Witness to harm; holding to account: What is the importance of information for members of the public who give evidence and may be witness in a regulatory hearing of a health or care professional?

Ryan-Blackwell, Gemma S and Wallace, Louise (2024). Witness to harm; holding to account: What is the importance of information for members of the public who give evidence and may be witness in a regulatory hearing of a health or care professional? Health Expectations, 27(4), article no. e14168.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.14168

Abstract

Background Health and social care regulators are organisations that seek to maintain public trust in professionals and protect the public from harmful practitioners. For example, they ensure that practitioners have the correct qualifications to practice and investigate any concerns raised about them. Serious concerns can result in a Fitness to Practise (FtP) hearing where a member of the public may be required to give evidence as a witness. Being a witness and being cross-examined is known to often be traumatic, particularly for members of the public in criminal trials. There is some research evidence that registered professionals who are the subject of the proceedings may suffer mental ill health as result of the experience. But there is scant research that specifically explores the experiences of members of the public giving evidence in a FtP hearing. The regulator web pages are an important source of information for public witnesses to prepare themselves for a FtP hearing.

Aim This study aimed to examine the publicly available information for public witnesses from the 13 health and social care regulators in the UK to evaluate the content, amount, type and format of information available and make recommendations about how regulators can improve these.

Methods Regulator websites were searched during November 2021-February 2022 for information for the public on what happens after raising a concern with a regulator. Resources were downloaded and qualitative content analysis conducted. Our findings were validated by interviews (n=7) with the public including people with experience of FtP, and a focus group of the public (n=5).

Results 146 resources (97 webpages and 25 public facing documents, 20 videos and 4 easy read documents were found. Topics included screening and investigation, preparing for a hearing, during a hearing and after a hearing, and support for witnesses.

Discussion and conclusion We conclude that there are many deficiencies in the information content and its presentation for the public, and some exemplars, such as the use of flow charts and short videos to explain the FtP processes. Recommendations for practice take the form of a framework with three themes, i. co-production, ii. preferred content, iii. format. It may be used by regulators to enhance their support for members of the public as witnesses in FtP hearings.

Public Contribution Our advisory group of people with lived experience of involvement as members of the public in FtP discussed the findings and contributed to the recommendations.

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