Transcript Slide 1

How is CQC ensuring safe,
high quality and best value
services during challenging
times?
Alan Rosenbach
Special Policy Lead, CQC
7th March 2011
Role and remit – what
does CQC do?
Single regulator for health and social care
Focus on outcomes – we are informed by people’s
experiences
Register providers of care and monitor compliance with
essential standards of quality and safety
Tackle poor quality care using risk-based regulation, to
reduce the likelihood of harm
Strengthen safety and quality assurance using a common
system of registration, compliance and enforcement across
all sectors
Support choice and promote accountability for publicly funded
services by providing expert, independent information
Reduce the costs and burden of regulation
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Registration and compliance
monitoring
Registration application
Information
capture
Application
made
Application
assessed
Judgement
made
Judgement
on risk
Judgement
published
Information
analysis
Regulatory
judgement
Regulatory
response
Ongoing monitoring of compliance
The scale of regulated care
Primary medical
services
Independent
healthcare
Independent
ambulances
9,000 providers
1,500 providers
200 providers
NHS hospitals
Adult social
care
Primary dental
care
409 providers
12,500 providers
8,000 providers
Combined outpatients
and inpatients
People using adult
social care services
Dental appointments
77.4 million
1.75 million
36.4 million
Plus additional c700 providers (bodies currently licensed HFEA and HTA)
How we gather evidence to
monitor compliance
Looking at outcomes, a person’s
experience of the care they receive
Involving people who use services
in our reviews of compliance
Using a wide range of sources of
evidence
Focusing on how care is delivered
Being targeted and responsive –
taking swift action to follow up
concerns
Product development
Syndication
•Linking to places
where we know
people research
health and social
care decisions and to
providers themselves
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So what does safe mean for
CQC?
• CQC understands ‘safe care’ to be care delivered by a provider
who is compliant with our essential standards
• Non-compliance does not mean unsafe – it means an increasing
risk of care being unsafe. The more ‘non-compliant’ a provider is,
the greater the risk – but non-compliant is not an absolute
judgement on the quality of care on offer.
• Quality above ‘compliance’ is not CQC’s responsibility. This lies
with providers and commissioners of care – Boards, managers,
clinicians, commissioners, professionals……
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Enforcement
• It is the duty of providers to ensure compliance at all
times
• Should a provider not become compliant with the
standards required, CQC can:
 give a warning notice
 impose or vary conditions
 suspend registration on some services
 issue a fine
 prosecute
 or close a service by cancelling registration.
Our aims for a new information
scheme on quality
We are designing a new information scheme on adult
social care quality, which we aim to begin in spring 2012
Our aim is to provide information about the quality of
services to help people who use and commission them to
make choices and decisions
We also hope to:
Motivate providers to improve the quality of care to
give people using services the best possible
outcomes and experiences
Reinforce the need for compliance with essential
standards at all times
Recognise and reward services that are providing
care of a higher quality
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Questions
CQC – Helping make care better for people
Questions?
Alan Rosenbach, Special Policy Lead, CQC
[email protected]