Redwood Ward is a 17 bed older adult mental health ward based at St Charles Hospital in Kensington. It caters for older adults service users with organic and/or functional mental health needs.
The post for a band 6 Deputy Ward manager will entail managing a case load of older adult service users under CPA in an older adult mental health inpatient setting, under the supervision of the Ward Manager.
To work closely with the Ward multidisciplinary team including Matron, Doctors, Nurses, HCSW’s, Psychologist, OT, Activity Co-ordinator, Physiotherapist, Dietician and Arts Therapists.
To work in a person centred and recovery focused way to assist service users with their recovery and help prepare them for effective discharge. This post would involve supervising and supporting more junior staff and deputising for the Ward manager as required.
The post would also involve taking responsibility for managing physical healthcare needs and active involvement in audits and various Quality Improvements on the Ward, including plans relating to CQC inspection.
Band 6 nurses work closely with the people who use our services, families, friends and carers and play an important contribution in how people experience our services. Band 6 nurses are expected to be kind and responsive but professional and informative and contribute to the quality of the services we provide by:
• keeping the people who using our services as safe as possible through the use of sound clinical skills and effective risk assessments
• ensuring the best possible clinical outcomes by using up-to-date skills and adhering to evidence based policies and procedures
• ensuring the people using our services have a good experience by respecting, empowering and working in partnership with people throughout the care planning process
We believe that the best health care is delivered by multi-disciplinary teams working well togetherand in partnership with other teams and services to provide seamless care. Band 6 nurses work as part of a team and you will contribute to the success of the team by being an effective role model and supervising other Band 5 nurses, healthcare assistants/ support workers and students to ensure they are working to the standards which the people using our services deserve.
Values
Central and North West London NHS Trust expects all Band 6 nurses to act in a way which shows you understand our core values and are willing to put them into practice with service users, their friends family and carers and also other staff members.
As a Band 6 nurse we expect you to show COMPASSION, contribute to a caring and kind environment and recognise that what you do and say helps can make the lives of others better.
We expect you to RESPECT everyone and acknowledge and welcome people’s differences rather than ignore them or see them as problematic.
We expect you to EMPOWER others and continually try to provide information, resources and support to help others make their own decisions and meet their own needs.
We expect you to work in PARTNERSHIP and behave in a way that shows that you recognise that commissioners and users of our services are the people who generate and pay for our work.
As a band 6 nurse we expect you to role model these values and contribute to ensuring that they are embedded in the practice of the team.
Key Responsibilities
Central and North West London NHS Trust is committed to providing safe, effective services and providing patients and families with a positive experience.
Patient Safety
Band 6 nurses contribute to the provision of safe and reliable services by:
• Using their clinical judgement and risk assessments to keep the people using our services as safe as possible
• Safeguarding people by recognising and responding when an adult or child might be at risk from abuse but also recognising their own limits and asking for help and escalate concerns when necessary
• Escalating safety concerns and by doing so acting as effective advocates for those who use our services
• Being open and transparent about their own practice
• Supervising the work of others
• Reflecting on everyday practice to identify areas where improvements in safety or quality can be made
• Working with others to create a culture of continuous improvement
• Maintaining accurate, legible, comprehensive records
• Maintaining compliance with their mandatory training requirements
• The NMC plays an important role in safeguarding the public by regulating the work of nurses and all
nurses, including Band 6 nurses, are expected to register with the NMC each year and adhere to the
NMC Code of Conduct.
Clinical Outcomes
Band 6 nurses often work with people who have complex needs and contribute to the effectiveness
of services by:
• Being confident, autonomous practitioners who take responsibility for the care they give to
patients but also take responsibility for overseeing the work of others in the team including
less experienced nurses and staff without a professional qualification
• Providing skilled, evidence based nursing care which adheres to agreed policies and
procedures
• Working with patients and families in all stages of the care planning process including
assessing risks and needs
• Acting as patient advocates in the multi-disciplinary team and overseeing the work of others
to ensure that they are also responding to the needs of patients and providing clinically
effective care
• Working as autonomous practitioners and taking responsibility for the care they give to
patients but also work as team members
• Contributing to creating and maintaining high performing teams by:
• communicating well with all members of the team
• understanding their role in the team and how they help the team achieve its’ objectives
• reflecting on their own practice regularly and encouraging the whole team to reflect on their
practices in handovers and team meetings
• encouraging the team to learn from adverse events or respond to data analysis from audits
or benchmarking exercises and implement sustainable initiatives which improve clinical
outcomes
Patient Experience
Band 6 nurses contribute to the people using our services feeling respected and empowered to make
decisions about their health and wellbeing by:
• Working in partnership with patients and their families and carers
• Gaining consent and, as far as possible, involving people in all decision making
• Signposting patients and carers to the courses provided by the Recovery and Wellbeing
College or services provided by the local authority or voluntary sector
• Reassuring people by being professional, responsive, knowledgeable and confident
• Demonstrating clinical leadership and challenging any poor behaviour to patients, families or
other staff members and creating a positive, inclusive culture in which everyone is treated
with kindness and respect and the trust’s values are embedded in all practice
• Responding to complaints or concerns effectively and quickly in line with the Trust policy
Supporting yourself and others All services and teams in the Trust should be able to demonstrate that they are meeting the Care Quality Commission (CQC) standards of care. Band 6 nurses are expected to be Clinical Leaders and play an active role in ensuring that the team understands the CQC standards and what individual team members do to help achieve those standards by:
• Taking a lead role in gathering and recording evidence which demonstrates that CQC and
locally agreed standards are being met: assessing the performance of the whole team by
using audit and benchmarking exercises and often contribute to the implementation of quality
improvement initiatives.
• Contributing to the performance management of teams and creating a positive culture in which
the team can learn from mistakes and is enthusiastic to improve
• Deputising for the team leader / ward manager and ensuring that there is no fall in
performance in their absence.
This may include managing the team and coordinating shifts.
Engaged staff are more productive and Band 6 nurses play a role in engaging in other staff members
in the Trust and the work we do by:
• Providing supervision and annual appraisals to individuals and giving constructive, regular
feedback which helps those individuals reflect on their work, understand their objectives and
the CQC standards and monitor their progress towards achieving them
• Participating constructively in their own supervision and annual appraisal processes
• Using continuing professional development funds to develop a relevant clinical specialism,
gain sign-off mentorship skills or undertake accredited leadership or management modules
This advert closes on Tuesday 18 Feb 2025
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