Skills for Care
Top

Single Assessment Framework version

Print this page

Learning culture

Even with the most robust risk assessments and best staff, accidents and incidents do occur in adult social care services. The CQC expects all regulated services to have a proactive and positive culture committed to identifying, investigating, and learning from each safety incident.

The following film provides a summary of this area of inspection. It can help you and your teams learn about what will be inspected and what is important to demonstrate to deliver good or outstanding care.

Introducing Learning culture

Duration 01 min 45 sec

No matter how safe we try to make our services, accident and incidents will occur.

What the CQC expects is that when accidents or incidents happen, our response and subsequent actions helps to mitigate any unnecessary reoccurrence.

Openness and transparency around safety is key. Your staff should be capable and confident in their roles to raise concerns and report incidents, including near misses.

Your managers and leaders should set the standard, taking ownership of any accidents and incidents, but empowering your staff team to implement any changes that might be needed.

Your reviews of accident and incidents should be thorough, often involving managers, staff and, where possible, the people you support. On occasions, you may need to involve external expertise and other agencies too.

Each accident and incident is an opportunity to learn from mistakes and further strengthen your service.

In preparation for inspection, the CQC will be looking at any notifications, RIDDOR or HSE reports that have been submitted.

They’ll also be planning to interview a number of people as part of the inspection. Be prepared to share examples of what you have done to improve safety.

During their inspection, the CQC may request to see a number of different documents including:

  • complaints and compliments
  • Incident and ‘near miss’ policies and records, including alerts, investigations, outcomes and improvement plans.

To learn more about how you can meet this area of CQC inspection, take a look at GO Online.

Watch the film here: https://vimeo.com/789624418

Recommendations

These recommendations act as a checklist to what the CQC will be looking for. Skills for Care has reviewed hundreds of inspection reports and identified these recommendations as recurring good practice in providers that meet CQC expectations.

The CQC is non-prescriptive, which means they don’t tell you what must be done in order to meet their Quality Statement. These recommendations are not intended to be a definitive list and some recommendations might not be relevant to your service. We hope they help you reflect on what evidence you might wish to share with the CQC.

Learning culture


Developed in partnership with