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{{org_field_name}}

Registration Number: {{org_field_registration_no}}


Staff Support and Wellbeing Policy

1. Purpose

The purpose of this policy is to outline the commitment of {{org_field_name}} to promote and safeguard the physical, mental, and emotional wellbeing of all staff, including registered nurses, healthcare assistants, and other temporary workers who are engaged on a zero-hours or other flexible contract basis. Staff wellbeing is directly linked to high-quality, safe, and effective care for service users, and as such is fundamental to the agency’s success. {{org_field_name}} recognises that working within the health and social care sector can be both rewarding and demanding. This policy provides guidance on how the organisation will support its workforce, both reactively and proactively, to ensure a healthy, resilient, motivated, and valued workforce.

This policy is designed to support compliance with legislation and guidance relevant to employment businesses and temporary staffing agencies in England, including the Employment Agencies Act 1973, the Conduct of Employment Agencies and Employment Businesses Regulations 2003, the Agency Workers Regulations 2010, the Employment Rights Act 1996, the Working Time Regulations 1998, the National Minimum Wage Act 1998, the National Minimum Wage Regulations 2015, the Equality Act 2010, the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974, UK GDPR and the Data Protection Act 2018, the Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Act 2006, the Safeguarding Vulnerable Groups Act 2006, and the Modern Slavery Act 2015 where applicable.

{{org_field_name}} is an employment business supplying temporary workers to client organisations. It does not provide regulated care services directly and does not require registration with the Care Quality Commission unless its business model changes and it begins to carry on regulated activities.

2. Scope

This policy applies to all temporary agency workers, including registered nurses, healthcare assistants, support workers and other work-seekers supplied by {{org_field_name}} to care homes, healthcare providers, supported living providers and other client settings. It also applies to directors, office-based staff, consultants, contractors and anyone involved in the operation of {{org_field_name}}, so far as relevant to their role and contractual status.

For the purposes of this policy, “client”, “hirer” or “end user” means the organisation to which {{org_field_name}} supplies temporary workers. “Agency worker” means an individual supplied by {{org_field_name}} to work temporarily under the supervision and direction of a hirer. Nothing in this policy changes the individual’s contractual status, but {{org_field_name}} will apply statutory rights and protections according to the individual’s actual legal status and the nature of the assignment.

3. Related Policies

4. Legal and Regulatory Framework

{{org_field_name}} will operate this policy in line with the legal and regulatory duties that apply to temporary staffing agencies and employment businesses in England. These include, where applicable:

{{org_field_name}} will monitor legal developments, including provisions of the Employment Rights Act 2025 as they come into force, and will update this policy and related procedures where necessary.

5. Commitment to Staff Wellbeing

{{org_field_name}} is committed to:

6. Directors’ and Compliance Lead Responsibilities

The directors and any nominated compliance lead will be responsible for:

7. Responsibilities of All Staff

All staff engaged by {{org_field_name}} are responsible for:

8. Creating a Supportive Working Environment

{{org_field_name}} will ensure:

Before an assignment begins, {{org_field_name}} will seek and provide relevant assignment information, including the nature of the role, location, start and finish times, expected duties, rate of pay, any known health and safety risks, PPE requirements, reporting lines, emergency contacts, dress code, cancellation arrangements and any specific training, checks or experience required.

Where a worker reports that the client site has not provided adequate induction, safe systems of work, equipment, supervision, rest breaks, reasonable adjustments or support, {{org_field_name}} will review the concern promptly and liaise with the client where appropriate. If the concern presents a serious or immediate risk to health, safety, safeguarding or wellbeing, the agency may remove the worker from the assignment or decline further supply until the concern is resolved.

9. Agency Worker Rights and Equal Treatment

{{org_field_name}} will support compliance with the Agency Workers Regulations 2010. Agency workers are entitled from the first day of an assignment to access the hirer’s relevant collective facilities and amenities, such as canteens, rest areas, transport facilities, childcare facilities and similar workplace facilities, unless the hirer can objectively justify different treatment. Agency workers must also be informed by the hirer of relevant internal vacancies.

After completing the qualifying period in the same role with the same hirer, agency workers are entitled to equal treatment in relation to basic working and employment conditions, including pay, duration of working time, night work, rest periods, rest breaks and annual leave, as if they had been recruited directly by the hirer to do the same job.

{{org_field_name}} will take reasonable steps to obtain accurate information from hirers about comparable terms and conditions and will review assignments where an agency worker may have reached, or be approaching, the qualifying period.

Agency workers should notify {{org_field_name}} promptly if they believe they are not receiving appropriate access to facilities, vacancy information, rest breaks, annual leave, pay, or other rights connected with an assignment.

10. Working Time, Rest and Fatigue Management

{{org_field_name}} will comply with the Working Time Regulations 1998 and will take reasonable steps to avoid unsafe working patterns, excessive hours and fatigue. Staff have the right, subject to the detailed rules and exceptions in the Regulations, to:

Staff must provide accurate information about their availability, hours worked and any work undertaken for other employers or agencies where this may affect fatigue, working time limits, safe practice or fitness to work.

