The Health Visitor Implementation Plan, unveiled back in February, has a goal to create 4,200 extra posts by 2015. It projects that numbers will accelerate as that year approaches. But nowhere in the plan does it state that numbers will continue to decline. Several months down the line, this is unfortunately the case. The figures, provided to us by strategic health authorities, provide a wake-up call about the scale of the task ahead for the government to realise its ambition.
The plan is to train 6,000 health visitors to meet the target, accounting for people leaving the profession. A couple of factors might explain why the planned expansion of the workforce is struggling to get off the ground. First, the profession is itself not currently in the best of health. A survey from the Royal College of Nursing last month found health visitors feeling overworked and undervalued. Many feel unable to provide the wider public role they aspire to hold as their time gets consumed dealing with more acute needs. The result is that they quit. Moreover, a substantial proportion of health visitors in some areas are nearing retiring age.
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