Title: Raising concerns
1Raising concerns share and learn 11
November 2015London Nyla Cooper, Programme
LeadAdele Bunch, Senior Programme Officer
2Today
- Welcome and brief introductions
- NHS Employers role
- Key messages and developments
- The role of the INO, Charles Rendell, CQC
- Table discussion local guardian models
- Lunch networking
- New patient safety video, Margit Veveris, HEE
- Our freedom to speak up service, Sharon Landrum
and Carol Skillen, Wirral University Teaching
Hospital - Developing a standard integrated policy for
reporting raising concerns, Tom Grimes, Monitor - Evaluation and next steps
- Close
3Role of NHS Employers
- help employers understand and contribute to
changes in healthcare, enabling them to improve
the quality and safety of patient care - work closely with employers, key national bodies
and regulators to influence policy and regulatory
change - provide advice, guidance, information and
resources to help employers review, develop and
implement effective local arrangements - deliver a range programmes targeted at
influencing cultural change staff experience,
staff engagement, organisational development,
health, work and well-being, equality and
diversity and people-performance management
4Actions from the Learning notblaming report (DH
July 2015)
Action Timeline
Employers To take forward actions in an effective, proportionate and affordable manner, in advance of national guidance being issued including appointment of local FTSU guardians As soon as practicable
Care Quality Commission To consult on independent national officer (INO) role To appoint INO To develop support team function Consultation Sept-Dec 2015 By Dec 2015 By April 2016
Health Education England To work with the Care Quality Commission and INO once appointed, to produce guidance on the training needs for the Freedom to Speak Up guardian role and curriculum for NHS organisations By April 2016
5Actions from the Learning not blaming report
(DH July 2015)
Action Timeline
NHS England, NHS Trust Development Authority and Monitor To devise a support scheme for NHS staff and former NHS staff who are experiencing difficulties finding employment as a result of having made protected disclosures To produce a standard integrated policy and procedures for reporting incidents and raising concerns Engagement with key stakeholders and other interested parties throughout Nov-Dec 2015 Consultation Nov-Dec 2015
NHS England To produce guidance on how to implement the principles and actions in primary care Engagement with key stakeholders (By end 2015)
Department of Health To establish an independent patient safety investigation function for the NHS (under the single leadership of the NHS Trust Development Authority and Monitor) By April 2016
- NHS England to produce a standard integrated
policy and procedure for reporting incidents and
raising concerns - Department of Health to establish an independent
patient safety investigation function for the NHS
6National GuardianBriefing November 2015Charles
Rendell, Strategy Manager CQC November 2015
7Contents
- Introduction
- The purpose of the National Guardian
- CQCs role in relation to staff concerns
- Principles for how the Office of the National
Guardian will operate - Functions of the National Guardian
8Introduction
- In response to concerns about the culture in the
NHS, the Secretary of State for Health
commissioned Sir Robert Francis to carry out an
independent review Freedom to Speak Up (FTSU).
- The review was asked to identify measures to
foster a culture in the NHS in England where
staff can feel safe to speak out about patient
safety, as well as learning lessons by listening
to those who have experiences to share, both
positive and negative. - The review was published in February 2015. One of
the major recommendations was to create an
Independent National Officer to support staff
raising concerns and the wider system. - The Department of Health (DH) consulted on Sir
Roberts recommendations between the 13th March
2015 and 4th June 2015, including whether the
Independent National Officer should be hosted by
CQC. - Overall, the consultation received 103 responses
from individuals and on behalf of organisations.
The consultation received 75 responses regarding
the National Guardian and the majority of these,
56, were in full support of the role being hosted
by CQC.
9National Guardian to be hosted by CQC
- Learning not to Blame states that the person
undertaking the role will - Advise NHS Organisations to take appropriate
action where they have failed to follow good
practice, or advise the relevant system regulator
to make a direction to that effect - Provide support to the Freedom to Speak up
Guardians - Provide national leadership on issues relating to
raising concerns by NHS workers - Offer guidance on good practice and handling
concerns and - Publish reports on the office of the Independent
National Officer. - Source Learning not to Blame Government
response to the Freedom to Speak Up consultation
July 2015
10Contents
- Introduction
- The purpose of the National Guardian
- CQCs role in relation to staff concerns
- Principles for how the Office of the National
Guardian will operate - Functions of the National Guardian
11Why do we need a National Guardian?
