My Lords, the draft regulations laid before the House on 5 September allow the Secretary of State to impose a financial penalty on private adult social care providers that fail to submit information required under Section 277A of the Health and Social Care Act 2012 or provide false or misleading information.
This statutory instrument will make sure that the Government receive a regular, standardised and accurate set of data from providers of social care to give us an up-to-date understanding of how the care system is functioning, what problems are emerging and where those problems are. This in turn means that the Government can support providers and the social care system as a whole to serve the care needs of the population, offering people choice, control and support to live independently.
At the start of the pandemic, it became clear that, here at the centre, we were lacking up-to-date information about the functioning of the social care system, as we had no comprehensive national source of data from providers. For instance, we did not know how many people were receiving care, where they were receiving it or where capacity was in the system, and we lacked provider-specific information about the workforce.
The Government relied on data mainly captured through aggregate annual returns from local authorities and periodic returns from the Association of Directors of Adult Social Services, supplemented by state of care briefings from the Care Quality Commission and from Skills for Care on the workforce. By the time we received this sort of information it was of little use to respond to on-the-ground situations.
As an interim response during the pandemic, the Department of Health and Social Care expanded the use of the capacity tracker tool, which at the time was used by providers primarily to share information about their bed vacancy, so that we could collect the information we desperately needed to give us a picture of the front line of social care. This gave us near real-time data to manage risks and issues that were presented on the front line, but, until the Health and Care Act 2022, it was difficult to require providers to do so.
Since the pandemic, most providers have continued to complete the capacity tracker, and it has continued to be a valuable source of data. However, with the ending of the infection control funds, we have seen completion rates decline. Therefore, we have taken steps to put provider data collection on a sustainable, long-term footing through new powers inserted into the Health and Social Care Act 2012 by the Health and Care Act 2022.
The Secretary of State for Health and Social Care now requires registered adult social care providers to submit data via the capacity tracker tool. This includes data on bed vacancies, service users, workforce resourcing, vaccination status and visiting data. We recognise that data collection can be onerous for care providers and, in making this data collection mandatory, we reduced the frequency of data collections from weekly to monthly. We have also removed data fields where the information was no longer critical.
Our intention is to share appropriately collected data with organisations across the adult social care
sector that need it to guide delivery, policy development and research. The information submitted will be subject to the UK general data protection regulation.
Through the 2022 Act, we can now require the information from providers. This is already in place. It is important to note that what we are debating today is the legislation to enforce that requirement. Enforcement is through financial penalties, which have been developed to make sure that the mandation of the data is effective but also done in a way that is proportionate. The draft regulations therefore cover the amount of the penalty, the service of notices, the right to make representations and the right to appeal to the tribunal. The regulations set out that the level of the penalty will be the same as a provider’s Care Quality Commission registration fee, which is scaled to provider type and size.
It is our intention that these enforcement powers are used as a last resort. A notice of intent will be given before imposing a penalty, and the provider will have the right to make representations as to why it should not be imposed. Thereafter, a final decision will be taken and, if it is decided to impose a penalty, a final notice will be given. The provider will then be able to appeal to the First-tier Tribunal—the UK courts—if it disagrees with that decision. There is also provision in the regulations for notices to be withdrawn, for the recovery of financial penalties in the county court and for a duty to review the regulations every five years.
We need these draft regulations because we need to be able to enforce the information duties created by the Health and Care Act 2022. In particular, the Act inserted new Section 277A into the Health and Social Care Act 2012 to enable the Secretary of State to require information from regulated providers of adult social care services about themselves, their activities and the persons to whom they have provided care. New Section 277E provides for regulations to be made to enforce that duty to provide information through the imposition of financial penalties. We hope, and very much expect, compliance to be the norm so that financial penalties are not required. However, a deterrent is important, and these regulations provide powers to impose financial penalties if needed.
The Government’s priority is to support providers to share their data wherever possible. The data required will be proportionate, and providers will normally be given three months’ notice of any changes to the data requested unless there are any particular extenuating circumstances. Financial penalties will normally be a last resort, for example where a provider continues to be, or is persistently, in breach of its data obligations despite multiple offers of support from our delivery partners.
So what have the Government done so far? In our data strategy, we set out our vision for how data will be used to improve the health and care of the population in a safe, trusted and transparent way. Ultimately, we want a health and care system that is underpinned by high-quality, readily available data that is collected once and shared appropriately with those in the sector who need it. This is critical to the running of our health and care services and will help to improve adult
social care commissioning practice, improve outcomes for people receiving care and provide greater oversight of the sector.
I beg to move.