Legislation – Health and Social Care Act 2012

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Introduction

PART 1
The health service in England

1 Secretary of State’s duty to promote comprehensive health service

2 The Secretary of State’s duty as to improvement in quality of services

3 The Secretary of State’s duty as to the NHS Constitution

4 The Secretary of State’s duty as to reducing inequalities

5 The Secretary of State’s duty as to promoting autonomy

6 The Secretary of State’s duty as to research

7 The Secretary of State’s duty as to education and training

8 Secretary of State’s duty as to reporting on and reviewing treatment of providers

9 The NHS Commissioning Board

10 Clinical commissioning groups

11 The Secretary of State’s duty as to protection of public health

12 Duties as to improvement of public health

13 Duties of clinical commissioning groups as to commissioning certain health services

14 Power of clinical commissioning groups as to commissioning certain health services

15 Power to require Board to commission certain health services

16 Secure psychiatric services

17 Other services etc. provided as part of the health service

18 Regulations as to the exercise by local authorities of certain public health functions

19 Regulations relating to EU obligations

20 Regulations as to the exercise of functions by the Board or clinical commissioning groups

21 Functions of Special Health Authorities

22 Exercise of public health functions of the Secretary of State

23 The NHS Commissioning Board: further provision

24 Financial arrangements for the Board

25 Clinical commissioning groups: establishment etc.

26 Clinical commissioning groups: general duties etc.

27 Financial arrangements for clinical commissioning groups

28 Requirement for primary medical services provider to belong to clinical commissioning group

29 Other health service functions of local authorities under the 2006 Act

30 Appointment of directors of public health

31 Exercise of public health functions of local authorities

32 Complaints about exercise of public health functions by local authorities

33 Abolition of Strategic Health Authorities

34 Abolition of Primary Care Trusts

35 Fluoridation of water supplies

36 Procedural requirements in connection with fluoridation of water supplies

37 Fluoridation of water supplies: transitional provision

38 Approval functions

39 Discharge of patients

40 After-care

41 Provision of pocket money for in-patients

42 Transfers to and from special hospitals

43 Independent mental health advocates

44 Patients’ correspondence

45 Notification of hospitals having arrangements for special cases

46 Role of the Board and clinical commissioning groups in respect of emergencies

47 Secretary of State’s emergency powers

48 New Special Health Authorities

49 Primary care services: directions as to exercise of functions

50 Charges in respect of certain public health functions

51 Pharmaceutical services expenditure

52 Secretary of State’s duty to keep health service functions under review

53 Secretary of State’s annual report

54 Certification of death

55 Amendments related to Part 1 and transitional provision

PART 2
Further provision about public health

56 Abolition of Health Protection Agency

57 Functions in relation to biological substances

58 Radiation protection functions

59 Repeal of AIDS (Control) Act 1987

60 Co-operation with bodies exercising functions in relation to public health

PART 3
Regulation of health and adult social care services

CHAPTER 1 Monitor

61 Monitor

62 General duties

63 Secretary of State’s guidance on duty under section 62(9)

64 General duties: supplementary

65 Power to give Monitor functions relating to adult social care services

66 Matters to have regard to in exercise of functions

67 Conflicts between functions

68 Duty to review regulatory burdens

69 Duty to carry out impact assessments

70 Information

71 Failure to perform functions

CHAPTER 2 Competition

72 Functions under the Competition Act 1998

73 Functions under Part 4 of the Enterprise Act 2002

74 Competition functions: supplementary

75 Requirements as to procurement, patient choice and competition

76 Requirements under section 75: investigations, declarations and directions

77 Requirements under section 75: undertakings

78 Guidance

79 Mergers involving NHS foundation trusts

80 Co-operation with the Office of Fair Trading

CHAPTER 3 Licensing

Licensing requirement

81 Requirement for health service providers to be licensed

82 Deemed breach of requirement to be licensed

83 Exemption regulations

84 Exemption regulations: supplementary

Licensing procedure

85 Application for licence

86 Licensing criteria

87 Grant or refusal of licence

88 Application and grant: NHS foundation trusts

89 Revocation of licence

90 Right to make representations

91 Notice of decisions

92 Appeals to the Tribunal

93 Register of licence holders

Licence conditions

94 Standard conditions

95 Special conditions

96 Limits on Monitor’s functions to set or modify licence conditions

97 Conditions: supplementary

