Care Bill [HL]

Lord Hunt of Kings Heath Excerpts
Wednesday 12th June 2013

(10 years, 11 months ago)

Lords Chamber
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Lord Hunt of Kings Heath Portrait Lord Hunt of Kings Heath
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My Lords, my noble friend’s amendment is very penetrating. Under this clause the Secretary of State will appoint only the chair and other non-executive members while the CQC appoints its own executive members, including the chief executive. I draw the noble Earl’s attention to our debate on day one of Committee when we discussed the governance of Health Education England and the Health Research Authority. I still fail to understand why the Secretary of State has to approve the appointment of the chief executive of those bodies when he does not in relation to the CQC. I take from it that HEE and HRA are less independent than the CQC. It would be interesting to know whether he can confirm that.

I thought my noble friend made a very powerful point about the appointment of a chief inspector. I endorse his remarks about the appointment of Mike Richards. He commands great respect, but I wonder why it is not in the Bill. It seems to me that the relationship between the chief inspectors and the chief executive and the board of the CQC is going to be a delicate one. Once you nominate somebody as chief inspector the implication is that they are independent in their job. My experience when I was at the DWP and responsible for the Health and Safety Executive is that it had some chief inspectors. There was the equivalent of the Nuclear Installations Inspectorate, although that has now gone, and the Chief Inspector of Construction. It was felt necessary in some of the most important sectors to have a figurehead. My understanding was that when it came to issues to do with the regulatory function they were independent and could not be second-guessed by the board. The relationship between the chief inspectors and the board is very important. I wonder whether the noble Earl’s department is storing up trouble for the future by not making them statutory post-holders so that it is absolutely clear in legislation what their responsibility is. I can see problems arising in future on this.

This issue about putting primary and community healthcare together will also be very important. The breakdown in the NHS over the past few months has been a breakdown in integration between different parts of the service. Putting primary and community care together would be very helpful.

Baroness Wall of New Barnet Portrait Baroness Wall of New Barnet
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I support the amendment and in particular the argument for the chief primary and community care inspector. Many of us who operate within the service—even people who use it—know that often the weakness has been in the delivery of primary care. We talked earlier about reconfiguration. The only way that that would be successful is if we had better primary care facilities and care that people could access nearer to home—all aspirations that the Government have. I strongly support having that watchful eye on making sure that primary care works effectively.

Baroness Northover Portrait Baroness Northover
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My Lords, I thank noble Lords for their contributions to this mini-debate on Amendment 73. We are sympathetic to the view behind this amendment —or what seems to lie behind it—which seeks to ensure that the new chief inspectors will be given a place on the board of the CQC. I echo here the praise of the noble Lord, Lord Warner, for Professor Mike Richards. I know that the professor’s cancer colleagues will miss him in that field.

Noble Lords are absolutely right about the importance of improving quality and in particular of trying to drive up quality within primary care. The Secretary of State announced the appointment of a Chief Inspector of Hospitals as part of the Government’s response to the Francis review into Mid Staffs. As has been referred to, since that time the Government have also announced the positions of a Chief Inspector of Social Care and a Chief Inspector of General Practice. These three chief inspectors will sit within the CQC and lead for it on the inspection and regulation of all registered providers of health and adult social care. They will be high-profile positions—as the appointment of Mike Richards demonstrates—and will speak for the CQC on the quality of care that they find. As such, it is likely, as noble Lords have indicated, that they will have a lot to offer the CQC board in knowledge, experience and leadership.

The noble Lord, Lord Warner, asked about the areas that the Chief Inspector of General Practice might cover and whether the post might be drawn more widely. In some ways, that rather bears out my point: setting this in stone in statute may not be the best way to make everything link up so that the new positions work as effectively as possible. The CQC needs to move this forward so that it can best drive up quality. It will be for the CQC to determine the exact remit of each of the chief inspectors. All providers of registered health and adult care services will fall within one of the chief inspectors’ remits. Perhaps that will reassure the noble Lords, Lord Warner and Lord Hunt. The CQC is working up detailed proposals. No doubt it will pay attention to what noble Lords have said. Broadly, the Chief Inspector of Hospitals will cover acute trusts, including mental health trusts; the Chief Inspector of Social Care will cover providers of regulated adult social care, including care homes and domiciliary care agencies; and the Chief Inspector of General Practice will cover GP and dental practices as well as walk-in centres, private healthcare and independent ambulance providers. Clearly, the CQC will look at how it gets comprehensive coverage.

