Is the risk that some trusts might cover up their never events to avoid a prominent league table position a reason not to publish the data?
@ShaunLintern @iHealthP @DebHazeldine What action is it you think they take Sean? How can a regulator know if never events go unreported?
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@C7RKY@iHealthP@DebHazeldine I'm talking about those NEs that are reported. Should be public else no imperative to take actions.Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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@C7RKY@iHealthP@DebHazeldine Unreported NEs are a different and far more complex issue. Ultimately responsibility on individual to report. -
@ShaunLintern@iHealthP@DebHazeldine And that's the problem - unreliable self-reporting again. Honest data? I already know 1 that's wrong. -
@C7RKY@iHealthP@DebHazeldine I agree. But what else is there? Unless we have omnipotence we only know what we know. We have to act on it -
@ShaunLintern@iHealthP@DebHazeldine Proper regulation, with a regulator that actually has the required powers to expose it. Email sent... -
@C7RKY@iHealthP@DebHazeldine I agree with you and CQC is making big strides to that end. -
@ShaunLintern@iHealthP@DebHazeldine How Shaun? I'm led to believe they don't even have the powers to go looking where the evidence is. -
@C7RKY@iHealthP@DebHazeldine Take a look at the new CQC inspection regime born out of Francis. It's far more robust than previous. -
@ShaunLintern@C7RKY@DebHazeldine Shaun, that's just a piece of paper. Where are the resources going to come from to actually do it?
End of conversation
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