National Health Service

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Speak Up and make the difference Presented by: Claire Batty, Policy Manager.
Advertisements

NGSU Regional Councils – Oct/Nov 2014 Fair Treatment at Work Nationwide Group Staff Union.
1 Discipline, Capability and Grievance resolution: for those with responsibility for others Jessie Monck, PPD, Human Resources Division.
Meeting your Legal Duty to Refer Presented by: Lyn Gavin.
Insert logo RAISING CONCERNS: Outline presentation.
The Public Interest Disclosure Act 1998 Will It Protect the Whistleblower in the National Health Service? Linnette King RN, RNT, LLM, MSc, PGDip Education,
Understand your role 1 Standard.
Contents Introduction Public protection
1 WHY IS WHISTLEBLOWING IMPORTANT AND ON WHAT PRINCIPLES SHOULD PROTECTIVE LEGISLATION BE BASED? David Lewis, Professor of Employment Law, MiddlesexUniversity,
Dignity and Respect in the Workplace
FOURTEEN YEARS OF WHISTLEBLOWING LEGISLATION IN THE UK: WHERE IS THE EMPLOYMENT PROTECTION? 1
©PCaW London 20 July 2010.
Whistleblowing UK Health and Safety Representatives Conference October
© PCaW PCaW is an independent charity, founded in We provide: free confidential advice to people concerned about wrongdoing.
Whistleblowing, safeguarding, complaints Joe Godden –
Module 5: Quality assurance. What is a quality assurance system? A quality assurance system measures the performance of a service against a range of standards.
#GovConf13 ©PCaW Belfast 22 November 2013.
The Rail Safety Summit  2015 RAIL SAFETY SUMMIT 2015.
Technical Certificate Workshop 304; Duty of Care 1August 2012.
Insert logo RAISING CONCERNS: Outline presentation.
MBA 740: BUSINESS ETHICS Nicos Rodosthenous PhD Lecture 4 7/7/20151Dr Nicos Rodosthenous.
WALES COUNCIL FOR VOLUNTARY ACTION CRIMINAL RECORDS UNIT SAFEGUARDING SERVICE   SAFEGUARDING.
Insert logo RAISING CONCERNS: Outline presentation.
©PCaW CIPFA NW Audit Risk and Governance Group 9 October 2015.
STANDARDS CONFERENCE WALES 2015 WHISTLEBLOWING WORKSHOP Sioned Wyn Davies, Deputy Monitoring Officer, Wrexham County Borough Council Kumi Ariyadasa, Solicitor,
©PCaW December ©PCaW
WHISTLE BLOWING POLICY PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE ON HUMAN SETTLEMENTS 22 JUNE
Abuse and Whistleblowing of abuse 1 Training package:- Abuse and Whistleblowing of Abuse by Jade Claridge.
Safeguarding Adults Care Act 2014.
Overview of the day Housekeeping Timings Respect, comfort, confidentiality, participation Any issues from today’s training 2.
Bribery & Corruption Mike Neumann ITS Training (UK) Ltd.
Whistleblowing: Raising and escalating concerns Professor Kay Caldwell – 28 th January 2016.
ETHICAL ISSUES IN HEALTH AND NURSING PRACTICE CODE OF ETHICS, STANDARDS OF CONDUCT, PERFORMANCE AND ETHICS FOR NURSES AND MIDWIVES.
Learning Outcomes LO3 Understand how to respond to evidence or concerns that a child has been abused or harmed. AC 3.1 Describe signs, symptoms, indicators.
Surveillance in Care Homes
Introducing the new Code
What is the purpose of the Public Interest Disclosure (Whistleblower Protection) Act?
Data Protection and Confidentiality
Statutory Duty of Candour
Whistleblowing: Protecting people who uncover bad practice.
Standards of Care, Safety and Protection
Tim Wright Principal Airworthiness Surveyor 8th December 2016
Manager Workshop Social Care.
National Health Service
SEFTON MASH The Decision Making Process of MASH and how the current restructure will affect MASH.
Staff Workshop Social Care.
Manager Workshop Social Care.
How to Find Your Way Around…
National Health Service
Whistleblowing Flowchart Appendix A
Standard Operating Procedure for Managing Concerns from Staff
Protect FS Masterclass
Information for Patients Please return to reception
11 Safeguarding Vulnerable Adults
D3 Confidentiality.
Information management and communication
SSSC Fitness to Practise Calum Davidson Intake and Engagement Officer.
Accountabilities of health and social care practitioners
The Adult Support and Protection (Scotland) Act 2007
Addressing Sexual Harassment in the Media and Creative Industries
Safeguarding.
Who are Care Opinion? Introduction to yourself and why you are giving this presentation.
“Seven-minute Safeguarding Staff Meeting”
NEXT Being Open: Duty of Candour 2016
How to find your way around …
How to find your way around …
Safeguarding and Volunteers Training
GDPR Information and Consent
Annual Training for Supervisors
Kim Howland MCH Policy Adviser
Presentation transcript:

