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Managers Benefit from ESR Self Service

3:30 pm in Reflections by Attractor

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Attractor has been working with an NHS client to support its work deploying  Supervisor Self-Service – part of the Electronic Staff Record (ESR), the national HR and Payroll solution used by almost all NHS organisations in England and Wales.

Following effective change management and process review action, the Trust has now completed the pilot phase, proving business processes work and assessing the extent to which new working practices are both fit for purpose and beneficial.

At the end of the pilot phase, managers using the system have reported real benefits for them in terms of time saving, more effective working practices, access to vital staffing information and greater empowerment with the ability to act quickly on timely information.

Subject to Project Board sign-off, Self-Service will be made available to managers across the organisation in a accelerated launch phase, alongside which the functionality in Manager Self Service will be piloted.

NHS Staff Record – Expanding Use to Get Benefits

10:00 am in A Track Record by Attractor

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Photo : DeclanTM, Flickr

In 2010, Attractor identified some challenges for the future of the NHS Electronic Staff Record (ESR), in particular suggesting the changing strategic picture in the NHS would have a big impact on deployment and implementation of additional features. While the “new look” NHS seems very slow to materialise, a world of increasing decentralisation and delegated authority must call into question the suitability of a national IT solution.

In a sign that Attractor wasn’t alone in identifying this question, the Department of Health wrote to NHS organisations recently, stating a late 2010 review had supported the concept of retaining and expanding the ESR solution from 2014 onwards.

While this strategy will undoubtedly require an appropriate  competitive process at the end of the existing contract, but it seems clear those actively managing the system and the contractual relationship with McKesson consider ESR has a long-term future.

From January through to June 2011, most NHS users of the ESR system will have experienced a major overhaul in the way the system looks and feels as well as significant enhancements in the solution’s functionality and “reach”.

As well as introducing a whole new look for core application users – which has generally been received positively – there are important additional features being introduced for learning management and administration, solutions to many user-identified problems and a move to switch all NHS organisations over to use of smartcards for controlling access to staff records.

These features and the parallel development of the National Learning Management Solution (NLMS) demonstrate the clear view of some who retain the vision that a national IT solution can be an important strategic enabler for the NHS. Unfortunately for many NHS teams, these new challenges have had to be managed at a time when available resources from the Department of Health and locally have been under increasing pressure and some have found it very difficult to make progress with some of the expanded functionality.

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Benefits of HR Self Service in the NHS

10:00 am in Latest News by Attractor

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In the current climate, perhaps it is unsurprising NHS organisations are looking for clear financial justifications for making any investments in projects which will take some time to complete and deliver benefits. When resources are tight and a number of core corporate functions are being subject to scrutiny and pressure, people are not sure there is a financial justification for starting any new work.

Having had the Electronic Staff Record (ESR) in place since 2008 (at the latest), many NHS organisations have deployed self service tools in some shape though few appear to be making full use of all it’s key features.

Too many NHS Trusts have been “piloting” ESR Self Service for a long time, with only a small number of people across the organisation using some of the tools available. This pattern suggests NHS organisations have commenced deployment without a clear strategy or vision about how they want to change the way they work.

Like many large projects, it can be all too easy to fall into the trap of focusing on the technology rather than the desired business change.

Undoubtedly, self service tools face special barriers in a healthcare environment. Not everyone has routine access to a computer and the NHS workforce has been relatively late in adapting to new computing technologies generally. With effective planning however, these challenges can be appropriately addressed and overcome.

In part though, the lack of progress on ESR Self Service reflects an innately conservative approach of corporate teams to the introduction of new technology – possibly not an issue special to the NHS. To the extent that self service encourages devolution of control and decision-making away from corporate centres, it is quite natural for those teams to express concern about risks and potential loss of control.

The combination of hesitant corporate teams, competing priorities, financial pressures and institutional constraints has the potential to make many NHS organisations seem increasingly archaic to “modern” managers from forward-looking healthcare and private industry and a new generation of employees now joining clinical teams from universities – who are familiar with the features of modern self-service technologies including sites like Amazon, Lastminute.com, iTunes and Facebook.

