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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> British Medical Association, R (On the Application Of) v Northamptonshire County Council & Ors [2020] EWHC 1664 (Admin) (25 June 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2020/1664.html Cite as: [2020] PTSR 1693, [2020] EWHC 1664 (Admin), [2020] WLR(D) 376 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN on the application of BRITISH MEDICAL ASSOCIATION |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) NORTHAMPTONSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL (2) CHIEF CONSTABLE OF NORTHAMPTONSHIRE (3) NHS NENE CLINICAL COMMISSIONING GROUP (4) NHS CORBY CLINICAL COMMISSIONING GROUP |
Defendants |
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- and - |
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NHS COMMISSIONING BOARD |
Interested Party |
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Mr. John McKendrick QC (instructed by LGS Law) for the First Defendant
Mr. Elliot Gold (instructed by Legal Services Derbyshire Constabulary) for the Second Defendant
Mr. Andrew Sharland QC (instructed by DAC Beachcroft) for the Third & Fourth Defendants
Mr. Clive Sheldon QC (instructed by Browne Jacobson LLP) for the Interested Party
Hearing dates: 6 & 7 May 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE SWIFT
A. Introduction
"must make arrangements …to work together in exercising their functions, so far as the functions are exercised for the purpose of safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children in the area."
The "area" is the area of responsibility of the relevant local authority. Section 16E(2) states that the arrangements made "… must include arrangements for the safeguarding partners to work together to identify and respond to the needs of children in the area." The arrangements that must be made are further specified in section 16F, to extend to "arrangements to identify serious child safeguarding cases which raise issues of importance in relation to the area" and arrangements for reviews of those cases where considered appropriate.
"16H Information
(1) Any of the safeguarding partners for a local authority area in England may, for the purpose of enabling or assisting the performance of functions conferred by section 16E or 16F, request a person or body to provide information specified in the request to—
(a) the safeguarding partner or any other safeguarding partner for the area,
(b) any of the relevant agencies for the area,
(c) a reviewer, or
(d) another person or body specified in the request.
(2) The person or body to whom a request under this section is made must comply with the request.
(3) The safeguarding partner that made the request may enforce the duty under subsection (2) against the person or body by making an application to the High Court or the county court for an injunction.
(4) The information may be used by the person or body to whom it is provided only for the purpose mentioned in subsection (1)."
The second is section 16I:
"16I Funding
(1) The safeguarding partners for a local authority area in England may make payments towards expenditure incurred in connection with arrangements under section 16E or 16F –
(a) by making payments directly, or
(b) by contributing to a fund out of which the payments may be made.
(2) The payments that may be made include payments of remuneration, allowances or expenses to a reviewer or an independent person.
(3) The safeguarding partners for a local authority area in England may provide staff, goods, services, accommodation or other resources to any person for purposes connected with arrangements under section 16E or 16F.
(4) Relevant agencies for a local authority area in England may make payments towards expenditure incurred in connection with arrangements under section 16E –
(a) by making payments directly, or
(b) by contributing to a fund out of which the payments may be made.
(5) In this section an "independent person" means an independent person mentioned in section 16G(3)."
The third provision is section 16K(1) of the 2004 Act, which requires the safeguarding partners to "have regard to any guidance given by the Secretary of State in connection with functions conferred on them by sections 16E to 16J".
"Action Required
System Transformation Partnerships – effectively Clinical Commissioning Groups working together in this collaboration along with Local GP provider representatives – should review their local arrangements in 2019/20 and where necessary implement changes to ensure safeguarding activity in general practice is supported.
Local examples of work that have been successfully implemented to improve reporting and the quality of reports include:
- Direct payments to a practice by the CCG under longstanding "Collaborative arrangements".
- Introducing a Safeguarding Local Enhanced Service.
…
Monitoring
NHS England and NHS Improvement expects local system reviews for supporting (including resourcing) general practice reporting activity to completed and implemented by the end of October 2019. (sic)
NHS England and NHS Improvement will work with CCGs named GP safeguarding leads to obtain assurances that local systems are supporting effective safeguarding arrangements in general practice from 1 November 2019."
These points were substantially repeated in the final letter of 11 July 2019.
B. Decision
(1) Breach of section 16K of the 2004 Act?
"36. Working in partnerships means organisations and agencies should collaborate on how they will fund their arrangements. The three safeguarding partners and relevant agencies for the local authority area should make payments towards expenditure incurred in conjunction with local multi-agency arrangements for safeguarding and promoting welfare of children.
