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Transcript of The Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014 and Possible Offences 13...
The Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014 and Possible Offences
13 August 2015 | Laura Guntrip and Alison Wood
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The Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014
Replace the 2010 Regulations
The following factors are established by the new regulations:
Fundamental Standards
Duty of Candour
Fit and Proper Persons Requirement for Directors
Under the regulations, CQC is now able to prosecute cases where someone using a registered service is harmed or is at risk of harm
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The Fundamental Standards
The ‘Essential Standards’ in the 2010 regulations have been replaced by the ‘Fundamental Standards’ under the 2014 Regulations
The Fundamental Standards are clearer statements of the standards of care that providers are expected to meet at all times
There are also two new regulations: the fit and proper person requirement for directors and a statutory duty of candour
The Fundamental Standards came into force for all registered providers on 1 April 2015
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HEALTHCAREComparison of the old standards and the fundamental standardsCurrent regulations
Care and welfare of service users
Assessing and monitoring the quality of service provision
Safeguarding service users from abuse
Cleanliness and infection control
Management of medicines
Meeting nutritional needs
Safety and suitability of premises
Safety and suitability of equipment
Respecting and involving service users
Consent to care and treatment
Complaints
Records
Requirements relating to workers
Staffing
Supporting workers
Cooperating with other providers
New regulations Person-centred care
Dignity and respect
Need for consent
Safe care and treatment
Safeguarding service users from abuse
Meeting nutritional needs
Cleanliness, safety and suitability of premises and equipment
Receiving and acting on complaints
Good governance
Staffing
Fit and proper persons employed and
Fit and proper person requirement for directors
Duty of candour
Comparison taken from CQC’s“Guidance for providers on meeting the fundamental standards and on CQC’s enforcement powers”, July 2014.
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Under the 2014 regulations, some of the regulations allow for direct prosecution when the Fundamental Standards are breached
When breaches of regulations do not constitute a criminal offence, CQC can enforce the Fundamental Standards using civil powers to impose conditions, suspend or cancel a registration. If providers do not comply with the requirements under the civil powers, they will be committing a criminal offence and could be prosecuted
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HEALTHCAREDuty of CandourRegulation 20
Aims to ensure that providers are open and transparent with service users and ‘other relevant persons’ (those acting lawfully on their behalf) regarding their care and treatment
Introduces a legal requirement requiring all health and adult social care providers registered with CQC to be open with people if things go wrong
CQC will be able to take enforcement action if this requirement is breached
Came into force for NHS bodies on 27 November 2014, and for all care providers since 1 April 2015
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HEALTHCAREIn order to comply with Regulation 20, providers must:
Act in an open and transparent way regarding care and treatment provided to service users
Inform the person as soon as reasonably practicable if something goes wrong (‘notifiable safety incident’), and provide support
Provide an account of the incident which is true of all the facts the provider is aware of
Advise on any further enquiries
Offer an apology
Keep a written record kept securely
Written notification including details of enquiries undertaken and still to be undertaken and an apology
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The Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) (Amendment) Regulations 2015
These regulations introduce Regulation 20A. This requires providers to display their CQC rating (Outstanding, Good, Requires Improvement or Inadequate)
Applies to all providers when they have received a CQC rating
The rating must be displayed legibly and conspicuously at the premises and on the website
Failing to do so will mean that CQC can prosecute, and they can move directly to prosecution without first serving a warning notice
Came into force 1 April 2015
‘Special Measures’
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HEALTHCAREThe display of the CQC rating must include:
The CQC logo
The name of the service
The overall performance rating
The rating for each of the five key questions and the performance in relation to particular premises or activities
CQC’s website address and the location on the website where the ratings and assessment of the provider can be found
The date the inspection report was published
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Fit and Proper Persons Requirement Regulation 5
Aims to ensure that directors are fit and proper to take on responsibility for the overall quality and safety of the care a service provides, and that it meets the requirements under the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014
Applies to directors: executive, non-executive, permanent, interim and associate positions, irrespective of their voting rights
Came into force for health service bodies on 27 November 2014, and for all other providers from 1 April 2015
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In order to comply with Regulation 5, providers must:
Make every reasonable effort to assure themselves of the suitability of their directors by all means available
Provide evidence that suitable systems are in place to ensure all new and existing directors are fit for the role
