NHS Constitution EasyRead
NHS Constitution EasyRead
NHS Constitution EasyRead
For England
This is an Easy Read version of the NHS
Constitution published on 27 July 2015.
What is in this booklet Page
1.
2.
3.
Part 1 -
4.
5. 6
6.
7.
What the NHS believes
Part 2 -
10
How the NHS works
Part 3 -
13
Patient rights and NHS promises
Part 4 -
27
The things patients should do to help
Part 5 -
Rights and promises the NHS makes 29
for NHS staff
Part 6 -
The things staff should do to help 33
Part 7 -
Telling the NHS what you think and 37
making a complaint about your care
What this booklet is about
1
You can read it on the website:
www.gov.uk/government/publications/
the-nhs-constitution-for-england
2
The NHS belongs to us all
3
What this booklet talks about
This booklet talks about:
Rights
· Your Rights as a patient – what you
can expect from the NHS if you are a
patient.
4
The law says all NHS organisations must
pay attention to the NHS Constitution.
10 years 3 years
Every 10 years we will ask people if the
NHS Constitution needs any changes.
5
Part 1 - What the NHS believes
1.
2.
3.
There are 7 main things we believe in.
4.
5. They are the ‘rules’ for everything the NHS
6. does. These are:
7.
· race.
· disability.
· age.
6
· sexual orientation (being straight, gay,
lesbian or bisexual).
· religion.
· belief.
7
The NHS should treat mental and physical
health problems with the same
importance.
8
This includes people who are in the Armed
Forces and their families, or people who
have been in the Armed Forces, who
should be able to get the same level of
health service as everyone else.
9
Part 2 - How the NHS works
10
2. Respect and dignity
Patients, families, carers and staff are
important. The NHS listens to what people
say and tells the truth about what it can or
cannot do.
11
We can all do things to keep ourselves and
other people well.
6. Everyone is important.
The NHS makes sure nobody is left out.
12
Part 3 - Patient rights and NHS
promises
13
· care that is right for you and is in line
with what you want.
15
2. Good care and good places to get
care
You have the right to:
16
3. Medicines and treatments
You have the right to:
17
4. Respect
You have the right to:
18
· look at information about your health
and care and fix it if it is wrong.
19
· take your personal details out of your
health information before it uses the
information to learn about better care.
20
5. Choice
You have the right to:
21
6. Being involved
You have the right to:
22
· a care service that is open and honest
with you.
23
· work with you and your family, carers
or people who speak for you.
25
The NHS promises to:
26
Part 4 – The things patients
should do to help
27
· stick to your treatment or talk to your
doctor if this is difficult.
28
Part 5 - Rights and
promises the NHS makes
for NHS Staff
Staff make sure the NHS gives good
quality healthcare.
Rights
The Handbook to the NHS Constitution
tells staff what rights the law says they
have. This section tells staff how those
rights help them at work, and the NHS’s
extra promises to them.
29
· be paid fairly.
30
The NHS promises to:
31
· involve staff or organisations that
speak for them in decisions that affect
them.
32
Part 6 - The things staff should
do to help
33
· make sure the NHS gives good, safe
care.
34
· do training to get better at their jobs.
35
· think about what services are like for
patients.
36
Part 7 –
Telling the NHS what you think
and making a complaint about
your care
37
? Sometimes NHS staff or volunteers will ask
you to tell them what you think of the
service.
How to complain
38
An NHS organisation must take
complaints seriously and have rules about
how to deal with them.
1 year
Step 1:
This is how most complaints are sorted
out.
· writing to them.
39
· sending an email.
· talking to them.
40
6 months
If things take longer than 6 months, the
organisation must write and tell you why.
Step 2:
If you are not happy with how the NHS
organisation has looked at your complaint,
you can make a complaint to an
independent person called an
ombudsman.
Telephone:
0345 015 4033
Textphone:
0300 061 4298
for people who are deaf or find it difficult
to use a telephone
41
Email:
[email protected]
Write to:
Parliamentary and Health Service
Ombudsman
Millbank Tower
Millbank
London
SW1P 4QP
42
You can get in touch with the Local
Government Ombudsman for complaints
about public health services.
43
To get in touch with them:
Telephone:
0300 061 0614
44
People who can help with complaints
If you want extra help with complaints,
you might want to ask these organisations
first:
Website:
www.healthwatch.co.uk/find-local-
healthwatch
Telephone:
03000 683 000
Email:
[email protected]
45
Telling other organisations
There are also other organisations that
can help you:
46
The Care Quality Commission (CQC)
checks health and adult social care
services such as hospitals, GPs or care
homes.
Telephone:
03000 616 161
Email:
[email protected]
47
Credits
www.inspiredservices.org.uk
48