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Less than 1% of social workers reported to regulator referred to hearing or found to have fitness to practise issues

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Figures show that relatively few practitioners about whom concerns are raised are found to have issues with their ability to practise safely or effectively
Photo: Fotolia/tashatuvango
Photo: Fotolia/tashatuvango

Less than 1% of social workers reported to Social Work England last year were referred to a hearing or found to have impaired fitness to practise (FtP), show figures released by the regulator.

Of 2,328 referrals received from December 2020 to November 2021, 0.5% were deemed serious enough, following investigation, to require a hearing.

In a further 0.3% of cases, the social worker accepted the verdict of the regulator's case examiners that their fitness to practise was impaired without a hearing being required (a so-called "accepted disposal").

Both rates have fallen since Social Work England's first year regulating the profession (December 2019 to November 2020), when 0.8% of 1,983 initial referrals required a hearing and there was an accepted disposal in a further 0.5% of cases. Figures are not yet available for the outcomes of hearings in either year.

High referrals

The statistics show how few social workers about whom concerns are raised are found to have issues with their ability to practise safely or effectively, or with their character, in the context of high numbers referred.

Social Work England said they showed the impact of its "risk-based approach" to FtP cases - with priority given to the most serious issues. However, the Social Workers Union, while welcoming the fall in the proportion of practitioners referred to a hearing, raised concerns about the impact on professionals' practice, lives and mental health of the "inordinately long" FtP process.

The falls in the proportion of hearings and accepted disposals were mainly driven by a drop in the percentage of cases investigated following the regulator's initial triage process and by post-investigation decision-making by case examiners.

Triage is designed to determine whether there are reasonable grounds to start an investigation, with the regulator's staff considering factors including whether there is likely to be evidence to support the concern, there has been a breach of standards, the issue is isolated or repeated and whether action has already been taken to address it.

Practitioners filtered out of process

In 2020-21, 45.4% of cases were deemed worthy of investigation following triage, down from 55% in 2019-20.

Following investigation - which tends to take around six months - 30% of remaining cases were referred to case examiners, up from 24% in 2019-20.

Their role is to consider the evidence and decide whether there is a reasonable prospect the person's fitness to practise will be found to be impaired at a hearing - and also whether a hearing is in the public interest.

Where it is not, they can agree an accepted disposal with the practitioner that their fitness to practise is impaired, potentially resulting in a written warning, suspension or a conditions of practice order, which places requirements on the social worker to enable them to continue practising.

Of cases considered by examiners, 8.9% were referred to a hearing and 5.8% resulted in an accepted disposal in 2020-21, down from 11.3% and 10.6%, respectively, in 2019-20.

Social Work England 'learning and improving'

Social Work England's executive director of fitness to practise, Jonathan Dillon, said: "The declining referral rate into investigations is as a result of us learning and improving during our first year of operations. This means that we referred fewer cases for investigation in 2020-21 compared to 2019-20. The same applies at the case examiner stage as we have been able to optimise the tools available to the case examiners to conclude cases at that stage of the process without referring to a hearing."

He added: "The decrease in decisions resulting in a finding of impairment is as a result of the risk-based approach to case progression that we have adopted since go-live. The higher risk cases are more likely to result in a finding of impairment and these cases have been prioritised for progression."

Since becoming regulator, Social Work England has faced a trio of pressures in managing the FtP system: problems with cases inherited from the Health and Care Professions Council (HCPC), much higher than expected referral levels and the impact of Covid. The pandemic lockdowns initially prevented the regulator from holding in-person hearings and slowed evidence gathering from under-pressure local authorities.

These resulted in substantial delays for practitioners, which it has sought to tackle since, including through investing more in the FtP system, with government funding.

However, the "inordinately long" process was still causing "devastating" problems for the practitioners concerned, said the Social Workers Union in its response to the latest figures.

"We welcome the reduction in number of cases that have proceeded from triage to investigation and the reduction in the number of cases referred to hearing, because this may be an indicator of fewer cases proceeding unnecessarily through the FtP process," said a spokesperson.

'Devastating effect on lives and careers'

"However, the time in which social workers remain in the fitness to practise process remains inordinately long. Our experience shows that registrants can be in the regulatory system for many years, causing a devastating effect on lives and careers.

"Individuals may lose their jobs, struggle to find alternative work or experience vastly reduced incomes. We have seen this result in severe financial detriment for people including the need to access food banks, and in some cases homelessness."

Workforce Insights

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