The NHS is on
track to virtually eliminate mixed-sex accommodation from
hospitals across England, announced Health Minister Ann Keen today.
The announcement follows the publication of a Taskforce report:
‘Delivering same-sex accommodation – the story so far’. The
report highlights that all trust improvement schemes supported by
the Department of Health’s £100 million ‘Privacy and Dignity Fund’
will be completed by June 2010.
This means that sleeping in same-sex bays or wards and having
access to same-sex toilets and bathrooms facilities is now the
everyday experience of the overwhelming majority of NHS patients,
at every stage in their journey through care.
All trusts are expected to provide same-sex accommodation and, by
2010, any trust that fails will be subject to financial sanctions.
Today’s report outlines the progress of the intensive drive set
up by the Department in January and also builds on work outlined
back in 1997, when the NHS was asked to eliminate mixed-sex
accommodation from specific clinical departments in 95 per cent of
trusts in England by 2002. That target was exceeded.
Since January, over 200 trusts have commissioned 1,157 schemes
across nearly 400 sites.
Improvement works have included:
• over 2,300 new or refurbished toilets and bathrooms;
•
10,800 extra modesty curtains to ensure patient privacy within
same-sex areas;
• over 14,000 new signs to help patients find
same-sex facilities, such as the toilets or bathrooms;
• 960
other building projects such as women-only lounges, security doors
and reglazing windows with frosted glass;
• almost 700 new bed
management systems to get patients to the right bed on first
admission; and
• over 1,200 education and training programmes.
These schemes are part of a wider programme of work on delivering
same-sex accommodation which also saw new Improvement Support
Teams set up to assist those trusts needing the most guidance and
support. This included helping trusts understand their problem
areas and supporting them in developing and implementing solutions.
Health Minister Ann Keen said:
“Back in January we announced that mixed-sex accommodation would
no longer be tolerated in the NHS, unless clinically justified.
Since then we have driven through intensive changes and the latest
data shows the dramatic effect that this has had.
“The overwhelming majority of NHS patients now sleep in same-sex
accommodation. This is a significant achievement and will make a
real difference to patients.
“These schemes are not just a quick fix and the transformations
are not just focussed on the physical environment. The works span
from building improvements and new management processes through to
training and communication programmes. These all contribute to a
patient’s experience of care and all serve to ensure that patients
receive the privacy and dignity they deserve.
“We are also clear that any trust that fails to deliver same-sex
accommodation, except where clinically justified, will be subject
to financial sanctions.”
Keith Pearson and Kathryn Riddle, Joint Chairs of the Delivering
Same-Sex Accommodation Taskforce added:
“Quality of patient care is a core principle of the NHS and the
NHS Constitution makes it clear that privacy and dignity are
fundamental rights.
“The activity and achievement on this intensive drive to
eliminate mixed-sex accommodation has been immense and we have
been privileged to see what can be delivered when patient groups,
clinicians, managers, politicians, architects, designers and the
public come together to put people’s privacy and dignity at the
centre of their planning.”
Ends
Notes to Editors:
Please
contact the Department of Health Newsdesk for more information on
020 7210 5221.
1. A full copy of the progress report ‘Delivering same-sex
accommodation – the Story so Far’ is available from the Department
of Health website.
2. We recognise that there are times when the need to treat and
admit can override the need for complete segregation. This might
apply, for instance, with:
- A patient needing very high-tech
care, with one-to-one nursing (e.g. ICU, HDU);
- A patient
needing very specialised care, where one nurse might be caring for
a small number of patients; or
- A patient needing very urgent
care (e.g. rapid admission following heart attack).
Where
mixing does occur, it must be justifiable for all the patients
affected. There are no blanket exemptions for particular
specialties and no exemptions at all from the need to provide high
standards of privacy and dignity at all times.
3. In January 2009, Health Secretary Alan Johnson announced an
intensive drive to ‘all but eliminate’ mixed sex accommodation and
a packet of measures including:
- A £100 million Privacy and
Dignity Fund to help trusts make swift adjustments to patient
experience;
- Improvement teams to be set up to go into
hospitals that need support during the process;
- A greater
focus on measuring and improving patient experience of mixed sex
accommodation; and
- Financial penalties for those hospitals
where patients are treated in mixed sex accommodation – unless it
can be clinically justified.
Contacts:
Department of Health
Phone: 020 7210 5221
NDS.DH@coi.gsi.gov.uk