National Health Service Staff Workshop National Health Service

Overview What is whistleblowing? Know how to raise concerns appropriately and in line with legal requirements Know where to go for help and support Overview The Speak Up Helpline and Website are provided by Social Enterprise Direct Ltd on behalf of the Department of Health

Whistleblowing Definition of whistleblowing: The act of reporting a concern about a risk, danger or wrongdoing in an organisation Often called ‘blowing the whistle’ or formally known as ‘making a disclosure in the public interest’ Whistleblowing The Speak Up Helpline and Website are provided by Social Enterprise Direct Ltd on behalf of the Department of Health

Whistleblowing legislation arose out of a spate of scandals and disasters in the 1980s and early 1990s. Inquiries found that workers had been aware of the danger but too scared to raise the alarm or had done so in the wrong way. High profile examples included: Clapham Rail disaster – an inspector didn’t want to ‘rock the boat’ Zeebrugge Ferry tragedy – staff concerns ignored by management Collapse of Barings Bank – an inquiry found nobody ‘dared to speak up’ Background The Speak Up Helpline and Website are provided by Social Enterprise Direct Ltd on behalf of the Department of Health

There have been a number of high profile cases much more recently, including: Harold Shipman murders Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust Media Cases The Speak Up Helpline and Website are provided by Social Enterprise Direct Ltd on behalf of the Department of Health

Whistleblowing Do you have a whistleblowing policy? Do you know where to find it? What do you think it might feel like to be a whistleblower? Why is it hard to raise a concern? Whistleblowing The Speak Up Helpline and Website are provided by Social Enterprise Direct Ltd on behalf of the Department of Health

The Public Interest Disclosure Act 1998 (PIDA) is the key piece of whistleblowing legislation Workers can make a claim to an Employment Tribunal if they are treated badly or dismissed. There is no need to have the normal qualifying service to do this Legislation The Speak Up Helpline and Website are provided by Social Enterprise Direct Ltd on behalf of the Department of Health

To gain protection a worker who makes a disclosure must believe two things: That they are acting in the public interest (2013) That they reasonably believe the disclosure tends to show past, present or likely future wrongdoing. The information being disclosed must be of the right type- ‘qualifying disclosure The concern must also be raised in the correct way Raising a Concern The Speak Up Helpline and Website are provided by Social Enterprise Direct Ltd on behalf of the Department of Health

Grievance vs Disclosure Grievance Tends to be a issue about employment rights. The person wishes to complain about their treatment. They have a personal interest in ensuring the issue is addressed. Protected Disclosure Tends to be about malpractice or serious wrongdoing such as dangerous or criminal activity which affect others. vs The Speak Up Helpline and Website are provided by Social Enterprise Direct Ltd on behalf of the Department of Health

