The Department of Health for England has announced a radical shake up in the
way hospitals are organised to meet the needsofchildren.
New standards set out in the first part of the national service framework for
children will require hospitals to provide childfriendly services,
including dedicated children's units in emergencydepartments,
separate and private facilities for adolescents,play areas and
teachers for children on wards, and the sort offood that children
want toeat.
In a direct response to the Laming inquiry into the death of Victoria Climbié
(BMJ 2003; 326:239)[Free Full Text],
hospitals will need to ensure that every child is discharged withan
individual care plan and that all staff who deal with childrenare
appropriately trained. Adequate plans should also be madefor
children who need care when they become adults, so that theydo not
get lost in the system, said Professor Al Aynsley-Green,the national
director for children, at the launch of the documentlast
week.
The secretary of state for health, Alan Milburn, committed the government to
producing a national service framework for childrenin July
2001 after the Kennedy inquiry into the deaths of childrenhaving
heart surgery at Bristol Royal Infirmary. The inquiry criticised
children's services for being subordinate to adult services andfor
being managed along the lines of "club culture," rather thanbeing
based on openness and transparency (BMJ 2001;323:181)[Free Full Text].
The new standards for hospitals are part of a 10 year programme for
children's services. Other standards on the quality andsafety of
care and of healthcare environments will be launchedin the next few
months. All hospitals are required to appointa "children's champion"
at board level to oversee the introductionof the standards. Plans to
meet the standards will be examinedas part of the Commission for
Health Improvement's rolling inspectionofhospitals.
"This is an enormous task, and we are not going to change things overnight,"
said Professor Aynsley-Green. "This is our mostambitious NSF
[national service framework], but we recognise thatthings have got
to change. We have to put children on the agenda.To do that we have
to overcome the cynicism that exists withinthe NHS because of staff
shortages and otherproblems."
The Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health welcomed the new framework,
saying it offered a chance to capture examplesof good practice and
spread them to every NHS trust in the country.
(Credit: KING'S COLLEGE
HOSPITAL )
Staff member and child in
paediatric emergency department, King's College
Hospital, London
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