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Minister Harris announces Government approval for Patient Safety Bill

Bill also extends HIQA's powers to the private sector

Minister for Health, Simon Harris, has today (Thursday) announced Government approval for the Patient Safety Bill (see link to General Scheme below).
Minister Harris said

“This important new legislation will for the first time provide in law for mandatory open disclosure in respect of serious patient safety incidents. The proposals being brought forward are in line with the UK Duty of Candour and will complement the legal protections for clinicians engaging in open disclosure that were introduced through the Civil Liability (Amendment) Act 2017.

“The Patient Safety Bill will also provide for mandatory reporting of serious events to the appropriate regulatory authority, such as HIQA or the Mental Health Commission. In addition it will empower the Minister for Health to issue guidance with regard to the undertaking of clinical audit.

“I strongly believe that creating a culture of mandatory open disclosure and learning from things that go wrong is the bedrock of making services safer.

“The Bill, which will now be sent to the Health Committee, is part of the broader programme of legislative changes and policy initiatives being taken by the Government to improve the ability of the health service to anticipate, identify, respond to and manage patient safety issues.

“The Civil Liability (Amendment) Act, passed last year, provides the legal framework to support voluntary open disclosure. It provides for an open and consistent approach to communicating with patients and their families and providing an apology, as appropriate, when things go wrong in healthcare. The Minister has now signed the commencement order for this legislation and the regulations to accompany the Act have been finalised.

“The Patient Safety Bill also addresses another key patient safety issue around the lack of regulation in the private sector by extending the powers and responsibilities that HIQA currently exercises in relation to public hospitals to private hospitals as well. This will allow HIQA to set standards for the operation of private hospitals, to monitor compliance with them and to undertake inspections and investigations as required.

Today’s decision by the Government marks a major milestone in the overall work we are doing to improve the safety and the quality of our health services. We have seen in many areas of the health service the harm that can be done to patients and their families by a failure to disclose vital information. I look forward to working with colleagues in the Oireachtas to progress this important new legislation. I would also like to take this opportunity to recall the commitment of the staff of our health service, including the many doctors and nurses who do engage in open disclosure on a daily basis. I want to work with them also as we look to move our health service into a new phase.”

Ministerial regulations will be used to prescribe serious patient safety incidents that are subject to mandatory open disclosure. Examples of serious patient safety incidents would include wrong site surgery, patient death or serious disability associated with a medication or diagnostic error, serious errors that emerge in screening programmes and maternal deaths.