{{org_field_name}} will monitor working patterns where reasonably practicable and may refuse, cancel or pause assignments where there is a concern that the worker is fatigued, working excessive hours, unfit to work safely, or at risk of breaching working time rules.

Agency workers must take reasonable care of their own health and safety and must not accept shifts where they are too tired, unwell or otherwise unable to work safely.

Where a worker has opted out of the 48-hour weekly working time limit, this does not remove the agency’s or hirer’s responsibility to consider health, safety, fatigue and safe staffing risks.

11. Holiday Entitlement and Holiday Pay

{{org_field_name}} will ensure that eligible workers receive statutory paid annual leave in accordance with the Working Time Regulations 1998. Holiday entitlement and holiday pay will be calculated according to the worker’s contractual status, working pattern and applicable legal rules.

For workers who are irregular-hours workers or part-year workers, {{org_field_name}} will apply the statutory rules that apply to leave years beginning on or after 1 April 2024, including the statutory accrual method where applicable.

Where legally permitted and properly operated, {{org_field_name}} may use rolled-up holiday pay for irregular-hours workers or part-year workers. Where rolled-up holiday pay is used, it will be calculated and shown clearly and separately on the worker’s payslip, and the worker will remain entitled to take annual leave.

Workers are encouraged to take annual leave for rest and wellbeing. Holiday pay must not be treated as a substitute for actually taking rest from work.

12. Stress and Mental Health

{{org_field_name}} acknowledges that stress is a major contributor to poor mental health and may arise from work-related or personal factors. The agency will:

Where concerns arise from a client environment, {{org_field_name}} will, where appropriate, liaise with the hirer/end user to address the issue. This may include concerns about unsafe staffing levels, poor induction, bullying, harassment, discrimination, violence or aggression, lack of breaks, or unreasonable pressure on agency workers.

13. Support Structures

Staff will have access to:

Where appropriate, {{org_field_name}} may liaise with the client organisation to obtain information, request remedial action, support the worker, or decide whether further supply to the placement is appropriate.

14. Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion

{{org_field_name}} is committed to promoting equality and diversity. Staff, workers, applicants and work-seekers will not be discriminated against, harassed or victimised because of any protected characteristic under the Equality Act 2010, namely age, disability, gender reassignment, marriage and civil partnership, pregnancy and maternity, race, religion or belief, sex, or sexual orientation. All staff have the right to a safe working environment free from bullying, harassment, and discrimination. Staff who experience or witness discrimination are encouraged to report it immediately to the agency in line with the Whistleblowing or Grievance Policy.

{{org_field_name}} will consider reasonable adjustments for disabled workers and applicants where required. Workers should inform the agency as early as possible of any adjustment, health condition, disability, pregnancy-related need, religious requirement or other matter that may affect placement suitability, working arrangements or wellbeing.

{{org_field_name}} will not subject a worker to a detriment because they raise a concern, make a complaint, request a reasonable adjustment, report discrimination or harassment, or support another person in doing so.

15. Prevention of Sexual Harassment

{{org_field_name}} has a legal duty to take reasonable steps to prevent sexual harassment of its workers in the course of their work. This duty applies proactively and includes considering risks that may arise from colleagues, agency staff, client staff, service users, visitors, contractors or other third parties encountered during assignments.

{{org_field_name}} will take reasonable steps to prevent sexual harassment by:

Sexual harassment includes unwanted conduct of a sexual nature that has the purpose or effect of violating a person’s dignity or creating an intimidating, hostile, degrading, humiliating or offensive environment.

Workers must report sexual harassment or risks of sexual harassment as soon as possible. Reports will be handled confidentially so far as reasonably practicable, but information may need to be shared where necessary to protect workers, investigate concerns, comply with legal duties, or prevent further harm.

{{org_field_name}} will not victimise any worker for raising a sexual harassment concern, supporting another person’s complaint, or participating in an investigation.

16. Supervision, Appraisal, and Development

{{org_field_name}} will provide:

For temporary workers, supervision and feedback may be proportionate to the nature, frequency and duration of assignments. {{org_field_name}} will use check-ins, placement reviews, incident reviews, complaints, client feedback and worker feedback to identify wellbeing concerns, training needs, support needs or placement suitability issues.

Where a worker is registered with a professional body, such as the Nursing and Midwifery Council, {{org_field_name}} will expect the worker to maintain their professional registration, revalidation requirements, competence and fitness to practise. The agency will support workers by providing relevant assignment information and feedback where appropriate.

17. Whistleblowing and Raising Concerns

Staff are encouraged to raise concerns at the earliest opportunity if they believe their wellbeing, or the wellbeing of colleagues or service users, is at risk. Staff can raise concerns without fear of victimisation, harassment, or reprisal.

Concerns may include, but are not limited to, unsafe staffing, poor care observed at a client site, safeguarding risks, abuse or neglect, health and safety risks, unlawful discrimination, harassment, sexual harassment, modern slavery or labour exploitation, fraud, unlawful deductions from wages, working time breaches, or pressure to work when unfit or unsafe.

