Abstract

This paper reports and discusses the weekly Clapping for Carers – described as ‘front‐line heroes’ that took place across the United Kingdom during the first national lockdown of the coronavirus pandemic. Data are drawn from a UK‐wide online survey of health and social care workers, completed in May to July 2020. The survey received 3,425 responses of which 2,541 were analysed; free‐text comments were categorised. One question asked specifically: ‘Do you think the “Clap for Carers” was a helpful response from the public?’, and 815 comments were provided. Responses were extracted from these 815 free‐text comments and categorised as follows: unequivocally Yes, predominantly Yes, mixed feelings, predominantly No and unequivocally No. Most comments revealed mixed feelings about the helpfulness of Clapping with only a minority being entirely supportive. The free‐text comments offer some explanations for these views with many feeling that Clapping distracted from the severity of the pandemic and the inadequate resources. The free‐text comments reveal workforce concerns that the support demonstrated for the frontline workforce in Clapping might be transitory and that it may not translate into workforce improvements and political commitment to further funding of health and social care. Some saw the value of Clapping as illustrative of community cohesion. There was little mention of Clapping for heroes, and where it was the notion of heroism was rejected. The demonstration of public support in Clapping for Carers may have directly benefitted the public, but only indirectly the workforce. Future recruitment data may help discern if public support has translated into a desire to join the workforce.

Highlights

  • Millions of people in the United Kingdom (UK) displayed their support for frontline health and social care workers in the first national lockdown by taking part in Clapping for Carers

  • This paper reports and discusses the weekly Clapping for Carers –­ described as ‘front-­line heroes’ that took place across the United Kingdom during the first national lockdown of the coronavirus pandemic

  • The research aims to explore the impact of providing health and social care during the Covid-­19 pandemic on nurses, midwives, social care workers, social workers and patient-­facing allied health professionals (AHPs; the survey was promoted to occupations listed on the Health and Care Professions Council registrar for 2020, including occupational therapists, physiotherapists, dieticians and paramedics)

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Millions of people in the United Kingdom (UK) displayed their support for frontline health and social care workers in the first national lockdown by taking part in Clapping for Carers. This paper reports data from a large UK survey of the health and social care workforce that sought respondents' feelings about this public manifestation of support and discusses the range of opinions expressed and their differentiation from those of the public

| Background
| METHODS
| FINDINGS
| Strengths and limitations
Findings
| CONCLUSION

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