Skills for Care have revealed the number of vacant posts in adult social care have increased by 52% – the highest rate on record.
Key findings from Skills for Care’s annual report on the state of adult care in England include:
Despite these findings the demand for care has risen, highlighting the sector is facing a complex challenge with recruitment and retention which will be impacting on the lives of people who need social care.
Staff turnover rates within care roles remain high at 29% as approximately 400,000 people left their jobs.
However, not everyone who leaves their job leaves social care, as around 63% of people working in the sector having been recruited from other care roles.
Social care is still seeing high rates of turnover amongst the youngest staff with 52.6% of people under 20 leaving within 12 months.
In the context of the national cost of living pressures, four out of every five jobs in the wider economy pay more than the median pay for care workers.
The data demonstrates that social care’s ongoing recruitment issues present both a short-term and long-term challenge with workforce growth projections showing that employers will need to fill around 480,000 more posts by 2035.
The report highlights the need to implement the ‘People at the Heart of Care’ white paper which was published last year and to start releasing the £500m committed for the workforce in that white paper for skills and learning.
Skills for Care CEO Oonagh Smyth said: ‘This report highlights the immediate and longer-term capacity issues in social care.
‘Data shows that while we are going to need 480,000 extra people working in social care by 2035, we already have 165,000 vacancies every day and the 28% of the workforce aged 55 or over may retire in the next 10 years.’
‘The ‘People at the heart of Care’ white paper had commitments to investing in knowledge, skills, health and wellbeing, and recruitment policies to improve social care as a long-term career choice.
‘The implementation of the commitments in that white paper have never been more important so that we can start to build the foundations to ensure that we have the workforce that we need now and in the future.
‘In short, our society needs a step change in how it values social care and the great people who provide it.’
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