The Health and Social Care Act establishes a new super-regulator, bringing together the Healthcare Commission, the Commission for Social Care Inspection and the Mental Health Act Commission. It will also improve the regulation of healthcare professionals and introduce the Health in Pregnancy Grant of £190. The Act was passed after the House of Commons agreed to a number of amendments.
There was cross-party support for a measure to strengthen the protection of vulnerable people using residential care by ensuring that any independent sector care home that provides accommodation together with nursing or personal care on behalf of a local authority is subject to the Human Rights Act.
The Government also agreed to a duty on the new regulator to conduct periodic reviews of care commissioned by primary care trusts or local -authorities. The Care Quality Commission will take over all regulatory duties from the Healthcare Commission, the Commission for Social Care Inspection and the Mental Health Act Commission by April 2009. Cynthia Bower, chief executive of West Midlands SHA was announced as its first chief executive.
The Act covers the setting up of the new regulator for health and social care to which it will bring a more integrated approach. It will have tougher powers, backed by fines, to inspect, investigate and intervene where hospitals or other healthcare facilities are failing to meet hygiene standards. The provisions include enabling legislation for the registration processes for organisations delivering services and for the registration on service managers. It also covers the enabling elements of a code of practice for healthcare associated infections
This includes changes in the standard of proof in malpractice cases from a criminal to a civil standard. This will not mean that all cases are decided on the balance of probabilities; the standard of proof will be proportionate to the seriousness of the case. Striking off clinicians will be a final option that requires the strictest burden of proof.
The Act will introduce a process of revalidating the professional registration of all doctors. This will occur every five years in a process that will involve an appraisal process to confirm they have met the standards expected.
The Act also covers enabling legislation for the regulation of social workers including the training of approved mental health professionals
This section covers issues around detaining individuals on the basis of the risk of them infecting others, knowingly or unknowingly or spreading the results of contamination, not necessarily caused by infection alone. It allows justices of the peace to restrict movement of people or objects and isolate premises which are considered contaminated but stops short of enforced treatment for infected individuals.
This section enables the awarding of a grant to pregnant women to support their additional health needs in the last months of pregnancy. The award is linked to a requirement to seek maternal health advice from a health professional.
Last reviewed 5 Aug 2008