CQC inspections fall to second lowest level since 2016 – new data shows
Pannone Corporate
22/08/2024

Care Quality Commission (CQC) inspections have fallen to their second lowest level in almost 10 years, as the day-to-day regulatory function of the public body continues to lag behind pre-pandemic activity.

According to new data, physical inspections by the CQC have dropped from a peak of almost 23,000 in 2016, to just less than 8,000 in 2023 – a marginal increase on 2020 figures, which showed that 7,711 inspections were carried out during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Of the 107 inspections with an overall rating of ‘Requires Improvement’ or ‘Inadequate’, only four have resulted in completed and published full Quality Statement reviews.

The fall in inspections also coincides with the commencement of the CQC’s new operating model, which may account for some of the reduction.

Bill Dunkerley, regulatory associate partner at Pannone Corporate, which conducted the annual research under the Freedom of Information Act, commented: “Despite the fanfare and extensive publications to promote its introduction, the CQC’s new regulatory model has had something of an inauspicious start.

“The regulator was hopeful that its new approach would enable it to be more dynamic in its assessment of services, and permit more contemporaneous data collection to take place. Far from becoming a more proactive, dynamic and responsive agency, as the data shows, the CQC is becoming more sedentary in its approach.”

The research shows that despite an increase in the number of concerns being received by the CQC, the total number of regulatory actions taken by the Commission has fallen year-on-year and currently sits at around half of pre-lockdown levels (10,618 in 2019; 5,783 in 2023). Although there was a clear drop-off in the number of regulatory actions in 2020, figures have remained consistently low since then, compared with upwards of 15,000 each year in the period following the CQC’s receipt of enhanced powers in 2015.

In addition, the use of warning notices has dropped significantly, from a peak figure of just over 1,500 during 2015 to less than 600 in 2023. Despite a flurry of prosecutions over the last few years, the annual figures also show that prosecutions are decreasing rapidly. There are currently 121 open criminal investigations concerning specific incidents or unregistered providers.

Dunkerley added: “To be an effective regulator going forwards, and one with real teeth, the CQC has to combine its new inspection and assessment framework with meaningful regulatory activity. Whilst to date, the CQC could have been seen to be relatively proactive – undertaking inspections of providers at fairly reasonable intervals – an inherent danger within its ‘data-driven’ approach is that this may result in it becoming reactive, as recent data perhaps tends to indicate.

“At the end of the day, the CQC’s new regulatory model does not change its investigatory and enforcement powers. The latest figures suggest that either the CQC is becoming less active, or is achieving compliance by providers without the need to resort to use of its enforcement powers.”

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