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Excellence in specialist and community healthcare Duty of Candour Sal Maughan, Head of Risk Management
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Duty of Candour Formally came into force on 27 November 2014 for NHS Trusts, Foundation Trusts, and Special Health Authorities in England: Statutory Duty: Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014 – read alongside CQC Guidance, March 2015 Professional Duty: GMC/NMC Guidance, Openness and honesty when things go wrong, June 2015 Contractual Duty: Commissioning contract imposes fines for non-adherence to statutory duty *Best practice for all clinical staff for many years Duty of Candour / St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
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Duty Defined In essence, to take the initiative in acting in a open and transparent way when dealing with a “relevant person”: patient person lawfully acting on behalf of a patient if :- is a child, can’t make a decision for themselves, has died. Duty of Candour / St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
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Who owes the duty? For legal purposes the statutory duty of candour is owed by the Trust However, everyone has a role to play Providers have to ensure that all staff, “regardless of seniority or permanency”, know about the organisation’s responsibilities. The professional duty of candour is owed by all registered healthcare professionals Duty of Candour / St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
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‘What does it mean to be open and transparent? ‘Open’ means: enabling concerns and complaints to be raised freely without fear and questions asked to be answered. ‘Transparent’ means: allowing information about the truth about performance and outcomes to be shared with staff, patients, the public and regulators. Duty of Candour / St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
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When is the duty triggered? When the Trust is aware that a ‘notifiable’ safety incident has occurred - when it discovers a patient has suffered harm It is an incident that is unintended or unexpected that occurs when a patient is being treated/cared for; and could result in or appears to have resulted in: a) the death of the service user; or b) severe harm, moderate harm, or prolonged psychological harm. Near miss? Duty of Candour / St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
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Level of harm Death – the death relates directly to the incident rather than to the natural course of the service user’s illness or underlying condition; Severe harm – means a permanent lessening of bodily, sensory, motor, physiologic or intellectual functions, including removal of the wrong limb or organ or brain damage. Moderate harm – means harm that requires a moderate increase in treatment, and significant, but not permanent harm. Moderate increase in treatment – means an unplanned return to surgery, an unplanned readmission, a prolonged episode of care, extra time in hospital or as an outpatient, cancelling of treatment, transfer to another treatment area (e.g. ITU) Prolonged psychological harm - psychological harm a patient has experienced, or is likely to experience, for a continuous period of at least 28 days. Must notify if the degree of harm is not yet clear but could result in one of the above Must notify if the degree of harm is not yet clear but could result in:- Duty of Candour / St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
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Must do: Notify the patient or “relevant person” that the incident happened as soon as reasonably practicable 10 working days, and sooner where possible Must be given in person by one/more representatives of the Trust. Who should give it? Consider‘ seniority, relationship to the person using the service, and experience and expertise It is an account, true to the best of the Trust’s knowledge, of all the facts the Trust knows about the incident at that date. Duty of Candour / St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
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Oral & written notification Ensure the patient or representative can understand. State what further enquiries/investigation will happen. Apologise (express sorrow or regret) - this won’t amount to an admission of liability (CQC/NHSLA) Provide reasonable support to the relevant person. Treat them with respect and empathy. Provide information about support groups, counselling and complaints procedures. Keep a written record – medical records Follow up in writing Continuing duty to inform patient, in writing, of further enquiries and investigations, should they wish to receive this information – SI or RCA report The Trust must keep a copy of all correspondence. Duty of Candour / St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
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Consequences of non-compliance It is a criminal offence: summary offence punishable by fine (currently £2,500) Sanction imposed on Trust Can also be imposed on directors Professional Consequence: Disciplinary proceedings before one of the health regulators Contractual: Fine of cost of care episode or £10k if unknown. CQC Enforcement action – fail to meet fundamental standards to be open and transparent Possibility of having to reimburse part or all of NHSLA’s compensation costs Duty of Candour / St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
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Policy and training & demonstrating compliance Being open/duty of candour policy – on intranet Ensure when reporting incidents – Datix section completed and record in notes Template letters available – DGMs and Risk team Make sure there is a process in place for supporting the staff involved – involve OH? Training – Head of Risk/Risk Team Reporting internal – DGB/PSC/QRC External – CCG monthly Audits – internal and external CCG/CQC (Dec 2015) Duty of Candour / St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
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Duty of candour Discussion / case studies Duty of Candour / St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
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