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Split data-sharing plan 'unworkable'

Posted: 01 September 2005 | Subscribe Online


Split data-sharing plan 'unworkable' Plans to introduce separate information-sharing procedures for health professionals and the rest of the children's workforce have been branded as unworkable by a leading social care figure, writes Amy Taylor.

Ian Johnston, director of the British Association of Social Workers, said it was wrong to have different procedures and that relationships between health and social care staff were not good enough for the plans to work.

Guidance put out to consultation last week recommends a new two-tier approach to disclosing information for health professionals.
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Under the proposals, health staff who had a reasonable suspicion that a child was being harmed due to abuse or neglect could contact other professionals for more information, but would not be required to disclose the nature of their concerns.

They would combine this new information with their own and decide whether the child could be in danger.

The government argues that the approach is necessary because of the sensitive nature of information held by health staff, but Johnston said the information held by social workers was just as sensitive.

He feared that the distant relationships between the two professions and their mutual distrust could militate against the proposals working in practice.

Johnston said: "Social workers have always been concerned about [health professionals] not sharing information when they should."
Caroline Abrahams, director of public policy at children's charity NCH, said that, although the guidance was intended to clarify information-sharing procedures, its length and wording could have the opposite effect.
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"If I was a practitioner and I was faced with a document of such complexity about information-sharing it would not make me more confident," she said.

Abrahams also highlighted the fact that the guidelines are non-statutory, so there would be no guarantee that professionals would follow the proposed procedures.

A spokesperson for the NHS Confederation welcomed the guidance and the two-tier approach for health professionals.

The consultation closes in November.



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