Like many organisations then, the NHS has been relatively slow to implement self service tools in the workplace. It is all to common to hear the business benefits of ESR Self Service have yet to be fully understood or, more importantly, realised in practice. How can this be successfully approached? Read the rest of this entry →

NHS Pay Fraud and Errors 2010

10:00 am in Latest News by Attractor

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People Management reported a case recently where an NHS employee was paid for a period of nearly two years after she left her job. The ex-employee began to receive payments in April 2008, almost a year after she left the Trust.

According to reports, errors transferring staff information at Calderdale Primary Care Trust during the migration of data to the Electronic Staff Record (which went live in April 2008) causedThe error was eventually identified during an internal audit exercise in January 2010.

Yvonne Atkinson, a healthcare support worker, had not alerted her former employer and received almost £22k over 22 months. Apparently her partner had persuaded her not to contact the employer. When challenged by the organisation, the ex-employee admiting knowing she was not entitled to the money and subsequently pleaded guilty to theft.

She was eventually sentenced to a four months’ suspended prison sentence and a 12-month supervision order.

Further problems came to light with NHS payroll arrangements earlier in the year when, in September 2010, around 350 employees at NHS Sefton, located in Bootle Merseyside, were notified they had received overtime payments due to a calculation error.

In this case there was no suggestion of dishonesty, errors relating to unsocial hours payments – an area where earnings can vary regularly and employees often find it difficult to keep track of the details.

At NHS Sefton, the overpayments ranged from £20 up to a maximum of £4,500 with overpayments totaling about £160k and the Trust contacted staff, asking them to pay back the amounts overpaid over a reasonable period – of up to three years.

Once again, the errors were identified as a result of audit activity carried out by the Trust’s new payroll provider carried out an audit exercise. Payroll procedures were changed to prevent such a problem recurring.

An NHS employee working for NHS Greater Glasgow also admitted to defrauding NHS Scotland of around £38k by claiming for hours that she had not worked at Stobhill Hospital between 2006 and 2008. After moving from a job as a cleaner to become a part-time administration assistant, while still working as a cleaner.

The employee recorded additional hours she worked as a cleaner and, after the records had been authorised by her line manager, the employee added hours which she had not worked and these papers were submitted for payment.

When the Trust’s management team queried a budget overspend, audit review uncovered the discrepancies and led to the scam being discovered. The employee was jailed for a period of eight months.

NHS Skills Passports – Benefits and Barriers

10:00 am in Latest News by Attractor

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Photo: IK's World Trip, Flickr

In principle, a common competence framework across the NHS and wider Healthcare sector could make a significant difference to employment administration and the overall cost of employment.

The National Occupational Standards developed for health organisations are already available to all organisations and employees, supported by shared workforce systems. These have not been universally adopted however, a step which requires a degree of consensus which proved challenging even when the NHS was managed as a single national organisation.

There is clearly appetite nationally for a skills passport. When NHS PASA conducted research  in this area, 121 NHS organisations responded to a national questionnaire on statutory and mandatory training with the following findings -

  • 90% of respondents feel staff urgently need a Training Passport
  • 85% feel that retraining staff who have moved from one NHS organisation to another creates needless duplication of training – assessed as equivalent to costs of £74m per annum across England,
  • 95% feel that staff who often move jobs ought to have some means of transferring skills that they have developed in statutory and mandatory training
  • 85% feel that national agreement is needed regarding the content and level of statutory and mandatory training.

In August 2010, Attractor posed the question “Is it Too Late for an NHS Skills Passport“, the article considered the potential benefits of a more joined up approach across the NHS alongside the challenges presented by an emerging decentralised strategic framework.

Delivering the advantages and benefits of joined up planning and action on workforce skills will be harder as as the NHS gradually de-nationalises.

What can the recent experience of NHS organisations tell us? Read the rest of this entry →

What Future for NHS Staff Record?

