Help to make a complaint | Healthwatch Northyorkshire

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Who can I complain to?

The NHS and social care services are there to provide care to everyone. If you have concerns over any aspect of your care or the actions or decisions of any NHS or social care body, you have the right to make a complaint.

If you decide to make a complaint, you have several options. In the first instance, we recommend you speak directly to the service itself and see if you can resolve the issue between you.

If you can’t resolve the issue directly with the service, you can:

  • In most cases, this will be one of England’s 42 integrated care boards, which are responsible for commissioning (planning and funding) your local GP, dental, community, mental health and hospital services.
  • Report your complaint to the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman.
  • Report the problem to another regulatory body, such as the Care Quality Commission (CQC). CQC are not responsible for dealing with individual complaints, but if it raises concerns over the service, it may wish to investigate further.
  • Use your local authority complaints procedure if your complaint is about social care provided by the council. Your local one is North Yorkshire Council.
  • Report your complaint to the Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman.
  • Report a healthcare professional to their regulatory body in cases of professional misconduct.
  • Take legal action, for example, if you have suffered from clinical negligence, personal injury or breach of your human rights.

Should I make a complaint?

If your complaint is an immediate or high-risk situation, such as you or your loved one are not receiving enough care, there is a risk to your safety, or you have suffered from discrimination, you should report the problem immediately.

You may decide not to make a complaint because you are worried that it might make your situation worse. You may worry that if you speak to the services directly, you could annoy them, and the standard of care you receive might get worse.

You are not alone – a lot of people don’t make a complaint because of these fears.

But it is important that where services aren’t working as planned, NHS and social care providers learn from complaints, communicate those lessons to people, and improve.

The rules about making a complaint allow you to complain either directly to the organisation providing the service or to the organisation that buys (commissions) the service. For example, if you’re unhappy with the treatment you are getting from your General Practitioner (GP), you could:

  • Speak informally to someone at the GP surgery about your concerns
  • Ask to move to another GP in the same practice or a new practice
  • Formally complain to either the GP surgery or your local integrated care board (as the commissioner).

What can I achieve through a complaint?

Before you make a complaint, it is helpful to think about what you want to achieve. These can include:

  • Getting access to the care you need
  • To improve the service, so other people don’t have the same experience you had
  • To get an explanation of what went wrong and an apology.
  • To get someone disciplined or prosecuted.
  • To get compensation

Who do I make a complaint to?

Complaints procedure

Everyone who provides an NHS service in England must have their own complaints procedure. You should be able to find information in the waiting room, at reception, on their website or by asking a staff member.

You can either complain directly to the service or to the service commissioner (this is the organisation that paid for the service or care you received). You cannot complain to both at the same time.

If you prefer not to raise your concern with the service, these are the commissioners:

Your local integrated care board (ICB) for complaints about:

  • GPs, dentists, opticians or pharmacists
  • hospital care, mental health services, out of hours services, ambulance services,
  • NHS Continuing Healthcare,
  • NHS 111
  • community services such as district nursing.

For services in North Yorkshire (excluding Craven)

NHS Humber and North Yorkshire Integrated Care Board

Telephone: 01904 555 999

E-mail: hnyicb.experience@nhs.net

Post: The Experience Team, NHS Humber and North Yorkshire
Integrated Care Board, Health Place, Wrawby Road, Brigg. DN20 8GS

For services in Craven and West Yorkshire

NHS West Yorkshire Integrated Care Board

Telephone: 01924 552 150

Email: wyicb.complaints@nhs.net

Post: NHS West Yorkshire Integrated Care Board, Complaints
Team, White Rose House West Parade, Wakefield. WF1 1LT

You may have also received care in another area of England. You can raise an issue with that service directly or through that area's local integrated care boars:

Find another integrated care board

Complaints about GPs, dentists, opticians and pharmacists were previously dealt with by NHS England.  When responsibility for these services was delegated to local ICBs, this included responsibility for handling complaints. NHS England will continue to deal with complaints for a small number of issues including:

  • Specialised commissioning
  • Health and justice
  • Armed forces health
  • Immunisations and vaccinations
  • Services delivered nationally by NHS England to patients/public (such as Screening Call and Recall, NHS App etc)

Make a complaint to NHS England

You can complain or give feedback:

  • By post to: NHS England, PO Box 16738, Redditch, B97 9PT
  • By email to: england.contactus@nhs.net, stating ‘For the attention of the complaints team’ in the subject line.
  • By telephone: 0300 311 22 33

British Sign Language users can make a complaint using a British Sign Language video interpreter. This uses a service called InterpretersLive! provided by Sign Solutions. Further information about the service and how to access it is available on the InterpretersLive! website.

Their opening hours are 9am to 4.30pm Monday to Friday, except Wednesdays when they open at the later time of 9.30am. They are closed on bank holidays.

Complaints must be made within 12 months of an incident or of you being made aware of the situation.

Feedback and complaints to NHS England

I'm unhappy with the outcome - what can I do?

If you have followed the complaints procedure but do not think the issue has been resolved or are unhappy with the outcome you can ask the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman for an independent review.

Phone: 0345 015 4033

If you use British Sign Language, you can use SignVideo service.

Ombudsman - what we can and can't help with

For more information on the NHS complaints process, visit their website.

Social care complaints

You can complain about any aspect of adult social care, regardless of whether the service is provided by the local authority, a private company or a voluntary organisation. And again, you can complain either to the social care provider or to the service commissioner.

Each social care service will have its own complaints procedure, which should be available to you on request.

You have the right to make a complaint if you have been affected or are likely to be affected by the action or decision of the organisation. You can also make a complaint on someone else behalf if they have asked you to, are incapable of making the complaint themselves, or are deceased.

North Yorkshire Council

Your local authority (also known as a council) deal with complaints about public health organisations and services that prevent disease, promote health and prolong life.

There is a 12-month time limit for making a complaint.

You should make us aware of your complaint within 12 months of the incident happening or from when you realised you had cause for complaint. The time limit may be extended at the discretion of the complaints manager if there is a reason for the delay.

Submit a complaint, comment or compliment

I’ve made a complaint, what happens next?

The service you have complained to should always acknowledge your complaint and respond with how they intend to investigate.

The organisation should then investigate your complaint and resolve the problem quickly and efficiently. They should also keep you fully informed about how the investigation is going.

You may be invited to a meeting to discuss your complaint or offer mediation or other help to resolve the complaint. It’s good practice to allow you to be accompanied to any meeting – so don’t feel like you need to go alone.

Once they have investigated your complaint, they must then respond to you. Their response should:

  • Explain how the complaint has been investigated
  • Explain the conclusions they have reached, including any action they intend to take to resolve the situation
  • Give details of how to escalate your complaint if you are not satisfied with the response.