- 02 November 2018
- 6 min read
How Home Managers can balance bureaucracy with personal care
SubscribeIf we approach administration creatively we will be able to spend less time in the office, and deliver more personalised care in our nursing homes.

Whatever the size of a care home, and irrespective of the background of the residents, every day we are required to complete a stack of paper work for CQC, local authorities, health colleagues, and families etc.
The demands of filling in the same old forms, completing care plans and risks assessments sometimes makes us feels that it gets in the way of doing what we all want to really do – deliver good quality care to those we look after.

The demands of paperwork and admin
Paperwork sits on shelves and in filing drawers. Its mere presence can breed resentment - demanding our attention and condensing a human job into text and forms.
Yes, the potential outcome of paperwork and administration generally is that it may make home managers less attentive to the human demands of the job. And the volume and detail of work that the administrative demands of the job calls for can be a major problem too, increasing the chance of managers taking shortcuts.

Forms forget that each care receiver has unique, human needs
One of the biggest ironies with all this form filling is how we try to balance a personal service tailored to the needs of individuals by using standardised forms and processes for everyone.
All too often we find that the needs of those we care for don’t easily fit into a form. People become round pegs in square holes, where forms become incomplete or partial pictures.
About this contributor
Senior Lecturer Health & Social Care, University of Gloucestershire
For more than 30 years Mark has worked across higher education and adult social care in practice, research and consultancy settings. He is passionate about thinking about ‘doing’ social care differently, and creating new structures that maximizes opportunities for all involved in the care exchange.
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