<moderator edit - post moved from here Desperate - therapist disclosed csa to mother to keep previous thread on topic>
My point is that the CQC and OFSTED operates under law, and they set the Regulations to which service providers must operate. Regulations are law, it is just that responsibility for setting those regulations has been delegated by the Parliamentary law-makers to the CQC and OFSTED experts in the field. The same thing occurs with the UK General Medical Council (GMC), the UK Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC), and the UK Health and Care Professionals Council (HCPC) these licensing authorities operate under law, and their 'regulations' for those practitioners licensed are law.
In the case of psychologists the relevant authority is the HCPC, they register under the term practioner psychologist, but if you look at the HCPC Standards of Proficiency for psychologists Link Removed , you can see that different kinds of psycholologists have differing licences e.g. counselling psychologists, clinical psychologists, educational psychologists, forensic psychologists, health psychologists, occupational psychologists, sport and exercise psychologists.
At section 7.3 of the HCPC Standards of Proficiency it states that in reference to maintaining confidentiality all registered psychologists must "be able to recognise and respond appropriately to situations where it is necessary to share information, advice, instruction, and professional opinion to service users colleagues and others". Under Safeguarding law and CQC Regulations e.g.The Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014, Regulation 13 Regulation 13: Safeguarding service users from abuse and improper treatment | Care Quality Commission, every therapist is required to share with Safeguarding Authorities any report of abusers who might be able to abuse other vulnerable people, or even might be able to repeat their abuse of the abused patient the psychologist is treating.
Every UK citizen has an obligation to report potential crime they have knowledge of, if we do not report/stay silent we can ourselves be open to being charged with aiding and abetting such criminal offences; nobody is above the law, not even therapists. This kind of thing is why we also have laws to try to protect service provider employees who whistleblow to the CQC concerns about unsafe care practices.
I’m not sure what your point is but I’m the very last person who needs a lecture on safeguarding
My point is that the CQC and OFSTED operates under law, and they set the Regulations to which service providers must operate. Regulations are law, it is just that responsibility for setting those regulations has been delegated by the Parliamentary law-makers to the CQC and OFSTED experts in the field. The same thing occurs with the UK General Medical Council (GMC), the UK Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC), and the UK Health and Care Professionals Council (HCPC) these licensing authorities operate under law, and their 'regulations' for those practitioners licensed are law.
In the case of psychologists the relevant authority is the HCPC, they register under the term practioner psychologist, but if you look at the HCPC Standards of Proficiency for psychologists Link Removed , you can see that different kinds of psycholologists have differing licences e.g. counselling psychologists, clinical psychologists, educational psychologists, forensic psychologists, health psychologists, occupational psychologists, sport and exercise psychologists.
At section 7.3 of the HCPC Standards of Proficiency it states that in reference to maintaining confidentiality all registered psychologists must "be able to recognise and respond appropriately to situations where it is necessary to share information, advice, instruction, and professional opinion to service users colleagues and others". Under Safeguarding law and CQC Regulations e.g.The Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014, Regulation 13 Regulation 13: Safeguarding service users from abuse and improper treatment | Care Quality Commission, every therapist is required to share with Safeguarding Authorities any report of abusers who might be able to abuse other vulnerable people, or even might be able to repeat their abuse of the abused patient the psychologist is treating.
The person entirely responsible for the offences of a perpetrator is the perpetrator. There are very good, therapeutic reasons for holding confidentiality which certainly don’t amount to aiding and abetting
Every UK citizen has an obligation to report potential crime they have knowledge of, if we do not report/stay silent we can ourselves be open to being charged with aiding and abetting such criminal offences; nobody is above the law, not even therapists. This kind of thing is why we also have laws to try to protect service provider employees who whistleblow to the CQC concerns about unsafe care practices.
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