My Lords, I welcome the intention to make the Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch a statutory body. We know that healthcare is very complex and that adverse events unfortunately occur very regularly. Recognising that weak safety systems create the conditions for the inevitability of error is vital to achieving high levels of patient safety. The noble Lord, Lord Patel, and I chaired the National Patient Safety Agency at different times, and we saw there the problems of having an agency where there was no mechanism for turning its work into appreciable action in the health service. I have great hopes that the HSSIB may well have a major impact on how the NHS improves safety.
In 2019, we had a Bill that was interrupted by the general election, and we now have these clauses in this Bill. Prior to the Bill in 2019, there was pre-legislative scrutiny from a Joint Select Committee of both Houses. This Select Committee argued that the most critical priority is to ensure that the prohibited disclosure of safe space provisions is fully fit for purpose in protecting the identity and statements of individuals who participate in our national safety investigations. The whole concept of safe space is so important. Without people in the service having the confidence to be able to tell the branch what is happening and where things have gone wrong, I do not think the branch is going to be able to work effectively.
It is very significant that the Select Committee concluded that any concession to safe space proposals—to coroners, for example—might significantly harm the branch’s ability to conduct effective safety investigations and would undermine one of the core principles under which the branch is being established. The Government
have never once given any explanation of why over 90 coroners should be allowed to override the safe space concept.
I am very disappointed to see that the senior coroners can, under paragraph 6 of Schedule 14,
“require the disclosure of protected material by the HSSIB”.
I am very supportive of the amendment of my noble friend to remove those coroners. In fact, I do not believe this is going to work unless we succeed in doing so. I look forward to some decent, substantive explanation—not just that the MoJ insisted on it, which we think is probably the real reason the Department of Health failed to stop this—as to why coroners should be allowed to impede the success of this endeavour.
The leadership of this organisation is clearly critical, and we have seen in recent weeks just how critical. The Joint Select Committee thought that, to emphasise the wider accountability of the HSSIB to Parliament, both the chair and the chief investigator should be subject to pre-appointment scrutiny by the Commons Health and Social Care Select Committee. The Government agreed at that time to have a look at it, and I would be grateful if the noble Baroness could tell me what the conclusions are. Again, I would say that, in the light of recent very unfortunate experience within the leadership of this organisation, parliamentary scrutiny is very much justified.
There is some debate about whether the Secretary of State should have the power in Clause 97 to direct the branch to carry out an investigation. I do not think that undermines the independence of the branch. I think it is perfectly proper for the Secretary of State to be able to order an intervention; after all, he or she is responsible for the NHS to Parliament. But it is sensible that that power should not be unlimited and that the branch should have sufficient resources to carry out such an investigation and not have all its work diverted because of a request or instruction by the Secretary of State—hence my Amendment 309.
It is also important that, where an investigation is carried out under such a direction, a copy of the final report should be laid before Parliament, setting out what action the Secretary of State proposes to take in response to the report. That is the subject of my Amendment 310.
In Clause 115, the oversight functions of the Secretary of State are laid out, including a power of direction in the event of HSSIB failure. That is quite normal. Such direction may not direct the outcome of a particular investigation. That seems sensible to me, but it should happen only in exceptional circumstances, and in the interest of transparency and accountability, the clause surely needs strengthening through my Amendments 312AA and 312AB.
I think the Government will find there is a great deal of support for the establishment of the branch as a statutory agency, but unless they can resolve the safe spaces concept and strengthen the governance, this branch may have some difficult challenges in the future. I beg to move.