We have deliberately avoided requiring that these inspectors should have a seat on the board for two reasons. First, the aim of Clause 79 is to give the CQC more autonomy in determining which executive members sit on its board. This is in line with best practice, as no doubt noble Lords will recognise. We would not wish to remove this new autonomy by requiring that any executive, other than the chief executive, must sit on the board. Secondly, we have designed the chief inspector roles to be non-statutory. They are internal to the CQC, and the CQC will have the power to design, shape and adapt the roles in a way that best enables their operational effectiveness. I hope that that helps to reassure the noble Lord, Lord Warner.

Lord Hunt of Kings Heath Portrait Lord Hunt of Kings Heath
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I am very grateful to the noble Baroness. Does that mean that at the end of the day the chief executive of the CQC can overrule the chief inspectors? That must be the implication of what she said.

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Lord Warner Portrait Lord Warner
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Clearly the noble Baroness has clarified matters, but whether she has reassured me is another question. I think the Government underestimate the profile of the Chief Inspector of Hospitals in particular. There is no doubt that this will be a very powerful and important post with an enormous profile. The idea that this person can be overruled by the chief executive and the board, as this legislation sets out, poses a problem I certainly want to think more about.

I also think that there is a gap here. Community health services are not clearly in anybody’s remit. I am sure my noble friend Lord Hunt would agree that if we were to identify one black hole where there is not a great deal of data on performance and quality, it would be community health services. It is an area that has not been probed well by independent inspection, and as far as I can see the game plan is to have no inspector looking into that area. Given everybody’s concern about integration, it seems a bit of a missed opportunity for there not to be some linking up there.

I want to consider this much further. It would be helpful if Ministers sent the Committee the job description for the three inspectors they propose. In my experience, it is rather difficult to appoint anyone to anything without a job description. It would be very helpful to our deliberations to have that before Report.

Lord Hunt of Kings Heath Portrait Lord Hunt of Kings Heath
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It seems to me that unless this is sorted out there will be problems in the future, notwithstanding the calibre of the current leadership of the CQC, which I readily acknowledge. If the chief inspector does not have total operational independence when acting as chief inspector, I see a recipe for potential trouble. We will not reach Report until October, so there is plenty of time. My noble friend and I would be very interested to have at least some discussion about how the CQC will avoid the kind of conflicts that clearly we would rather not have, if at all possible.

Baroness Northover Portrait Baroness Northover
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I am very happy to take back to the department the request for further descriptions of the jobs in these cases. We should also bear in mind that the aims of these chief inspectors, as part of the CQC, are to maintain safety and effectiveness and drive up quality. They have shared aims; it is not as if they have different ambitions in this regard.

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Moved by
73A*: After Clause 79, insert the following new Clause—
“National Reporting and Learning System
The National Reporting and Learning System shall come under the control of the Care Quality Commission.”
Lord Hunt of Kings Heath Portrait Lord Hunt of Kings Heath
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My Lords, we come to a very important clause, which I think the Government might describe as a Francis clause since it clearly seeks to respond to the Robert Francis inquiry into the Mid Staffordshire hospital problems. In fact, judging by the rigour of the Government’s initial response to Mr Francis, one might have thought that there would have been a series of clauses reflecting the 290 recommendations. It would be helpful to know why the Government consider that this is an adequate legislative response. Can the Minister say whether there is likely to be further legislation or whether, in effect, this is the definitive legislative response to the Francis report?

