PARLIAMENTARY WRITTEN QUESTION
NHS (14 July 2015)
Question Asked
Asked by:
Angela Rayner (Labour)
Answer
In the past three years, the NHS Constitution has been amended twice. In April 2013, the NHS Constitution was updated to reflect a number of key areas, including:
- patient involvement in discussions and decisions about their care and treatment, including end of life care;
- a duty of candour;
- the addition of a pledge to welcome feedback;
- integrated care, reflecting the needs and preferences of patients;
- new patient rights on complaints;
- amending the language to better reflect patient involvement in managing their own care;
- the addition of further staff rights, responsibilities and commitments; and
- ensuring patients will not have to share hospital sleeping accommodation with patients of the opposite sex.
Between February and April this year, the Department consulted on a package of further changes to the NHS Constitution. This included:
- reflecting recommendations made by Sir Robert Francis QC in his Inquiry Report on Mid-Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust;
- incorporating a series of fundamental standards, below which standards of care should never fall;
- highlighting the importance of transparency and accountability within the National Health Service;
- giving greater prominence to mental health, through reflecting a parity of esteem between mental and physical health problems; and
- making reference to the Armed Forces Covenant.
The updated NHS Constitution will be published alongside a revised version of the Handbook to the NHS Constitution on 27 July 2015. The Handbook outlines the contents of the NHS Constitution in further detail.
Answered by:
Ben Gummer (Conservative)
20 July 2015
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