Protection What type of information will qualify for protection? A criminal offence The breach of a legal obligation A miscarriage of justice A danger to the health and safety of any individual Damage to the environment Deliberate attempt to conceal any of the above Protection The Speak Up Helpline and Website are provided by Social Enterprise Direct Ltd on behalf of the Department of Health

Types of Concern Physical or emotional abuse Bullying Theft, fraud or bribery Abuse of power, position or authority Failure to treat people with dignity Financial mismanagement Worker must disclose facts – not just opinions Types of Concern The Speak Up Helpline and Website are provided by Social Enterprise Direct Ltd on behalf of the Department of Health

The Right Way Read your policy Can you raise your concern informally? Find out who you should raise your concerns with Be specific about dates and times Keep a note of raising your concerns, perhaps by an email afterwards stating you are raising concerns in line with PIDA. Keep a record of dates of meetings and what was discussed If you do not get a satisfactory response, escalate your concern If nothing is being done internally, you can go to the regulator – you should believe your information is substantially true (suspicion is not enough) Take advice if you consider wider disclosures such as the police or the media The Right Way The Speak Up Helpline and Website are provided by Social Enterprise Direct Ltd on behalf of the Department of Health

Who is Protected? Employees Agency workers People that are training with an employer, but not employed From 6 April 2015 the list was extended to include: Student nurses Student midwives Who is Protected? The Speak Up Helpline and Website are provided by Social Enterprise Direct Ltd on behalf of the Department of Health

Often issues can be raised in confidence but may be made public (eg during legal, disciplinary or police investigations). Organisations should make every effort to keep identity a secret. Organisations should be clear about their position on anonymous reporting. This can also be difficult to investigate. Whistleblowers should be careful with confidential patient information if reporting outside their team or organisation and should not breach their professional code of practice. Confidentiality The Speak Up Helpline and Website are provided by Social Enterprise Direct Ltd on behalf of the Department of Health

A new support worker on her first nightshift hears an elderly service user with dementia cry out when a worker goes over to them to tell them off for making a noise. She is not absolutely sure what happened but wants to discuss it with her manager. Is this a whistleblowing concern? You are the new support worker. What action would you take? What Would You Do? The Speak Up Helpline and Website are provided by Social Enterprise Direct Ltd on behalf of the Department of Health

Employers can also be liable for the acts of co-workers who victimise or harass whistleblowers (unless the employer can prove they have taken reasonable steps to prevent this) Co-workers are personally liable if they subject a worker to bad treatment or victimisation because they have made a protected disclosure. Bullying & Harassment The Speak Up Helpline and Website are provided by Social Enterprise Direct Ltd on behalf of the Department of Health

PIDA does not obligate employees to raise concerns, however health and social care professionals will have a duty under their professional body The Statutory Duty of Candour –The Government has introduced an explicit Duty of Candour as a CQC registration requirement – placed on organisations. No candour-related offences on individuals-strengthened codes Terms and conditions of service NHS constitution Safeguarding Policies Employee Duties The Speak Up Helpline and Website are provided by Social Enterprise Direct Ltd on behalf of the Department of Health

Advice & Support Telephone and email advice, signposting, support and guidance for the Health and Social Care Sector. Website – tools, documents, guidance, updates: www.speakup.direct Raising Awareness – networking, campaigns, events Other useful links: Trade Unions ACAS – employment advice www.gov.uk/whistleblowing PCaW – charity Professional Bodies e.g. Nursing & Midwifery Council Regulators – e.g CQC, Ofsted, FSA etc The Speak Up Helpline and Website are provided by Social Enterprise Direct Ltd on behalf of the Department of Health

www.hee.nhs.uk/our-work/hospitals-primary-community- care/learning-be-safer/raising-responding-concerns- whistleblowing www.speakup.direct Further Information The Speak Up Helpline and Website are provided by Social Enterprise Direct Ltd on behalf of the Department of Health