The Care Quality Commission (CQC) has taken over the hosting of the Maternity and Newborn Safety Investigations (MNSI) programme.
The CQC said the new arrangement would ensure the MNSI programme:
There will be no change to operations or workforce and there will be no interruption to ongoing investigations.
The programme of investigations into maternity and newborn safety incidents was previously overseen by the Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch (HSIB). It began in 2018 as part of the national initiative to improve safety in maternity care.
The new hosting arrangement was announced earlier this year in a written ministerial statement. The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) decided the most appropriate and streamlined way to deliver maternity investigations was for the function to be hosted within the CQC.
The purpose of MNSI remains the same:
There will be no change to how hospital trust maternity services in England refer incidents or concerns to the MNSI team. Each hospital trust will continue to have a named contact within the MNSI team.
CQC chief executive Ian Trenholm said: ‘We are delighted to welcome colleagues from the Maternity and Newborn Safety Investigation programme to CQC. The team has already made significant strides in improving maternity safety and we are keen to build on this.
‘The move to CQC will enable high-quality independent family focused maternity investigations to continue with the benefit of support from a larger organisation like CQC. Together with our MNSI colleagues, we are committed to providing learning to support families and the health and care workforce, contributing to the collective effort by providers and partner organisations in delivering a consistently safe maternity experience for everyone.’
Sandy Lewis, associate director of maternity investigations, will lead MNSI. She said: ‘This is a great opportunity to build on the work that we have already done, that helps to make maternity care safer for families and colleagues.
‘The move to CQC provides a great platform to collaborate, share and disseminate best practice and learnings. I’d like to provide assurance to our families and colleagues that we will continue our work and maintain the independence of maternity investigations in the NHS.’
Image: Marcel Fagin
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