MANCHESTER AND NORTHWEST DISTRICTS BRANCH HEALTHCARE SERVICES SECTION

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Minutes of Meeting Friday 25 November 2016 Brookfield Masonic Hall, Westhoughton, Bolton Present: Mark Burns MB Chair Peter Bohan PB Vice Chair John Houlihan JHn Secretary Simon Regan SR Guest Speaker, Care Quality Commission Melinda Lyons ME University of Manchester Matt Rodgers MR Phoenix Medical Supplies Steve Rowland SRo Priory Group Carl Dennis CD The Guinness Partnership Lynne Atherton LA Wrightington, Wigan and Leigh NHS Foundation Trust Maureen Conway MC Mydentist Kirsty Mulvaney KM Mydentist Penri Cunnah PC Mydentist Tina Platt TP East Cheshire NHS Trust Shannon Jolly SJ Compass Compliance Solutions Ltd. Deborah Williams DW Compass Compliance Solutions Ltd. Paula Coward PCo University Hospital of South Manchester NHS Foundation Trust Jane Close JC St Anne s Hospice Sue Tootill ST Brighterkind Care Homes Therese McArdle TMcA St John s Ambulance Services Terence Harris TH Aintree University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Andre Haynes AH Wirral University Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Joe Cryans JC The Joseph Rowntree Foundation Sallyanne Hunter SAH NHS Liverpool Clinical Commissioning Group Steve Cann SC Bolton Council Sue King SK Four Seasons Healthcare Lorraine Disley LD Four Seasons Healthcare Paul Mason PM Barchester Healthcare Lisa Harris LH Barchester Healthcare Jane Kemp JK Royal College of Nursing - Retired Minutes of the Manchester and Northwest Districts Healthcare Services Section 2016-11-25 1

Paul Roberts PR Department of Health Jane Hadfield JHa The Christie NHS Foundation Trust Caroline Simpson CS Consultant Philomene Nkwenti PN Creative Support Ltd. Wendy Guest WG Lancashire Care NHS Foundation Trust Sally Shihadah SS University Hospitals North Midlands Lisa Hitchcox LH Your Housing Group Ian Neil IN Your Housing Group Wendy Astle Rowe WAR Mid Cheshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Lyn Ellis LE Cheshire and Wirral Partnership NHS Foundation Trust Debbie Carr DC Cheshire and Wirral Partnership NHS Foundation Trust Apologies: Martin Brandon MBr South West Yorkshire Partnership NHS Foundation Trust David Halicki DH Consultant Deborah Halicki DHa Pennine Care NHS Foundation Trust Andy Wood AW Alternative Futures Group Vanessa Mayatt VM Mayatt Consultancy Phil Gifford PG Mayatt Consultancy Guest Speaker Presentation Simon Regan, Care Quality Commission Presentation: An update on the work of the Care Quality Commission SR recapped on the history and political landscape of the Care Quality Commission and the current network of relationships and concordats with other internal and external bodies such as Monitor, NHS England, the Health and Safety Executive, Ofsted, HM Inspectors, the Coroners Society, Clinical Commissioning Groups etc. He also spoke of future plans to develop closer working relationships with charity organisations and other patient safety groups. Members received a summary of the purpose and role of the Care Quality Commission; its current model of registration; how it collates data; information gathering and its inspection regime. Examples were given of the types of data being used to measure against each of the five domains asked of all healthcare service providers during inspection i.e. are they safe, effective, caring, responsive and well led. Minutes of the Manchester and Northwest Districts Healthcare Services Section 2016-11-25 2

SR referred to progress being made when completing comprehensive inspections of all services of building a powerful baseline when understanding the quality of care. Attention was drawn to a recent publication highlighting the overall ratings of those NHS acute and independent locations, mental health, learning disability and community trusts following the outcome of inspection. It concluded that the majority, a total of 49% required improvement, with 5% deemed as being inadequate. By contrast, only 1% was classed as being outstanding with 44% cited as being good. Members noted, from the evidence presented, that work is encouraging continuous improvements to be made. Discussions also took place of the volume and complexity of health and social care provision and of the many challenges and expectations faced. SR added that at the same time, the Care Quality Commission have focused on strengthening its systems and processes, ensuring it makes the best use of its resources in being as effective as possible, as well as reducing the requirements it places on those it regulates. Members were given a detailed account of the new five year strategy to be adopted by the Care Quality Commission. This strategy was agreed by 86% of respondents following a year long consultation with partners, stakeholders, providers and the public and is due to be implemented in April 2017. It sets out the vision for the Care Quality Commission to be a more targeted, responsive and collaborative regulator and identifies four key priority actions in achieving that strategic ambition. These four priorities are for the Care Quality Commission to: encourage improvement, innovation and sustainability in care by working with others to support improvement, adapting its approach as new care models develop and publishing new ratings of NHS trusts use of resources; deliver an intelligence driven approach to regulation by using information from the public and service providers more effectively so as to target resources where risks to quality of care are the greatest, checking where quality is improving and introducing a more proportionate approach to registration; promote a single shared view of quality by working with others and agreeing a consistent approach to defining and measuring quality, collecting information from service providers and delivering a single vision of high quality care; Minutes of the Manchester and Northwest Districts Healthcare Services Section 2016-11-25 3

