18 Care Quality Commission PDF 65 KB
To consider the following documents on the Care Quality Commission (CQC):
Report of the Borough Solicitor;
Introduction and overview of the assessment process for health and
adult social care commissioners 2009/10;
The aims and principles of the review of commissioners;
Key milestone dates;
Voices into Action – guidance for Overview and Scrutiny
Committees.
Deborah Westhead, Ann Gray and Hayley Moore from the Care Quality Commission will attend to present to the Committee on:
Annual Assessment of Commissioners of Health and
Adult Social Care 2009-10 and
the role of Overview and Scrutiny and the relationship with the
CQC.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Committee was briefed on the Care Quality Commission by Deborah Westhead and Hayley Moore.
Members were advised that the main aim of the CQC was to “Make sure people get better care” and this was facilitated by:
Driving improvement;
Putting people first and championing their rights;
Acting swiftly to remedy bad practice;
Gathering and using knowledge and work with others.
There was now a requirement for providers of health and social care to register with the CQC - NHS providers were required to register by April 2010, adult social care and independent healthcare providers by October 2010 and primary medical and dental services and others from 2011. CQC had been given stronger enforcement powers including the power to fine, suspend or ultimately close a service.
The CQC would undertake periodic reviews to assess the performance of organisations that commissioned and provided care and make sure they worked together better, would undertake special reviews of specific services or pathways of care or themes and also contribute information on care services to guide Comprehensive Area Assessments.
The key driver for change was to focus on how health and adult social care commissioners worked together to make care better for people.
A CQC assessment would replace the Annual Healthcheck for commissioner PCTs. The CQC would report on the PCT’s performance against a number of commitments indicators and national priorities that were part of the Vital Signs framework as well as reporting on various scores the PCT received under other assessment processes such as World Class Commissioning.
Adult Social Care departments would receive an aggregated grade from the CQC based on outcomes for people who use services, CQC would report on the two domains covering leadership, commissioning and use of resources and score each Council in relation to the quality of regulated services it commissioned. A self assessment would be completed and to score “performing excellently” 4 out of the 7 outcomes must be judged as performing excellently with Outcome 7 “Maintaining Personal Dignity and Respect” judged as performing well.
The timescale meant that in September 2010 the CQC would share the grades/ratings from commissioner assessments with PCTs and Councils. Then in late November/December 2010 the CQC would publish adult social care grades and PCT ratings together as a single publication focusing on commissioners and around the same time the Comprehensive Area Assessment of commissioners would also be published.
The CQC was committed to listening and working with people and published Voices into Action to show how people’s views would feed into its work. People would be involved in decision making, assessments, reviews and studies, surveys, as “Experts by Experience” and through bodies such as Scrutiny Committees and Local Involvement Networks.
The CQC would not need a commentary to be submitted about core standards for the NHS but had adopted a more flexible system that allowed information to be sent at any time via a form on the website, such information would be used as part of monitoring services. Any urgent concerns could ... view the full minutes text for item 18