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Canlyniadau chwilio am care act 2014

Yn dangos 31 i 45 o 453 canlyniadau

Raising concerns, openness and honesty

An important part of being a health and care profession is reporting concerns about safety and being open and honest

Share your COVID-19 story

We are eager to highlight the vital work that you and many other health and care colleagues are doing during this unprecedented time

Having consent

Case study on having consent from service users (or other appropriate authority) before any care, treatment or other services is carried out

Be Sure - check the Register and find a professional

We keep a Register of health and care professionals who meet our standards for their training, professional skills, behaviour and health

Being open when things go wrong

Case study on being open and honest if something has gone wrong in any care, treatment or other services they have provided

Standards in practice: being open when things go wrong

The duty of candour is important for anyone working in health and care, but what does it mean in practice?

Employer insight: Moving to the UK to practice and the challenges of finding employment

Doreen is a physiotherapist working in an intermediate care team, and speaks about the steps one Recruiting Manager took that made a real difference

A registrant's responsibility to maintain appropriate boundaries

Registrants establish and maintain that trust by treating service users with dignity and respect and involving them in decisions about their care.

Our CPD requirements

Our flexible approach takes into account of the broad range of health and care professionals and is based on outcomes

Check the Register

We keep a Register of health and care professionals who meet our standards for their training, professional skills, behaviour and health

Sale, supply and administration

Local arrangements can be made to allow health and care professionals who are not prescribers to supply or administer medicines

Disclosing information to regulators

There are a number of regulators – such as the General Medical Council, the Care Quality Commission and us – who may need you to pass on information to them

Introduction to confidentiality

Confidentiality means protecting personal information, this information might include details of a service user’s lifestyle, family, health or care needs which they want to be kept private

Promote high quality professional practice

Aim: Enable our professions to meet our standards so they are able to adapt to changes in health and care practice delivery, preventing harm to service users.

My Story - Rachel Karanja

In celebration of Black History Month Rachel shares some inspiring words of what she has learned and experienced as a black health and care professional in the UK.

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