Clause 81 creates a new offence so that providers of health services and adult social care that supply, publish or otherwise make available information that is “false or misleading” could be subject to criminal sanctions. The offence applies to a care provider as a corporate body, not to individual directors or employees. Clause 81 outlines the scope of the offence, including where care providers are potentially subject to it and the type of information to which it relates. I understand that further detail will be specified in the regulations as appropriate.

Let me say at once that this clause is welcome, as far as it goes. However, I have two questions to ask. First, is it possible to be rather more explicit than the Explanatory Notes are as to what information is likely to be covered by the offence? This is important as I have received a briefing from NHS employer organisations, which recognise the seriousness of the potential offence in this clause and would like to see clarity as to the kind of information that is embraced.

It is disappointing that the clause does not contain a provision to enact a duty of candour, as recommended by Robert Francis. That is the subject of my Amendment 76B. He said that a statutory duty should be imposed to observe such a duty of candour on healthcare providers who believe, or suspect, that treatment or care provided to a patient has caused death or serious injury to inform that patient or another duly authorised person as soon as is practicable. At Second Reading, the noble Earl said that the duty of candour would be dealt with through CQC registration via regulations. I am very puzzled that such a key recommendation—it was almost the headline recommendation—of the Francis report is not going to be dealt with in the Bill when the Government clearly have the vehicle to put it there, so I am very sympathetic to my noble friend Lord Warner’s Amendment 77, which I think is consistent with my Amendment 76B. It is always nice to feel that I am consistent with my noble friend.

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Lord Campbell-Savours Portrait Lord Campbell-Savours
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But does the noble Baroness recognise that that might then determine the policy of nursing homes concerning whether they are prepared to take on the responsibility of carrying NHS patients? They will then be chargeable with an offence which otherwise—if they were not to take on those patients—they would not be subject to.

Lord Hunt of Kings Heath Portrait Lord Hunt of Kings Heath
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Perhaps I may ask my noble friend whether that then comes to the point that the noble Baroness raised earlier about needing to extend this duty to GPs and social care providers. The reality is that if the duty were extended to social care providers, most of those homes would not be viable unless they accepted either local authority-funded clients or clients from the health service. Is not the answer to extend the duty to make sure that we cover GPs, community health and so on?

Baroness Northover Portrait Baroness Northover
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In terms of the division that the noble Lord pointed to, if a provider decides that it does not want to take on NHS patients because it will have to reach higher standards than for private patients—which appeared to be part of what he was saying—once that is publicised and becomes apparent, that will not exactly encourage people to use those providers.

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Baroness Northover Portrait Baroness Northover
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My noble friend says no. I can see that the van advertising litigation probably does not want to encounter the noble Lord, Lord Campbell-Savours, as he comes out of whichever hospital it is.

In the light of what I have said, and anything else that we need to clarify, I encourage noble Lords not to press their amendments.

Lord Hunt of Kings Heath Portrait Lord Hunt of Kings Heath
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My Lords, we are extremely grateful to the noble Baroness for that reply. There are obviously a lot of issues that we may want to return to, but clearly the main debate is about the duty of candour. It has been a good debate because noble Lords have identified the problems of a statutory duty on individuals. This presents some real challenges, which clearly need to be thought out with great care and attention. I very much accept that there is a real risk of perverse incentives and discouraging staff doing the right thing because of the fear of prosecution.

However, I am puzzled about the duty of candour. I do not understand why the Government have included this offence of supplying false or misleading information in the Bill when the duty of candour, which is clearly much more important, will be relegated to secondary legislation. From the debate and the comments of all noble Lords who spoke, clearly this is not easy. It has to be got right. The best way to get it right is through primary legislation.

The problem with secondary legislation is that, at best, we will have an hour and a half of debate and we are not allowed to amend it. This issue is so complex and important that it warrants more. I strongly recommend that the Government to look at this again and bring back an amendment on Report in the light of Professor Donald Berwick’s recommendation. I think that they will find that the duty of candour is the flagship of the Francis report. Not to have it included in the Bill means that we are missing something. I suspect that patients will miss out in the end.

Having said that, this is a good way to conclude our discussions tonight and I beg leave to withdraw my amendment.

Amendment 73A withdrawn.