Care Quality Commission
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Have your say on Care Quality Commission fees

The Care Quality Commission (CQC) yesterday publishes a consultation about the fees that it proposes to charge registered providers in 2015/16.

The fees paid by providers, together with grant-in-aid from the government, are central to ensuring that CQC can carry out the job it is committed to delivering - registering and inspecting health and adult social care providers to make sure they provide safe, effective, compassionate and high-quality care, monitoring them to make sure they continue to do so, and taking action if they don't.

Earlier this year, CQC consulted on its 'new approach' to monitoring, inspecting and rating health and adult social care services. The main elements of the new approach are larger, more specialist and expert inspection teams led by chief inspectors, greater involvement in inspections by members of the public with personal experience of services, better use of information to identify risks and plan inspections, ratings for all health and adult social care services and tougher registration checks. 

The impact of these changes and developing a model that everyone can have confidence in is an increased cost of regulation. Our budget is a combination of grant-in-aid from the government and from fees paid by providers. To meet government policy of recovering all chargeable costs from fees, we must increase the proportion of cost recovery from fees and reduce the amount of funding from the taxpayer, bringing us closer and more accountable to the sectors we regulate.  This consultation sets out the proposal we are making to change the balance of funding to increase cost recovery from provider fees in 2015/16. 

This year’s consultation includes proposals to:

  • Increase annual fees for all registered providers except for the dental sector.
    • Amend the fee scheme for independent healthcare providers whose fees increased due only to structural changes made in the 2013/14 fees scheme

With these increases included, health and care providers will still typically pay 1% or less of their income in fees to CQC.

The impact of the proposed fee increase on a typical NHS GP, care home and NHS trust would be:

  • NHS GP - £69
  • Care home - £238
  • NHS trust - £6458

We are not proposing to increase fee charges for dental providers as we already recover the full chargeable costs of regulating this sector.

CQC is committed to making sure that fee charges are fair, proportionate and transparent. We are also committed to ensuring that we closely monitor the costs of our regulatory work, continuously seek to improve its efficiency, evaluate its effectiveness and demonstrate the value of our approach to the public, the taxpayer and the sectors we regulate.

The proposals in this consultation have been developed with CQC's Fees Advisory Panel, which includes representatives from the providers we regulate.

The consultation runs until noon on 9 January 2015. The consultation document is availablehere.

For media enquiries, call the CQC press office on 020 7448 9401 during office hours or out of hours on 07917 232 143.

For general enquiries, call 03000 61 61 61.

Notes to editors

CQC has powers to set fees under the Health and Social Care Act 2008, subject to consultation and the approval of the fees scheme by the Secretary of State. The fees scheme will take legal effect on 1 April 2015 and will replace the current scheme.

Registered providers are liable for paying the amount set out in the fee scheme as an annual charge. The amount they pay depends on the type and size of the services they provide.

CQC aims to introduce a facility for providers to be able to pay fees by instalments from April 2016.

CQC consults with its Fees Advisory Panel when developing its fee proposals – the panel members represent all the major stakeholder organisations in the sectors CQC regulates.

The amount spent on CQC regulation as a proportion of the total expenditure on health and adult social care in England is 16p for every £100 spent.

Further information about our consultation on our 'new approach' is available here.

Supporting information about our fees proposals can be found in our Impact Assessmenthere.

About the Care Quality Commission

The Care Quality Commission (CQC) is the independent regulator of health and social care in England.

We make sure health and social care services provide people with safe, effective, compassionate, high-quality care and we encourage care services to improve.

We monitor, inspect and regulate services to make sure they meet fundamental standards of quality and safety and we publish what we find to help people choose care.

 

Channel website: http://www.cqc.org.uk/

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