GP practices should get in touch with staff who quit over the Covid vaccine mandate to discuss reinstating them in their role, NHS England has said.
It comes as the promised consultation on revoking the mandatory vaccine requirement was today launched by the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC).
In a set of FAQs published yesterday, NHS England said that practices should contact staff who resigned over the mandate ‘as soon as practicable’ to ‘discuss the Government’s plan to consult on revoking the regulations’.
It said: ‘If the individual is still within their notice period, discussions can take place about whether they would like to continue or withdraw their resignation or pause their notice period until the outcome of the consultation and Parliamentary process is confirmed.
‘Managers should follow this with a formal letter to the individual confirming the conversation and agreed next steps.’
However, the document suggested that staff would not be guaranteed to get their job back.
It said: ‘If the individual’s notice period has expired and they wish to return to their former role, the employer may choose to provide the individual with reasonable support with respect to the recruitment and selection process and extend an offer to re-engage them to their former role and on the same terms and conditions of employment.
‘The employer will need to be able to demonstrate consistency in their approach to ensure that a fair and equitable process has been given to all applicable workers.’
Pulse reported last month that GP practice staff were already resigning or looking for other employment ahead of the Covid vaccine mandate coming into force.
The document also advised practices to keep Covid vaccines as a requirement in relevant job adverts and ‘part of their pre-employment health checks’ while ‘the legislation is still in place and subject to consultation and parliamentary approval’.
They should provide advice that this is under review but ‘include wording in their job adverts that they encourage and support vaccination uptake’, it added.
NHS England also said that practices are still ‘encouraged’ to meet with unvaccinated staff to provide ‘encouragement and support for vaccine uptake’.
Mr Javid last week announced that GPs and their patient-facing staff will no longer be required to be vaccinated against Covid-19 by 1 April.
His statement came just days before the 3 February deadline for unvaccinated staff to get their first Covid vaccine in time.
There had been fears that up to 3,000 GP staff would have had to be dismissed, as NHS England guidance said redeployment into non-patient-facing roles was ‘not guaranteed’.
As previously published in our sister title, Pulse.
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