Confidentiality Clauses (NHS Scotland) (PE1495)
Agenda item 2 is consideration of three new petitions. As previously agreed, the committee will take evidence from each petitioner.
Good morning.
Excuse me, Mr Wilson, but you have come to the end of your five minutes.
Okay.
We have to allow time for members’ questions and of course we have other petitions to deal with.
I have an email from Carole Ewart, the chair of the human rights consortium Scotland, stating that there are several issues that, in her mind, seem to contravene human rights legislation.
If you have not already supplied us with that email, can you please provide a copy?
Yes. If you want a copy of any of this stuff, I can photocopy it and leave it with you.
In preparing for the discussion, I noticed a quote from the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Wellbeing, who has basically said—I am paraphrasing here—that any confidentiality or gagging clauses are between NHS boards and employees and are not a direct matter for Government. What is your view on that? Obviously, you had a difficult experience with your health board, but do you have direct experience of other health boards in Scotland that have gagging clauses with their employees?
As I said, between 2009 and 2012, there were 697 compromise agreements in Scotland and I believe that almost every one of them contained a gagging clause. They are used by all health boards in Scotland.
Is any ordinary entry-level member of staff in any health board in Scotland required to sign one, or are they used specifically where a senior employee is leaving and has to sign a compromise agreement?
It would apply to any worker who is caught up in circumstances in which a compromise agreement needs to be reached. A nursing assistant or porter, say, might blow the whistle on certain nasty business and, as a result, their position might become untenable. The union might then thrash out with the employer a compromise agreement for the employee to leave their employment. The employee would be given a payment, which is taxpayers’ money. Almost every compromise agreement has a gagging clause preventing the employee in question from speaking out.
Thank you for that answer. We will move to questions from the committee.
Good morning, Mr Wilson. I live in Ayr and, having been subject to NHS Ayrshire and Arran’s treatment, I congratulate you on your work there. The consequent actions by the Government and the health boards are attributable to your work.
I have a letter from the central legal office about gags, which says that it does not personally insert the gagging clauses. The standard compromise agreement contains a confidentiality clause, so the legal office has no say in that.
Is it not the case that NHS Scotland’s central legal office carried out a review of confidentiality clauses and developed a revised form of wording that explicitly made clear that an individual’s right to raise protected disclosures is protected, whether or not they insert the clause of their own volition?
I do not find that to be the case because, out of 697 agreements in the past three years, there have been only four protected disclosures. That tells you that some of my friends who are with me today, who have been gagged, are terrified to speak out because of the consequences. They fear that they will be taken to court and maybe that their pension or any payment that they have been given will be removed from them. A culture of fear exists in our NHS.
Can I stop you on that? It is quite important. Things have happened such as the Public Interest Disclosure Act 1998 and the Employment Rights Act 1996. Actions have been taken by the Government, instructions have been given to health boards and money has been made available to help to change the culture of bullying. We are talking about culture. We can legislate as much as we like, but we are talking about management culture and what needs to be done there.
Of course. A huge part of the problem is the culture of secrecy. The culture is all about protecting the organisation at all costs and to hell with the workers—they can go to the wall. They can be paid off and gagged with gagging clauses because, at the end of the day, the culture is to protect the organisation. That is what it is all about, and that needs to stop.
However, the regime has been changed. Action has been taken by the Westminster Government and by the Scottish Government to attempt to get rid of all the problems, if not delete them. All the legislation and assistance is in place. How do we change what is now a cultural problem?
For a start, we should get rid of the confidentiality clause, because it is total nonsense. There is a huge dam of truth and horrible things—
Mr Wilson—
Can I please make my point? There is a huge dam of nasty, horrible things that have been happening in the NHS, and this document is creating the log-jam and preventing information from becoming public knowledge. It needs to go, and then people will be able to speak freely and without any fear of being taken to court for speaking the truth about bad things.
If you are referring to a document, will you describe it for the record, so that we understand which document you are referring to?
I am referring to annex A—the style revised wording from the NHS compromise agreement of May 2013.
Do you accept that the cabinet secretary has already stressed to the health boards that he expects them to ensure that confidentiality clauses and non-derogatory statement clauses are not used to suppress the reporting of concerns about practice in the NHS in Scotland? That has been made abundantly clear not just once but several times.
It would be up to an individual to decide on that but, as I said at the start, surely if a person wants something to remain confidential, they keep it confidential and do not share it with anybody. That is what any of us would do.
We cannot open this on one side and not on the other. I agree with the intent, but we have to protect employees who want confidentiality clauses. Should they not have the right to have such a clause written into a compromise agreement?
What you are saying is like saying that Alex Neil is telling the foxes to take better charge of the chicken coop. The boards have been left to their own devices for years and years and they have done nothing, despite being told again. The ability to make a protected disclosure existed before that; it has been there since 1996. Why did we have to put in another clause this year to remind boards of what to do? They have not been doing it for years.
You have played a significant part in this. Do you accept that it takes time to change the culture of management? I believe that it is changing. Do you agree or do you think that it is stuck? I would hardly use the fox and chicken analogy, because we want to ensure that everybody is a fox and a chicken and not one or t’other, so that they understand that openness and transparency are key in any public organisation—or indeed any organisation. Do you detect any change or are you saying that we are stuck in 1996?
I could ask a person who is here to read a short statement of their experience, if you would like to hear it.
