Healthwatch England is a body established under the Health and Social Care Act 2012, which took effect in April 2013. The Healthwatch network is made of up of local Healthwatch across each of the 152 local authority areas and Healthwatch England, the national body.
Organisation
Healthwatch England is a statutory body whose purpose is to understand the needs, experiences and concerns of people who use health and social care services and to speak out on their behalf. The Healthwatch network works together to share information, expertise and learning in order to improve health and social care services. When established the organisation was hosted by the Care Quality Commission but reported directly to the Department of Health. However in January 2016, in a move seen as downgrading the organisation after the departure of its first Chief Executive, it was announced that a new National director would be appointed who would report to the Chief Executive of the CQC. David Behan said even though the national director will report to him, they would be able to criticise the work of the CQC if necessary. Sir Robert Francis was appointed chair in September 2018.
Predecessor organisations
Healthwatch is the latest reorganisation of arrangements to involve patients and the public in the running of the NHS in England. Community Health Councils were established in 1974 and abolished in 2003 to be replaced by Public and Patient Involvement Forums run by the Commission for Patient and Public Involvement in Health. They were replaced in their turn in April 2008 by Local Involvement Networks. Community Health Councils continue in Wales. Scotland has a quite different system run by the Scottish Health Council.
Resources
The 148 local Healthwatch groups were allocated £43.5m by the Department of Health in 2013 but the groups only received £33.5m of this – leaving £10m unaccounted for. Anna Bradley, chair of Healthwatch England, said: "This discovery is hugely disappointing. Less than 4p out of every £10,000 spent on health and social care was allocated to champion the cause of consumers in the first place and even this tiny amount is failing to reach those charged with speaking out on behalf of their local communities. The tragedies of , Mid Staffs, Morecambe Bay and Winterbourne View all highlight what happens when the system fails to listen." Almost a third of councils cut their local Healthwatch budgets in 2015-16 by an average of 14%, Blackpool and Hounslow by more than half. For 2018-19 it was planned that the 152 local Healthwatch services should receive £26,064,086 from local authorities to carry out their statutory activities, 35.3% less than was originally planned in 2013. This pays for 408 full time equivalent staff. Local healthwatch organisations also engage a considerable number of volunteers. In November 2018 it was announced that NHS England and NHS Improvement were to put in “significant investment” to the organization in order to encourage participation in the development of the NHS's long term plan.
Local Healthwatch
The announced intention was that each local Healthwatch would be an independent organisation, able to employ its own staff and involve volunteers and accountable in its own right. Plans to make the local Healthwatch in Leicester an independent organisation were thwarted by Voluntary Action Leicester who had been charged with establishing the organisation but would not hand over the contract to the newly established Healthwatch Leicester Ltd.
National activity
The organisation produced a report entitled Safely Home: what happens when people leave hospital and care settings? in July 2015 which was based on thousands of shocking stories about what happened when people left had hospital without the right planning and support.
Criticism
The People's Inquiry into London's NHS recommended that Healthwatch England be closed down and that local Healthwatch bodies are separated from the Care Quality Commission and modelled on the old Community Health Councils. They should link up with local community organisations, pensioners groups and other community organisations, and be given the statutory powers to inspect hospital and community services, to object to changes which lack public acceptance and to force a decision on contested changes from the Secretary of State.