Ensure directors are of good character and that no appointments meet any of the unfitness criteria:
Bankruptcy, insolvency, appearing on barred lists, being prohibited from holding directorships, involved in a serious misconduct, mismanagement of failure of care
If someone no longer meets the requirement, inform the regulator
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Breaching Regulation 5
If someone who does not meet the FPPR is appointed, or is already in place, this will be a breach of Regulation 5. Evidence of this breach could be:
There are no proper systems in place for a provider to make the assessments required
A director is unfit on a mandatory ground, for example bankruptcy, insolvency etc
A provider receives information concerning the fitness of a director, and makes a decision regarding their fitness that is not one a reasonable person would make
CQC can take enforcement action if a breach of FPPR occurs
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Offences
CQC will be able to bring prosecutions for breaches under The Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014 and The Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) (Amendment) Regulations 2015
Some of the new regulations have offences attached, and CQC will be able to bring prosecutions if these regulations are breached. For regulations they cannot prosecute against, CQC may use other civil actions as set out in their enforcement policy
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CQC may prosecute breaches of the following regulations directly without first issuing a Warning Notice:
Regulation 11 Need for consent
Regulation 16(3) Receiving and acting on complaints
Regulation 17(3) Good governance
Regulation 20(2) and (8) Duty of Candour
Regulation 20A Requirement as to display of performance assessments
A defence to these offences is available where the registered persons took all reasonable steps and acted with all due diligence (Regulation 22(4))
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CQC can prosecute for the following offences, but only if the breach of the regulation results in people who use services being exposed to avoidable harm, a significant risk of such harm occurring or suffering a loss of money or property as a result of theft, misuse or misappropriation:
Regulation 12 Safe care and treatment
Regulation 13 (1) to (4) Safeguarding service users from abuse and improper treatment
Regulation 14 Meeting nutritional and hydration needs
For breaches of the remaining regulations not listed on these slides, CQC can take regulatory action other than prosecution.
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Criminal Justice & Courts Act 2015
S.20….ill treatment or wilful neglect: care worker offence
S.21….ill treatment or wilful neglect: care provider offence
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S.20 Ill-treatment or wilful neglect: care worker offence
(1) A care worker commits an offence if-
(a) he has care of another individual by virtue of being a care worker; and (b) he ill-treats or wilfully neglects that individual
“care worker” means an individual who, as paid work, provides:
(a) health care for an adult or child (other than excluded health care), or(b) social care for an adult,Including an individual who, as paid work, supervises or manages individuals providing such care or is a director or similar officer of an organisation which provides such care
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S.21 Ill-treatment or wilful neglect: care provider offence
(1) A care provider commits an offence if-
(a) an individual who has the care of another individual by virtue of being part of the care provider’s arrangements ill-treats or wilfully neglects that individual
(b) the care provider’s activities are managed or organised in a way which amounts to a gross breach of a relevant duty of care owed by the care provider to the individual who is ill-treated or neglected, and
(c) in the absence of the breach, the ill-treatment or wilful neglect would not have occurred or would have been less likely to occur
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“Care Provider” means-
a) a body corporate or unincorporated association which provides or arranges for the provision of -a) health care for an adult or child, other than excluded health care,
orb) social care for an adult, or
b) an individual who provides such care and employs, or has otherwise made arrangements with, other persons to assist him or her in providing such care.
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Penalties
Fine
Remedial order
Publicity order
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Health and Safety Incidents
Transfer of responsibility from the Health and Safety Executive to CQC in deciding whether regulatory action will be taken in relation to reported incidents of health and safety involving people using services regulated by CQC
It will fall to CQC to investigate incidents such as deaths of service users following poor treatment, physical restraint, choking and falls
A recently published Memorandum of Understanding between CQC, HSE and local authorities aims to ensure ‘effective, co-ordinated and comprehensive regulation of health and safety’
Came into force on 1 April 2015
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Contact us
Laura advises providers of adult care homes, nursing homes, supported living facilities, independent hospitals, children’s homes and schools on a range of issues. Her work includes local authority or CCG contractual disputes, disputes with residents, Court of Protection cases, safeguarding investigations, inquests and police investigations.01202 786187
Alison advises healthcare providers on a range of issues, including contractual disputes, safeguarding investigations, inquests and Court of Protection cases. Her work includes defending regulatory enforcement action by CQC and other regulatory bodies.
01202 786179