- The National Guardian is intended to fill a gap
in the system, around external review of how NHS
trusts handle concerns raised by staff. - CQC currently looks at how well trusts handle
staff concerns as part of its assessment and
notes any issues in relation to the treatment of
staff or systems for raising concerns.
Monitor/TDA then direct trusts to address these
issues. As prescribed persons, CQC, Monitor and
TDA can also investigate concerns raised with
them if there are outstanding safety issues. - However, these mechanisms do not generally
involve reviewing how individual cases were
handled locally, or how staff were treated. The
only way staff can raise an issue about
ill-treatment externally is through an Employment
Tribunal. - The National Guardian is intended to provide
external review of how cases are handled locally,
where there is a cause for concern. This will
involve reviewing the process that ahs been
followed, not investigating the concern or
forming a judgement on the outcome of any
existing investigations. - The National Guardian is not intended to take
over investigation of cases, because this would
take responsibility away from local
organisations. - The National Guardian will advise staff raising
concerns and providers, and will support the
local FTSU Guardians, as well as providing
national, high-profile leadership on the raising
of staff concerns. Detail on the functions to be
performed is set out on slide 5.
12Contents
- Introduction
- The purpose of the National Guardian
- CQCs role in relation to staff concerns
- Principles for how the Office of the National
Guardian will operate - Functions of the National Guardian
13CQCs role in relation to staff raising concerns
- CQC is an independent regulator, on the side of
people who use services and acting to encourage
all providers to improve the quality of services
they provide. CQCs purpose is to ensure health
and social care services provide people with
safe, compassionate, high-quality care and to
encourage services to improve. CQC provide
robust, fair and consistent judgements of quality
of care that expose poor care and variation in
care, and make quality transparent. - CQC has a dual role in relation to staff raising
concerns about poor care - CQC look at how well the providers it regulates
respond to staff concerns and - CQC want to receive information about poor care
from staff directly in order to inform its
overall assessment of individual providers - Every planned CQC inspection now looks at how
well services handle complaints and other
concerns about poor care, as this can be an
indicator of the quality of leadership and a
reflection of how safe and responsive the culture
is. - The National Guardian will carry out two
important functions that are distinct from CQCs
role - It will review individual cases (whereas CQC, on
the whole, looks at systemic issues) - It will consider the treatment of the employee
(whereas CQC, on the whole, looks only at quality
and safety issues)
14Contents
- Introduction
- The purpose of the National Guardian
- CQCs role in relation to staff concerns
- Principles for how the Office of the National
Guardian will operate - Functions of the National Guardian
15Principles for how the Office of the National
Guardian will operate
1. The National Guardian will be independent of
NHS providers, and the National Guardians
decisions will be free from interference,
including from national bodies.
2. The National Guardian will have wide
discretion on whether or not to get involved in
specific cases.
3. NHS providers will continue to be responsible
for the effective handling of staff concerns.
4. The National Guardian will not circumvent
existing authorised processes for raising
concerns or replace existing legal remedies. The
National Guardian will not second guess or
interfere with ongoing processes locally or
nationally..
5. The National Guardian, whilst not having
specific statutory powers, will have sufficient
authority from four ALBs to ensure
recommendations are taken seriously and acted
upon.
6. The National Guardian will challenge others (
locally and nationally) to look again at cases,
and advise on appropriate actions rather than
undertaking investigations directly.
7. The National Guardian will not review historic
events, but may consider cases where the original
concern was raised in the past but ill-treatment
of the staff member is a current issue
16Independence of the National Guardian
- The National Guardian will be an appointment by
the CEO of CQC on behalf of the Board. The
National Guardian will not be a member of the
Executive Team, thereby allowing the role to
operate independently of the executive function
of the CQC. - The National Guardian will be able to refer
issues to CQC, Monitor, TDA or NHSE. This will be
supported by MOUs, a bi-annual committee and
annual reports to each of the Boards. - The National Guardian will share communication
channels with CQC, including website, customer
service call centre and press office. - The National Guardian will potentially use CQC
branding for any reports or communications but
these will be independent reports and will not be
signed off by the CQC Board. - The storage of information by the National
Guardian must be covered by an adequate level of
protection. - Review mechanisms will need to be agreed for the
National Guardian to pass information to others
outside and within CQC. - National advisory Board public and provider
organisation representatives ( bi-annual) - The National Guardian appointment reviewed
periodically (e.g. every 3 years)
While the National Guardian is accountable to the
CEO of CQC for delivery of their annual work
programme, their decisions over which cases to
review and their recommendations will be entirely
independent . This is the same way that the Chief
Inspectors operate within CQC with regards to
their quality judgements.
