which these professionals provide much needed help.
The current report shows the following findings:
• Renal units employ different combinations of psychosocial
staff. For example, In some units a social worker and
psychologist work together, whereas in other units this
would be a counsellor and a psychologist.
• There are inequalities and large variations in the number of psychosocial staff available to help patients within units. 12 units (14%) have no psychosocial staff dedicated to kidney patients, 34 units (40%) have one or two dedicated staff, and 38 units (46%) provide three or more psychosocial staff to care for their patients.
• The number of psychologists (in adult services) has
increased over the past 15 years but the number of social
workers has decreased. Overall, these adult psychosocial
services have increased with 25%, but this is not as much
as the increase in number of patients of about 50%.
• In paediatric services, psychology and social work services overall have decreased with 21% compared to 2002.
• None of the 84 units employ the recommended number of
social workers (proposed in 2002).
• Only 4 units (5%) employ the recommended number of
psychologists (proposed in 2002).
These results suggest that there are not enough
psychosocial staff to provide care to all renal patients.
The provision of renal psychosocial care is patchy and
appears to be inadequate. Further research into the
psychosocial needs of kidney patients is necessary, to
develop innovative solutions to provide equitable care and
evidence based psychosocial clinical guidelines.

Citation

Seekles, M., Coyne, E., Ormandy, P., Wells, L., Bevin, A., & Danbury-Lee, A. (2018). The UK renal psychosocial workforce : a mapping exercise

Report Type Project Report
Publication Date Apr 30, 2018
Deposit Date May 1, 2018
Publicly Available Date May 1, 2018
ISBN 9781912337071
Related Public URLs https://www.kidneycareuk.org/
https://britishrenal.org/
Additional Information Corporate Creators : British Renal Society, Kidney Care UK
Projects : UK Psychosocial Workforce Audit;Investigating renal psychosicial service provision

Files

F__Paula F Drive_KCUK knowledge Exchange 2016_psychosocial report_The UK Renal Psychological Workforce Report_FINAL.pdf (2.4 Mb)
PDF

Version
British Renal Society & Kidney Care UK Workforce Report





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