My Lords, I rise to speak to Amendment 307 in my name. I am very grateful to the noble Baroness, Lady Finlay, and the noble Lord, Lord Warner, for adding their names to it. I am also grateful for the support already received from my noble friend Lady Brinton.
As I have argued in earlier debates on this Bill, it is a real problem that measures under Part 2 that aim to improve the sharing of information and data apply only to adults. This is despite the clear need to improve how children’s data is shared between health and social care and also between other agencies, including education and wider local services. The current absence of a single unique identifier makes identification of children who are in touch with multiple services very difficult and is a real barrier to joined-up support. My amendment seeks to address this glaring gap by requiring the Secretary of State to publish plans to use the NHS number as a single unique identifier for children.
Everyone in England and Wales is assigned a unique NHS number at birth or after the first time they interact with NHS services and that number is valid for life. Currently, the NHS number is used to store information on patients within healthcare records. However, we know that children and young people are frequently in contact with other agencies and services
which are, more often than not, all using different identifiers. It is no wonder that too many children, including the most vulnerable, fall through the cracks, leading to the tragic and absolutely horrendous examples of extreme child cruelty and death that we have heard about recently.
The 2021 annual report on local children’s safeguarding practice reviews, previously known as serious case reviews, states:
“Much has been written about the continuing barriers to sharing information between safeguarding partners and we found that those issues remain and were highlighted in almost half of all reviews”—
I repeat: some 50% of the reviews.
Using the NHS number as a unique identifier would have the following benefits. It would reduce the risk of incorrect identification, improve multiagency working and improve care pathways. It would certainly ease the transition into adulthood, because the NHS number is for life. That NHS number stays with patients wherever they move within the country or between England and Wales. These are really important points.
A key finding of the House of Lords Public Services Committee report on child vulnerability was that
“in most local areas, services working with children are unable to match unique pupil identifiers on the national pupil database with children’s NHS numbers. This limits the ability of early intervention services to reach the most vulnerable children”.
Simon Kenny, the NHS England national clinical director for children and young people, added to these calls, stating that we “definitely” need a unique identifier, and that there needs to be
“a legal framework to enable it.”
This Bill provides just that opportunity.
Both the Children’s Commissioners—Anne Longfield, the previous Children’s Commissioner, and Dame Rachel de Souza—have supported the call for a single unique identifier number for children. I spoke with Anne Longfield about this only yesterday, and she described this approach as a force for good.
I finish by referring to a briefing from the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, for which I am very grateful. It strongly supports a single unique identifier for children using the NHS number and says that it would be utterly transformative in how services address the needs of children and young people, particularly the most vulnerable.