No. We are happy for any of the people in the gallery who are supporting you to submit any evidence and we would be happy to look at that, but only you are before us today.
Fundamentally, I am asking you whether you are saying that the NHS Scotland partnership information network guidance is not working. Are management—you can be selective if you are not including all of management—choosing to ignore the guidance, the instruction and the law of the land?
They always talk about openness and transparency—they have gone on about those things for years—but they still seem to be lacking. People are still scared to speak out.
I agree. I accept that there are circumstances in which people are afraid of the hierarchy of management. That is a management problem. Management have to be clear that there has to be total transparency.
Can you give me an example?
No, I cannot. I asked the question because, throughout my business life, customers and employees have alleged things and a lot of time has been spent on going through them, as should happen. We accept that there are sometimes allegations that are not proven.
As I have said, I have received phone calls from people who have been bullied. I listen to their stories, which seem to have a ring of truth. Channels should be available for them to pursue matters.
Are you telling me that the people on the line are not trained to give answers and pay proper compassionate attention to the questions or issues that are raised?
My experience and the stories that I have been told by nurses and other people who have been employed in the NHS show that people do not get the support that they need.
Thank you for coming to the meeting and for your petition. You said that staff do not know who to turn to for support and how to take forward issues that have been raised by compromise agreements. In your submission, you commented on the role of the unions. In respect of their working practices, the majority of NHS employees are protected by or are members of a trade union, the British Medical Association, the General Medical Council in Scotland or whatever. Do you feel that the unions and professional bodies are not protecting their members from the compromise agreements that NHS boards are forcing on them?
Unions are far too willing to immediately go along with a compromise agreement and simply get a quick deal done for someone to leave quietly by the back door, and they do not want to fight people’s cases. They should fight a lot harder for workers’ rights in those circumstances, rather than just come to a cosy deal that suits them and the employer but ruins the worker’s life. When someone leaves, they are very unlikely to be employed again because of such things. The unions should fight a lot harder for those people.
As no other member wishes to ask Rab Wilson a question, I will ask a final question. What explanation, if any, have you had from health boards about their use of confidentiality clauses?
I can go only by the available figures that have come to light through various freedom of information requests, which are usually submitted by MSPs. MSPs have done great work to unravel what is going on and get to the nub of the figures and the information that are needed. Through those freedom of information requests, I have got to know the numbers that relate to compromise agreements and the number of confidentiality clauses therein.
I re-emphasise that, if you or any of your colleagues in the public gallery have information that you would like the committee to see, please ensure that the committee has a look at it, because it is important that we make decisions that are based on the fullest possible information.
I suggest that we also write to Unison, the General Medical Council, the Royal College of Nursing Scotland and the British Medical Association to seek their views. It is not just people in the front line but consultants and other staff who are affected by compromise agreements, so it would be useful to get those organisations’ views on the use of compromise agreements.
That is a good point.
I thank Rab Wilson for his evidence. I think that we should write to Public Concern at Work to get its view on the petition.
I am happy to go along with what John Wilson and Anne McTaggart suggested.
I support what the convener suggested but, given the requirement for evidence, perhaps we should ask the national confidential alert line and Healthcare Improvement Scotland to produce monthly reports. Perhaps we should also consider asking Audit Scotland to review that process after, say, a year to see what is happening in health boards across Scotland.
I believe that—
I am sorry, Mr Wilson, but we are now at the stage of the committee making a decision on the petition.
I go along with all the recommendations.
Could the committee gain some information from the United Kingdom Government?
Sure. We could write to the Secretary of State for Health or the relevant health authorities in Westminster about the petition.
I am aware that the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Wellbeing, Alex Neil, announced at the Scotland Patients Association’s conference in June that £200,000 would be made available to health boards to establish other measures to tackle bullying and harassment in NHS Scotland. However, I find it curious that only six boards made bids for the funding: NHS Ayrshire and Arran, the Golden Jubilee hospital, NHS 24, NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde, NHS Tayside and Carstairs. Perhaps it would be worth contacting them to ask why they bid for funding. We might see in the responses whether the funding has had any impact.
That is a good point. Do members have any other options to suggest?
If we are writing to the six boards that Angus MacDonald suggested, I would like to know what management training they are doing on the subject to which the petition refers. I do not want to know how much they spend; I want to know how they establish the outcome that eliminates the scar from the relationship between management and employees.
Health boards have an important role in that regard, but there is guidance from the Scottish Government on the issue as well, through chief executive letters or—
I understand that.
I am just trying to identify who you want to write to. Is it the Scottish Government?
The problem to which the petition refers will be solved only at the coalface. Organisations including the Scottish Government can participate in addressing the problem, but it is primarily one of management. The culture has to be changed as quickly as possible.
Do you wish us to write to all the health boards in Scotland?
Yes.
Do members agree with the courses of action that we have identified, which involve doing a number of tasks?
If we are writing to all the health boards, we must differentiate the six boards that bid for the funding.
Yes. We must distinguish between the six that went for the funding and the others. That is a fair point. I thank committee members for their recommendations.
I have just been informed that the witnesses for the next two new petitions have been delayed in traffic, so my intention is that we will consider those petitions once they arrive. With the committee’s permission, I will jump to agenda item 3, which is consideration of current petitions. Do members agree to that?
Next
Current Petition