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NHS to Rate Trusts on Staff Safety and Wellbeing

Created at 5 Jul · 11:20 PM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

The NHS will begin rating trusts in England on their efforts to combat racism, violence, and sexual misconduct against staff. These new performance standards, part of a 10-year health plan, will directly influence overall trust ratings alongside patient care metrics.

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Key Numbers

1.5 millionNHS staff affected by new wellbeing measures
one to fourscoring scale for wellbeing measures
10-yearhealth plan commitment for new standards
one in 10NHS workers experiencing unwanted sexual behaviour
one in 10nurses and midwives experiencing unwanted sexual behaviour
threeyears of steep rises in violence and sexual misconduct

Who's Involved

NHS
will rate trusts on staff safety and wellbeing
Karin Smyth
Minister for secondary care, emphasizing staff dignity and accountability
Suzie Bailey
Director of leadership and organisational development at the King's Fund, questioning speed of change
Nicola Ranger
General Secretary and Chief Executive of the Royal College of Nursing, calling for enforcement
Tim Mitchell
Outgoing President of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, advocating for anonymous reporting

↳ Why This Matters

This initiative aims to improve the working environment for over 1.5 million NHS staff by holding trusts accountable for staff safety and wellbeing, which is expected to lead to better patient care.

Key facts

  • NHS trusts in England will be rated on their handling of racism, violence, and sexual misconduct towards staff.
  • The new performance standards will apply to acute, ambulance, and mental health trusts starting in July.
  • These measures will directly impact overall trust performance ratings, alongside patient care metrics.
  • Hundreds of thousands of NHS staff have reported experiencing abuse, harassment, or racism.
  • The Royal College of Nursing emphasized the need for enforcement mechanisms to ensure real change.

The National Health Service (NHS) in England is set to implement a new system for rating healthcare trusts based on their effectiveness in addressing violence, racism, and sexual misconduct experienced by staff. Starting in July, all acute, ambulance, and mental health trusts will be evaluated and ranked in public league tables across six key areas of staff wellbeing.

These new performance standards are a commitment within a 10-year health plan and aim to hold employers formally accountable for the treatment of their employees. The measures will assess success in combating racism, preventing violence, ensuring sexual safety, and supporting flexible working, line management, and overall health and wellbeing. Trusts will receive scores from one to four for each category, which will contribute to their overall performance rating, now directly linked to workforce wellbeing alongside traditional patient care metrics like waiting lists and A&E performance.

Minister for secondary care, Karin Smyth, highlighted the unacceptable levels of abuse reported by staff and stated that the new standards will ensure that how trusts treat their employees is measured and published. This initiative comes in response to concerning figures from the latest NHS staff survey, which indicated that hundreds of thousands of staff have faced attacks, harassment, bullying, or racism. Furthermore, nearly 10% of NHS workers, including a third of ambulance staff and over 10% of nurses and midwives, reported experiencing unwanted sexual behaviour in the past year.

Experts have generally welcomed the introduction of these performance measures, though some question the pace at which staff will experience tangible improvements in their daily working lives. Suzie Bailey from the King's Fund emphasized that the true test lies in whether these standards translate into a safer, more valued, and supported environment for staff, which is crucial for delivering high-quality care. Nicola Ranger of the Royal College of Nursing stressed that while zero-tolerance policies exist on paper, robust enforcement mechanisms are essential for those trusts that fail to meet the new standards, warning that continued high levels of abuse could lead to further staff departures. Tim Mitchell, outgoing president of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, suggested the need for a national, independent, and anonymous reporting system to allow staff to come forward without fear of reprisal.

Frequently asked questions

All secondary care NHS bodies in England, including acute, ambulance, and mental health trusts, will be affected. Primary care, such as GP practices, is currently excluded but may be included in the future.

Trusts will be rated on their success in tackling racism, preventing violence, improving sexual safety, promoting flexible working, line management, and health and wellbeing support.

For the first time, progress on workforce wellbeing, assessed via the NHS staff survey, will directly influence a trust's overall performance rating, alongside existing metrics like waiting lists and A&E performance.

Hundreds of thousands of NHS staff have reported being attacked, harassed, bullied, or subjected to racism. Nearly 10% of NHS workers, including a significant portion of ambulance staff, nurses, and midwives, have experienced unwanted sexual behaviour in the past year.

What Happens Next

01NHS trusts will be rated and ranked in published league tables from July.
02Ministers hope to roll out similar standards to primary care in future years.

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Cadence

How It Developed

The NHS will rate trusts on tackling racism, violence, and sexual misconduct towards staff.
From July, all NHS acute, ambulance, and mental health trusts in England will be judged and ranked.
The new standards will assess success in tackling racism, preventing violence, improving sexual safety, promoting flexible working, line management, and health and wellbeing support.
Trusts will receive a score of one to four for each measure, contributing to overall ratings.
Workforce wellbeing will directly affect performance ratings alongside waiting list and A&E metrics.
Minister Karin Smyth stated that these standards ensure accountability for how trusts treat employees.
Hundreds of thousands of NHS staff have experienced attacks, harassment, bullying, or racism.
Nearly 10% of NHS workers reported unwanted sexual behaviour in the past year.

Sources

T1
NHS to rate English trusts on tackling violence and racism towards staffThe Guardian

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