Pressure ulcers measurement toolkit for care homes
Healthcare Improvement Scotland has developed a measurement toolkit to support care homes to capture and monitor their pressure ulcer incidence over time to help support improvements in care. It is anticipated this toolkit can help to support data collection for pressure ulcer improvement work in care homes.
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Complaints about care services in Scotland, 2019/20 to 2022/23
The Care Inspectorate has today published a statistical bulletin on complaints about care services in Scotland.
The report covers complaints received and investigated between April 2019 and March 2023, and focuses in particular on the most recent year, 1 April 2022 to 31 March 2023.
The statistics show the Care Inspectorate actioned every complaint received and responded appropriately using a risk-based assessment process to satisfactorily resolve complaints as quickly as possible.
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Self-evaluation toolkits to support early learning and childcare services
We have been developing toolkits to support early learning and childcare services with self-evaluation. Each toolkit (one for daycare of children and school-aged childcare and one for childminders) has a range of templates, tools and worked examples specific to that sector.
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Care Inspectorate statistical summary report for quarter 1 of 2023/24
The Care Inspectorate statistical summary report for quarter 1 of 2023/24 has now been released. This presents data on the number of registered care services, new registrations and cancellations, complaints about care services and quality theme grades all by care service type and or service sector. This is updated on a quarterly basis.
All content is available under the Open Government License, unless otherwise stated. More information on this license is available here.
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Barnahus update July 2023
“The Barnahus or ‘Children’s House’ originated in Scandinavia and has become commonplace across Europe and North America. It is a radically different way of supporting children who have experienced or witnessed abuse from what we currently do in Scotland. In the Barnahus, all professionals supporting children work together ‘under one roof’, with its ‘four rooms’ of protection, health, recovery and justice. This means that children can tell the public authorities what happened to them in a child-friendly and supportive place, with consistent therapeutic support available throughout to them and their family members including siblings.
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