An update on the Health Professions Council

24
An update on the Health Profession s Council Rachel Tripp – the Hospital Physicists’ Association Conference November 2 nd 2007

description

Rachel Tripp – the Hospital Physicists’ Association Conference November 2 nd 2007. An update on the Health Professions Council. Today’s presentation. About the HPC CPD standards The White Paper. What are the underlying principles of professional regulation in the UK?. Self regulation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of An update on the Health Professions Council

Page 1: An update on the Health Professions Council

An update on the Health Professions Council

Rachel Tripp – the Hospital Physicists’ Association ConferenceNovember 2nd 2007

Page 2: An update on the Health Professions Council

Today’s presentation

•About the HPC

•CPD standards

•The White Paper

Page 3: An update on the Health Professions Council

What are the underlying principles of professionalregulation in the UK?

• Self regulation

• Professionally led

• Statutory regulation

• UK model

- Protection of Title vs Function

• Independent of government

Page 4: An update on the Health Professions Council

HPC’s main objective

“To safeguard the health and well-being of persons using or needing the services of registrants”

Health Professions Order 2001

Article 3 (4)

Page 5: An update on the Health Professions Council

How do we achieve this?

Register

Standards

Fitness to Practice

Communications

Page 6: An update on the Health Professions Council

Regulator must be separate and independent

TradeAssociation

ProfessionalBody

RegulatorGovernment

Page 7: An update on the Health Professions Council

Complementary roles

• Professional Body- Learned Society- Promotion and development of profession- Curriculum framework

• Trade Association- Terms & conditions

• Regulator- Sets and maintains standards

- Approves programmes- Keeps a register- Fitness to Practise- Continuing Professional Development (CPD)

Page 8: An update on the Health Professions Council
Page 9: An update on the Health Professions Council

182,000 registrants,13 Professions

Page 10: An update on the Health Professions Council

Standards

•Standards of Proficiency

•Standards of conduct, performance and ethics

•Standards of Education and Training

•Standards for CPD

Page 11: An update on the Health Professions Council

Fitness to Practise process

AllegationAllegation

MediationMediationInterimOrdersInterimOrders

HealthHealthConduct &CompetenceConduct &

Competence

InvestigationInvestigation

Page 12: An update on the Health Professions Council

HPC’s role within a wider context

Healthcare Commission report on trends in complaintsJanuary 2007, 16,000 complaints received over 2 years

What do patients want?

- Better explanation of what went wrong 33%

- Service improvements 23%

- An apology 10%

- The event acknowledged 9%

- Action against staff 8%

- The same thing not to happen again 8%

Page 13: An update on the Health Professions Council

Continuing Professional Development and HPC

• Standards (5) introduced in July 2005

• HPC requires all professionals to undertake CPD on a regular basis

• Audit will begin in July 2008

Page 14: An update on the Health Professions Council

Standards of CPD

•Maintain up-to-date record – in whatever format is helpful

•Mixture of activities relevant to current or future practice

•Contributes to quality of practice

•Benefits service user

Standards – CPD...

Ref:HPC/MJS/HPC/Oct 2007

Page 15: An update on the Health Professions Council

CPD audit process

• Profile

•Statement of current practice

•Description of how CPD meets standards

• Assessed by at least two CPD Assessors

• Met / not met / further information

• Further 3 months if required

• Can have registration lapsed

• Subject to appeals process

Page 16: An update on the Health Professions Council

CPD – finding out more

• Your guide to the HPC’s CPD standards

• Continuing Professional Development and registration

• Sample profiles

Page 17: An update on the Health Professions Council

‘Trust, assurance and safety: the regulation of health professionals in the 21st century’

Background to the White Paper’s publication:

•The Shipman report

•The Donaldson review of medical regulation

•The ‘Foster review’ of non-medical regulation

•The White Paper – February 2005

Page 18: An update on the Health Professions Council

Key messages in the White Paper

Affirmation of the vast majority of health professionals

Need to make systemic changes alongside regulation reforms

- e.g. clinical governance, coroner’s systems, death certification systems, controlled drugs, complaints systems

Page 19: An update on the Health Professions Council

White Paper reforms to regulation

Greater consistency between regulators

• Fitness to practise processes

• Standard of proof

• Common standards?

Page 20: An update on the Health Professions Council

Improving the structure of the regulators

•Appointed Council members

•Smaller Councils

•Separation of strategic function from decision-making

White Paper reforms to regulation

Page 21: An update on the Health Professions Council

Revalidation

•Positive demonstration of fitness to practise every 5 years

3 groups

•Employees of an approved body – part of appraisal and management systems

•Self-employed contractors – revalidation in collaboration between NHS commissioner and regulator

•Others – revalidation carried out by the regulator

White Paper reforms to regulation

Page 22: An update on the Health Professions Council

Revalidation – key questions

• Risk?

• Standards?

• Assessment against those standards?

• Cost?

Set up a professional liaison group (PLG) to look at continuing fitness to practise more broadly.

Also looking at post-registration qualifications and marking the Register.

White Paper reforms to regulation

Page 23: An update on the Health Professions Council

Regulation of aspirant groups

•No additional regulators – new groups normally be regulated by HPC

•Psychologists, healthcare scientists, psychotherapists and counsellors

•Also mentioned the regulation of acupuncture, traditional chinese medicine and herbal medicine

•Establishing a working group to look at regulation of other groups, including criteria and priorities

White Paper reforms to regulation

Page 24: An update on the Health Professions Council

Any questions

?