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CQC to face review into its ‘operational effectiveness’

CQC to face review into its ‘operational effectiveness’
By Anna Colivicchi
8 May 2024



The CQC is set to face a review into its ‘operational effectiveness’, the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) has said.

The ‘focused review’ will be led by North West London ICS chair Penny Dash, who has been appointed by DHSC on behalf of the Cabinet Office.

It forms part of the the Cabinet Office’s Public Bodies Review programme, which was launched in 2022, with the aim of reviewing 125 public bodies and saving the taxpayer around £800m over three years.

The review is ‘standard procedure’ under the programme, according to the Government.

The DHSC declined to provide the full terms of reference for the review, but according to the HSJwhich first reported the story, it will look at:

  • the effectiveness of CQC’s ratings and whether these are incentivising the improvement of care
  • how the watchdog is taking into account service users
  • how the CQC’s new assessment framework, which was rolled out in November, is working.

CQC chief executive Ian Trenholm said: ‘We welcome this review and look forward to working with the appointed team.

‘We recognise how important scrutiny of regulation is – we want the public and our stakeholders to have assurance that the effectiveness of our approach has been independently assessed, so that they can have confidence in our judgements of quality.’

The DHSC also launched a consultation last month seeking views on changes CQC regulations.

As it stands, the regulations that give CQC power to oversee services are set to expire in 2025 but the Government is proposing to remove this in favour of five-yearly reviews.

It said that the purpose of removing the expiry date is to ‘ensure CQC continues to have regulatory oversight’ of the health and care sector, and inserting a five-yearly review clause would mean ‘regular reviews’ of the regulations to ensure ‘they remain fit for purpose’.

Last month, the CQC delayed its rollout of new assessments of ICSs until further notice, despite being due to start in the first week of April.

A version of this story was first published on our sister title Pulse.

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