17Contents
- Introduction
- The purpose of the National Guardian
- CQCs role in relation to staff concerns
- Principles for how the Office of the National
Guardian will operate - Functions of the National Guardian
18Functions of the National Guardian
19Timelines
20Any questions?
- Consultation paper can be found at
- http//www.cqc.org.uk/nationalguardian
21Guardian progress
- There are currently guardians in post in 18 NHS
organisations across the country - Various models ranging from one guardian to
several per trust - Shared learning of three models available on our
website - If your organisation isnt on the guardian map,
let us know
22Local guardian models - discussion
- On your tables, discuss the progress made so far
in relation to the local Freedom to Speak Up
guardian including - The model you have adopted and reporting
structure - Learning so far
- Successes for far
23Lunch networking
24New patient safety video Rosie and Margit Veveris
25Video
26A single national whistleblowing policy
Tom Grimes Head of Enquiries, Complaints and
Whistleblowing
GOV.UK/monitor
27What am I going to cover?
28Freedom to Speak Up
-
- a harrowing and isolating process with reprisals
including counter allegations, disciplinary
action and victimisation - Action 2.2 NHS England, NHS TDA and Monitor
should produce a standard integrated policy and
procedure for reporting incidents and raising
concerns and a single integrated policy. - The objective is to normalise the raising of
concerns through - Knowing how to raise concerns
- Feeling fully supported
- Feeling protected
29How will it work?
30What does the policy cover?
31Vision for staff raising concerns what it
should feel like
32Your feedback
- Each group to feedback on
- Your general thoughts on the draft national
policy - A specific issue (details on each table)
33Summary
34Group 1
- The intention is that this policy be adopted by
all NHS organisations, with local process sitting
beneath it. Do you agree with this approach and
do you feel the policy is compatible with
existing local processes?
35Group 2
- The policy (and example process in Annex A)
encourages staff to first raise concerns with
their line manager, before escalating to their
local whistleblowing guardian and then a board
member. What are your views on this system of
escalation is it helpful or should it be open
to the individual to decide at what level and
with who he/she raises his/her concern with?
36Group 3
- FTSU looked at the experiences of vulnerable
staff groups when raising concerns and we believe
that the national policy will make it easier for
all staff to raise concerns, including those that
may be more vulnerable. Do you think it achieves
this and, if not, what else could be included?
37Group 4
- The policy lists examples of the type of concerns
staff might raise under it. Do you think there
examples are helpful? What, if anything else,
could be included in the list?
38Supporting you
- Template presentation and how to use guide
- Managers guide for raising concerns
(whistleblowing) - Self assessment tool
- Draw the line campaign logo
- Posters and flyers
- Top tips for raising concerns
- Raising concerns in the NHS a guide for staff
(new) - Dedicated guardian section of the website
including top tips for guardians (new) - Various shared learning examples of local
guardian models - Download your free copies from the NHS Employers
website at http//www.nhsemployers.org/your-workf
orce/retain-and-improve/raising-concerns-at-work-w
histleblowing
39Keep updated and stay in touch
- NHS Employers website www.nhsemployers.org/your-w
orkforce/raising-concerns-at-work-whistleblowing - Subscribe to our workforce bulletin
www.nhsemployers.org/workforcebulletin - Feature your organisation on the guardian map
- Follow us on LinkedIn or link up on Twitter
_at_nhse_nyla - Get in touch nyla.cooper_at_nhsemployers.org
adele.bunch_at_nhsemployers.org
40Evaluation and close
- Please spare a few moment to complete our
evaluation form your feedback is - important to us.
- THANK YOU