Where a concern relates to a client organisation, {{org_field_name}} will consider whether the matter should be escalated to the client, a safeguarding authority, professional regulator, local authority, the police, the Fair Work Agency, the Health and Safety Executive, or another appropriate body.

Staff may raise concerns via:

The directors will take concerns seriously and investigate in line with agency procedures.

18. Safeguarding, DBS and Suitability for Assignments

{{org_field_name}} will carry out suitability checks that are appropriate to the role, client requirements and legal requirements before supplying workers to health or social care settings. These may include identity checks, right-to-work checks, employment history, references, qualification checks, professional registration checks, training records, health declarations, DBS checks and barred-list checks where legally eligible or required.

DBS and criminal record information will be handled in accordance with data protection law, the DBS Code of Practice where applicable, and the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 and Exceptions Order 1975. Information will only be requested, used, shared and retained where lawful, necessary and proportionate.

Workers must immediately inform {{org_field_name}} of any matter that may affect their suitability for work, including restrictions on practice, suspension, investigation, criminal charges or convictions, safeguarding allegations, health issues affecting fitness to work, or changes to right-to-work status.

{{org_field_name}} may suspend supply, restrict assignments, request further information or notify relevant parties where it has concerns about a worker’s suitability, safety, safeguarding risk, professional status or legal right to work.

19. Right to Work

{{org_field_name}} will carry out right-to-work checks before a worker is supplied or employed, and will repeat checks where required for workers with time-limited permission to work in the UK. Checks will be conducted in accordance with current Home Office guidance and the Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Act 2006.

Workers must cooperate with right-to-work checks and must immediately notify {{org_field_name}} of any change to their immigration status, work restrictions, visa conditions or right to work.

{{org_field_name}} will not supply a worker where it knows, or has reasonable cause to believe, that the worker does not have the right to undertake the work in question.

20. Pay, National Minimum Wage and Deductions

{{org_field_name}} will ensure that workers are paid in accordance with their agreed terms, statutory minimum wage requirements, working time rules, holiday pay rules and any applicable Agency Workers Regulations 2010 equal treatment rights.

Workers will receive clear information about pay, deductions, holiday pay arrangements and payment intervals. Where required, agency workers will receive a Key Information Document before agreeing terms with the agency.

{{org_field_name}} will not make unlawful deductions from wages. Any deductions must be lawful, clearly explained and authorised where required.

Workers must submit timesheets or electronic time records accurately and within the required deadlines. Where pay queries arise, {{org_field_name}} will review them promptly and correct any confirmed underpayment as soon as reasonably practicable.

21. Data Protection and Confidentiality

{{org_field_name}} will process staff, applicant and worker information in accordance with UK GDPR and the Data Protection Act 2018. This may include personal data, employment records, training records, payroll information, right-to-work evidence, health information, safeguarding information, DBS information, professional registration information and assignment records.

Special category data, including health information, will only be processed where there is a lawful basis and a valid condition for processing under data protection law. Access will be restricted to those who need the information for legitimate business, legal, safeguarding, health and safety, payroll or compliance purposes.

Workers must maintain confidentiality regarding service users, clients, colleagues, agency records and any personal or sensitive information accessed during assignments. Breaches of confidentiality or data protection requirements may lead to removal from assignment, disciplinary action, termination of engagement, notification to the client or regulator, or other appropriate action.

22. Modern Slavery and Labour Exploitation

{{org_field_name}} is committed to preventing modern slavery, human trafficking, forced labour, debt bondage and labour exploitation in its business and supply chains.

The agency will take reasonable steps to ensure that workers are recruited and supplied ethically, are not charged unlawful work-finding fees, are paid lawfully, are free to leave work subject to lawful contractual notice provisions, and are not subject to coercion, threats, document retention, intimidation or exploitation.

Staff must report any concern that a worker, applicant or colleague may be subject to exploitation, coercion, trafficking, forced labour, debt bondage, control by another person, or suspicious payment or accommodation arrangements.

Where {{org_field_name}} meets the statutory threshold under section 54 of the Modern Slavery Act 2015, it will publish an annual modern slavery statement. Where the threshold is not met, the agency may still maintain anti-slavery procedures and provide client assurances where contractually required.

23. Training

All staff will receive training on:

24. Monitoring and Evaluation

Directors will:

25. Policy Review

This policy will be reviewed annually or earlier if:

The directors of {{org_field_name}} will take full responsibility for the policy’s implementation, monitoring, and review.

Because {{org_field_name}} does not provide regulated care directly, references to CQC requirements will only apply where relevant to client expectations, contractual requirements, or best practice for workers supplied into CQC-regulated environments. If {{org_field_name}} begins to provide regulated activities directly, it must review whether CQC registration is required before commencing those activities.


Responsible Person: {{org_field_registered_manager_first_name}} {{org_field_registered_manager_last_name}}
Reviewed on:
{{last_update_date}}
Next Review Date:
{{next_review_date}}
Copyright © {{current_year}} – {{org_field_name}}. All rights reserved.

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