37. The safeguarding partners should agree the level of funding secured from each partner, which should be equitable and proportionate, and any contributions from each relevant agency, to support the local arrangements. The funding should be transparent to children and families in the area, and sufficient to cover all elements of the arrangements, including the cost of local child safeguarding practice reviews."
"The work of the Partnership will be supported by the Business Office hosted by Northamptonshire County Council.
This continues the same arrangements used for previous Safeguarding Children Board and will include supporting the Child Deaf Review arrangements.
Proportionate funding, based on previous formulas, has been agreed and is sufficient to cover all elements of the arrangements, including the cost of two local child safeguarding practise reviews. Any further reviews will be considered at the time"
Northamptonshire County Council |
48,949 |
The Police and Crime Commissioner for Northamptonshire |
23, 931 |
Northamptonshire Clinical Commissioning Groups (NENE CCG and Corby CCG) |
65,949 |
Total for the 7 District and Borough Councils |
6,586 |
Other |
19,793 |
TOTAL |
167,323 |
(2) A failure to have regard to a relevant consideration?
(3) Breach of section 11(2) of the 2004 Act?
C. Are GPs obliged by law to provide information for safeguarding investigations and conferences?
"where a local authority are conducting enquiries under this section it should be the duty of any person mentioned in sub-section (11) to assist them with those enquiries (in particular, by providing relevant information and advice) if called upon by the authority to do so."
The submission made by the BMA and NHS England was to the effect the when it came to the assistance provided by GPs to safeguarding investigations and case conferences, GPs provided "advice" not "information" (or at least that the bulk of what GPs provide was advice).
"13. —Safeguarding service users from abuse and improper treatment
(1) Service users must be protected from abuse and improper treatment in accordance with this regulation.
(2) Systems and processes must be established and operated effectively to prevent abuse of service users.
(3) Systems and processes must be established and operated effectively to investigate, immediately upon becoming aware of, any allegation or evidence of such abuse.
(4) Care or treatment for service users must not be provided in a way that—
(a) includes discrimination against a service user on grounds of any protected characteristic (as defined in section 4 of the Equality Act 2010) of the service user,
(b) includes acts intended to control or restrain a service user that are not necessary to prevent, or not a proportionate response to, a risk of harm posed to the service user or another individual if the service user was not subject to control or restraint,
(c) is degrading for the service user, or
(d) significantly disregards the needs of the service user for care or treatment.
(5) A service user must not be deprived of their liberty for the purpose of receiving care or treatment without lawful authority.
(6) For the purposes of this regulation— "abuse" means—
(a) any behaviour towards a service user that is an offence under the Sexual Offences Act 2003,
(b) ill-treatment (whether of a physical or psychological nature) of a service user,
(c) theft, misuse or misappropriation of money or property belonging to a service user, or
(d) neglect of a service user.
(7) For the purposes of this regulation, a person controls or restrains a service user if that person—
(a) uses, or threatens to use, force to secure the doing of an act which the service user resists, or
(b) restricts the service user's liberty of movement, whether or not the service user resists,
including by use of physical, mechanical or chemical means."
Particular reliance is placed on regulation 13(2).
"13(2) Systems and processes must be established and operated effectively to prevent abuse of service users.
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● As part of their induction, staff must receive safeguarding training that is relevant, and at a suitable level for their role. Training should be updated at regular intervals to keep staff up to date and enable them to recognise different type of abuse and the ways they can report concerns. ● Staff must be aware of their individual responsibilities to prevent, identify and report abuse when providing care and treatment. This includes referral to other providers. ● Staff must understand their roles and associated responsibilities in relationship to any of the provider's policies, procedures or guidance to prevent abuse. ● Information about current procedures and guidance about raising concerns about abuse should be accessible to people who use the service, advocates, those lawfully acting on their behalf, those close to them and staff. ● Providers should use instance and complaints to identify potential abuse and should take preventative actions, including escalation, where appropriate ● Providers should work in partnership with other relevant bodies to contribute to individual risk assessments, developing plans for safeguarding children and safeguarding adults at risk, and when implementing these plans. This includes regularly reviewing outcomes for people using the service. ● Providers and their staff must understand and work within the requirements of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 whenever they work with people who lack the Mental Capacity to make some decisions." |
This, submits the First Defendant, makes it clear that a GP is subject to a statutory obligation to provide information for the purposes of safeguarding investigations and case conferences, in respect of any person who is one of the registered patients of that GP.
D. Conclusion and Disposal