10:00 am in Latest News by Attractor

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The announcement that NHS National Programme for Information Technology (NPfIT) was dropping it’s centralised approach – in favour of modular, locally-led solution seemed a long time in arriving.

Following recent decisions to scrap the the Microsoft Enterprise Agreement, to cease central funding for the NHS Appraisal Toolkit and not to renew the natonal Enterprise Agreementfor Novell it seems the time for large national IT solutions is over.

With these developments in national strategy, what does the future hold for the Electronic Staff Record (ESR), the integrated human resources and payroll solution used, almost universally, by NHS employers.

Following lengthy testing and pilot site work, the system was deployed across the NHS over 24 months finishing in April 2008.

In retrospect this project seems to be one of the few major IT projects which delivered its results broadly on time and within budget. ESR is now almost certainly the worlds largest employee database and it is surprising the NHS did not broadcast its success more widely.

Through the period 2008-10, work to refine and extend the system’s functionality has continued, now including a wide range of HR, Payroll, Staffing Budgets, Education and Training, eLearning and Self Service. The contract for the system will be reviewed in 2014 and those using the system will be looking at recent developments with interest and, perhaps, some concern.

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NHS Manager Self Service

10:00 am in A Track Record by Attractor

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Photo: DeclanTM, Flickr

Attractor was recently asked to support an NHS Foundation Trust with ambitions to deploy both manager and supervisor self-service across the organisation.

Using the self-service toolkit available within Electronic Staff Record (ESR), the NHS integrated human resources and payroll solution, the plan forms part of the organisation’s corporate improvement programme.

Attractor will be providing project consultancy support for the Trust’s management team throughout the life of the project. With support arrangements agreed in principle and the project team beginning to form, work started quickly to develop a robust and detailed project plan.

Activities in the plan will ensure all systems and technical issues, business process review and the stakeholder, communication and other change issues arising are appropriately addressed. This will help the organisation to acheives it’s objectives and secures the maximum possible benefits from implementing new tools.

With preparations for implementation now getting underway, the next key stages of work will involve planning for both anticipated business process review and effective actions to secure benefits realisation.

Is it Too Late for an NHS SKills Passport?

10:00 am in Latest News by Attractor

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The Sector Skills Council for UK Healthcare – Skills for Health has recently published the results of pilot work it was undertaking over a year with seven NHS Trusts on a ‘skills passport’.

The system, built by Skillsprofile based on work it has done withing other industries, allows workers to create an online record of their skills, qualifications and experience, verified by qualified line managers, enabling prospective or existing employers to save duplicating training where it is not needed – especially stautory mandatory training if staff move between employers.

Skills for Health endorsed the work delivered by the organisations, stressing the potential to reduce administrative costs associated with taking on new staff and a range of other benefits for employers and employees.

David Foster, Deputy Chief Nursing Officer for England has spoken favourably about the pilot, suggesting it had ” …confirmed the case for a skills passport, … also highlighted a range of potential additional benefits for employers, health workers throughout the UK, universities and, most importantly, those who use health services. But is this initiative too late? Read the rest of this entry →

Are NHS Managers and Employees ready for HR Self Service?

10:00 am in Uncategorized by Attractor

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With the Electronic Staff Record deployed across the NHS, many organisations have explored the use of HR Self Service functionality. If you work in the NHS how ready do you think front-line teams are for managing employee records using self service? Read the rest of this entry →

NHS Scotland Seeks New HRIS

10:00 am in Latest News by Attractor

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NHS Scotland has started a procurement process for a single national human resources information suite

The tender, which follows on from much earlier work on developing the user requirements and specification, envisages a five year contract.

The system will cover recruitment, training administration, attendance management, employee relations processing and medical staffing and is expected to have interface requirements to other systems including -

  • payroll
  • time and attendance
  • expenses management
  • occupational health transferable records
  • performance management and appraisal
  • “staff bank” management
  • e-rostering.

NHS Scotland is looking for a single supplier who can provide the system, training and disaster recovery, support and development and possibly hosting services for all the health boards in Scotland and the organisations that work with them. Read the rest of this entry →