Title: Commission for Social Care Inspection
1Commission for Social Care Inspection
- where the regulator fits in
- and what are the links?
- Action on Elder Abuse Moving Forward Conference
2CSCI?
- CSCI is the single regulator and inspectorate for
social care in England and was established by the
Health Social Care (Community Health
Standards) Act 2003 - We came into being on the 1st April 2004
replacing the NCSC, SSI and Audit Commission
(Joint Reviews) - We are a non-departmental government body
sponsored by the Department of Health and our
core functions are - The registration and inspection of care service
providers under the scope of the Care Standards
Act 2000 - The performance assessment of the 150 councils
with social services responsibilities (star
ratings)
3The Future!
The Chancellor announced a reform of regulatory
bodies in the March 2005 Budget with implications
for CSCI Our childrens functions will migrate
to a children learners and skills inspectorate
(the new Ofsted) by 2007 Our adult functions
will merge with the Healthcare Commission by 2008
in a new adult social care and health
inspectorate Transition arrangements are now
underway across both streams, but at different
speeds However, over the next two years we have
a major change agenda to deliver and Inspecting
for Better Lives (IBL) is at the heart of our
reforms towards a modern regulator and
inspectorate
4IBL
Inspecting For Better Lives Towards A Modern
Regulator Inspectorate
- Empower service users and be driven by their
experience - Make regulation simpler
- Use less resources
- Emphasise that providers and commissioners are
responsible for quality - Encourage improvement, but be tough on bad
practice.
5Elder Abuse
- Where we are now
- The role of CSCI in protection and safeguarding
matters often lacks clarity with partner agencies - Where we are going
- Reforms under IBL to our complaints processes and
our approach to protection and safeguarding will - Enable our external partners to better
understand our legal duties and responsibilities - Promote consistency of practise across CSCI
- Clearly define the difference between a
complaint and an allegation of abuse
6The Legal Context
Social Care
Care Standards Act 2000 Children Act 1989 Health
Social Care Act 2003 Regulations NMS
Rights
Human Rights Act 1998 Race Relations Amendment
Act 2002 Disability Discrimination Act 2005 Data
Protection Act 1998 Freedom Of Information Act
2000
7IBL Change Drivers
- We attach the term complaint to widely diverse
information with quite differing levels of
gravity - Adult and child protection referrals (including
suspicion of abuse) are obscured or double
counted - We sometimes find ourselves acting
inappropriately as the lead coordinating agency
in protection matters - The Public Interest Disclosure Act (PIDA) 1998
is not properly applied to staff in regulated
care settings - Inconsistent decision making about whether the
provider or ourselves should consider complaints - 80 of corporate complaints about us have their
origin in regulatory complaints matters
8Some Key Messages
- We have no statutory complaints duties and are
not a complaints investigation / mediation agency - Social care services have statutory
responsibilities for complaint handling
(providers and local authorities) - CSCI is not a protection agency, but will act
where regulated services are the focus of the
allegation - Allegations of abuse are the lead coordinating
(strategy) responsibility of local protection and
safeguarding bodies - CSCI may on occasions undertake a lead role in
adult protection enquiries and investigations
9Information
HOT INFORMATION
COOL INFORMATION
enquiries
compliments
correspondence
compliments
opinions
surveys
consultations
research
feedback
events
submissions
submissions
comments
referrals
suggestions
representations
representations
complaints
concerns
allegations
Information about regulated services comes to us
from a range of sources
The new approach focuses on information defined
as hot and which requires action of some
description
10Procedure
complaints
concerns
allegations
assessment using descriptors and accumulated
evidence
STATUTORY SOCIAL SERVICES COMPLAINTS PROCEDURE
CONCERN COMPLAINT CSCI OWNED
CONCERN COMPLAINT PROVIDER OWNED
ADULT PROTECTION MULTI AGENCY
CHILD PROTECTION MULTI AGENCY
COMPLAINT CONCERN PROVIDER OWNED
11Procedure Assessment
- information
- descriptors
- definitions
- ownership
- accumulated evidence
- proportionate Action
12Procedure Definitions
Concern / Complaint An expression of
dissatisfaction about the quality of the outcomes
for people using a service Allegation A
referral of a serious nature indicating possible
abusive or criminal practices
13Procedure Descriptors
Step 1 Descriptors Provide for initial screening
to determine whether information falls into the
scope of the concerns, complaints and allegations
procedure Step 2 Descriptors Enable the correct
definition to be applied (concern, complaint or
allegation) Step 3 Descriptors Assist in
determining whether the provider, local authority
or other agency, or ourselves own responsibility
for the necessary enquiries
14IBL Adult Protection
- The new approach to concerns and complaints has
exposed significant adult protection issues for
CSCI - CSCI Senior Management Board with shortly be
considering recommendations for reforms in adult
protection policy, procedure and practise. These
will be considered by the Commission in late
spring and include - The need for a new national adult protection
protocol that reflects structural changes since
No Secrets - Recognition of the term safeguarding and other
recent developments in adult abuse - Revised guidance for CSCI staff on their role in
local safeguarding arrangements