For everyone working in residential and domiciliary care

 
 

Social care providers' excellence award to be ditched

The government is to drop the planned excellence award for social care providers after it was universally rejected by the sector. Care Quality Commission chair Jo Williams (pictured) has said that she saw no prospect of the scheme going ahead.

Jeremy Dunning
Friday 30 September 2011 12:42

The government is to drop the planned excellence award for social care providers after it was universally rejected by the sector.

Care Quality Commission chair Jo Williams said that she saw no prospect of the scheme going ahead after it had receievd a "universal thumbs down" by providers' bodies and organisations such as the Association of Directors of Adult Social Services in a CQC consultation that closed last month.

She told the National Care Association conference: "It's clear yourselves and others have said it's not going to work and it doesn't add value. We put all the results of our consultation to the Department of Health and while we've not had a formal response I saw the minister [Paul Burstow] and he understands it's a universal thumbs down so I can't see it happening. The climate isn't there because everyone is saying it won't deliver the goods."

Opposition to the scheme centres on the following concerns:

● That applications for the award would be voluntary, meaning there was no marker of quality to distinguish those that did not apply.

● There were no gradations of quality for judging providers below "excellent".

● The scheme would be outsourced to multiple providers by CQC, resulting in inconsistency.

● Providers would have to pay to apply.

Responding to the announcement, Sheila Scott, chief executive of the NCA, said: "We believe this was a triumph of common sense. We would like to work together to find a way forward to demonstrate quality service provision." "The National Care Association has always said it's the wrong scheme at the wrong time, particularly in terms of the financial constraints."

A Department of Health spokesperson said: "We are committed to the development of a scheme that helps people choose between providers, recognises quality beyond the essential standards and encourages quality improvement by providers. Responses to the consultation will now be carefully considered to ensure that any new scheme meets these objectives and has the support of the sector."

What do you think? Join the debate on CareSpace

Keep up to date with the latest developments in social care. Sign up to our daily and weekly emails

Related articles

Ministers under pressure to ditch adult care excellence award

blog comments powered by Disqus
 
Spacer
Spacer

Why social care staff are vital in the battle against fire deaths

Fire deaths

In this guest post, London Fire Brigade deputy commissioner Rita Dexter explains what social care staff can do to help reduce the risk of fire deaths among older people at home and in residential care.

Last year, half of the 33 people who died in fires across London were aged over 60.

Spacer

Welcome to the residential and domiciliary care forum

TEST Have your say on pay, conditions at work or best practice in our new residential and domiciliary care forum

Spacer
Spacer
Spacer

The State of Personalisation in adult social care

State of personalisation

Read our exclusive research,  in association with Unison

Spacer
 
Spacer

Use the box below to search for your ideal job based on job title or area

Spacer
Spacer