improve efficiency and effectiveness by working more efficiently to achieve year on year savings and improving the work with the public and service providers. SR anticipated that this strategic ambition will only be achieved when people fully trust the Care Quality Commission and use its expertise and independent judgement about the quality of care, as well as people also having the confidence that good or poor standards of care are being identified along with necessary actions taken to protect their rights. In addition, health and social care organisations that deliver care improve quality as a result of being regulated and are encouraged to use resources as efficiently as possible to deliver high quality patient care outcomes. SR confirmed that whilst a proportion of activities are to remain the same, there are others that are expected to be done more differently such as thematic reviews, pathway tracking, demographics, registration processes, management experience and varying levels of scrutiny, numbers of incidents, resources, governance and risk management arrangements, key performance indicators etc. SR referred to encouraging health and social care organisations building a portfolio of evidence for submission on inspection, meaning fewer data requests will be needed prior to or during an inspection which will result in more focused risk profiles and inspections and shorter, concise reports. SR clarified, following the outcome of discussions held, that there are no plans at this stage for the Care Quality Commission to adopt the fees for intervention model that has been introduced by the Health and Safety Executive. Members thanked the guest speaker and expressed its gratitude for his valued contribution. Meeting 1. Apologies for absence Noted. 2. Minutes of the last meeting / matters arising Minutes of the last meeting Members approved the minutes of the meeting held on Friday 16 September 2016 as a true and accurate record. All actions from the minutes form part of the standing agenda of the meeting. Minutes of the Manchester and Northwest Districts Healthcare Services Section 2016-11-25 4

Matters arising JHn stated arrangements to rearrange delivery of the guest speaker presentation that was due to be held at the last meeting have since been completed. JHn proposed matters regarding the development of a template of instructions of how the branch wants information to be structured on its web pages be removed as an action item until confirmation is received from the branch. Members agreed. JHn repeated the request made by branch that districts and sections review which communication methods are successful and those that are not e.g. connect, mailer, event web pages etc. by asking members at each meeting and updating the networks officer, where necessary Action: members to provide feedback at the next meeting. JHn stated work to complete the section programme for 2017 has been completed and submitted to branch for publication. Members agreed matters regarding the outcome of feedback and the development of a dashboard illustrating health and safety training and competencies for directors and senior executives be deferred for presentation by David Sinclair at a future meeting. JHn confirmed he had received a reply from the networks officer, following a request made by members to issue a survey that will help examine concerns raised regarding numbers of attendances. Unfortunately, as the branch had already sent a survey out to all members recently, it was not possible to do another one until the middle of next year. JHn explained, in light of this, he had undertaken a review himself by means of canvassing those members in attendance and seeking opinion from a number of health and safety practitioners working across a variety of healthcare organisations that he had met through various networking events that do not or have not attended any meetings over the past year or so. As expected, dwindling numbers of attendances did not relate to the choice of venue, guest speaker presentations or of how, generally, the section is run. When speaking to a number of those who did not or have not attended any meetings they unanimously confirmed this was not their deliberate intention and was purely due to operational requirements, limited resources and an extremely busy workload. Minutes of the Manchester and Northwest Districts Healthcare Services Section 2016-11-25 5

When explored further, what was interesting to note was the differences amongst those canvassed, especially from those newly established health and social care service providers, of awareness of the section. It was noted that whilst most health and safety practitioners working within NHS organisations were fully aware of the section s existence, there was a clear lack of awareness of the section and or confusion amongst others regarding the dynamics between the section and healthcare services group. JHn added that the updating of information regarding the section has been completed and is regularly reviewed, however, many of those health and safety practitioners working for health and social care providers outside of the NHS thought the healthcare services group was the only network available to them and they were reluctant to attend because meetings are held outside the north west, with representation already in place nationally by nominated persons within IOSH with many also unsure of how information would be relayed back to them, if any. JHn stated that when challenged as to the differences between the healthcare section and group and whether they could signpost to information about the section on the IOSH webpage, most of these health and safety practitioners expressed difficulty doing so and were surprised it was contained under the branch framework, with some admitting this would not be the first place they would look and that they were browsing the healthcare group webpage, hence the confusion, despite him highlighting the search engine and structure of the branch using the 2016 programme. JHn concluded that he will update members on progress following further discussions with the networks officer regarding strengthening and improving the web links between the healthcare section and group to see if this makes any difference. Action: JHn to update members on progress at the next meeting. 3. Communication / correspondence / consultative documents JHn sign posted members to recent case law, publication of health and safety statistics for the health and social care sector and business plan issued by the Health and Safety Executive and updated memorandum of understanding between the Care Quality Commission, Health and Safety Executive and Local Authorities. 4. Regulatory authority update Minutes of the Manchester and Northwest Districts Healthcare Services Section 2016-11-25 6

5. IOSH Manchester and Northwest Districts Branch update 6. Future topics of interest 7. IOSH CPD / IPD programme 8. Members forum Members discussed local health and safety issues. 9. Any other business 10. Date of next meeting Friday 20 January 2017 Minutes of the Manchester and Northwest Districts Healthcare Services Section 2016-11-25 7