98 Conditions relating to the continuation of the provision of services etc.

99 Notification of commissioners where continuation of services at risk

100 Modification of standard conditions

101 Modification references to the Competition Commission

102 Modification of conditions by order under other enactments

103 Standard condition as to transparency of certain criteria

Enforcement

104 Power to require documents and information

105 Discretionary requirements

106 Enforcement undertakings

107 Further provision about enforcement powers

108 Guidance as to use of enforcement powers

109 Publication of enforcement action

110 Notification of enforcement action

Transitional provision

111 Imposition of licence conditions on NHS foundation trusts

112 Duration of transitional period

113 Orders under section 112: criteria for deciding applicable trusts

114 Repeal of sections 112 and 113

CHAPTER 4 Pricing

115 Price payable by commissioners for NHS services

116 The national tariff

117 The national tariff: further provision

118 Consultation on proposals for the national tariff

119 Consultation: further provision

120 Responses to consultation

121 Determination on reference under section 120

122 Changes following determination on reference under section 120

123 Power to veto changes proposed under section 122

124 Local modifications of prices: agreements

125 Local modifications of prices: applications

126 Applications under section 125: notification of commissioners

127 Correction of mistakes

CHAPTER 5 Health special administration

128 Health special administration orders

129 Objective of a health special administration

130 Health special administration regulations

131 Transfer schemes

132 Indemnities

133 Modification of this Chapter under Enterprise Act 2002

CHAPTER 6 Financial assistance in special administration cases

Establishment of mechanisms

134 Duty to establish mechanisms for providing financial assistance

135 Power to establish fund

Applications for financial assistance

136 Applications

137 Grants and loans

Charges on commissioners

138 Power to impose charges on commissioners

Levy on providers

139 Imposition of levy

140 Power of Secretary of State to set limit on levy and charges

141 Consultation

142 Responses to consultation

143 Amount payable

Supplementary

144 Investment principles and reviews

145 Borrowing

146 Shortfall or excess of available funds, etc.

CHAPTER 7 Miscellaneous and general

147 Secretary of State’s duty as respects variation in provision of health services

148 Service of documents

149 Electronic communications

150 Interpretation, transitional provision and consequential amendments

PART 4
NHS foundation trusts & NHS trusts

151 Governors

152 Directors

153 Members

154 Accounts: initial arrangements

155 Accounts: variations to initial arrangements

156 Annual report and forward plan

157 Meetings

158 Voting

159 Authorisation

160 Bodies which may apply for foundation trust status

161 Amendment of constitution

162 Panel for advising governors

163 Financial powers etc.

164 Goods and services

165 Private health care

166 Information

167 Significant transactions

168 Mergers

169 Acquisitions

170 Separations

171 Dissolution

172 Supplementary

173 Repeal of de-authorisation provisions

174 Trust special administrators

175 Objective of trust special administration

176 Procedure etc.

177 Action following final report

178 Sections 174 to 177: supplementary

179 Abolition of NHS trusts in England

180 Repeal of provisions on authorisation for NHS foundation trusts

PART 5
Public involvement and local government

CHAPTER 1 Public involvement

Healthwatch England

181 Healthwatch England

Local Healthwatch organisations

182 Activities relating to local care services

183 Local authority arrangements

184 Local arrangements: power to make further provision

185 Independent advocacy services

186 Requests, rights of entry and referrals

187 Annual reports

188 Transitional arrangements

189 Consequential provision

CHAPTER 2 Local government

Scrutiny functions of local authorities

190 Scrutiny functions of local authorities

191 Amendments consequential on section 190

Joint strategic needs assessments and strategies

192 Joint strategic needs assessments

193 Joint health and wellbeing strategies

Health and Wellbeing Boards: establishment

194 Establishment of Health and Wellbeing Boards

Health and Wellbeing Boards: functions

195 Duty to encourage integrated working

196 Other functions of Health and Wellbeing Boards

Health and Wellbeing Boards: supplementary

197 Participation of NHS Commissioning Board

198 Discharge of functions of Health and Wellbeing Boards

199 Supply of information to Health and Wellbeing Boards

Care Trusts

200 Care Trusts

CHAPTER 3 The Health Service Commissioner for England

201 Disclosure of reports etc. by the Health Service Commissioner

PART 6
Primary care services

202 Medical services: minor amendments

203 Persons eligible to enter into general dental services contracts

204 Arrangements under section 107 of the National Health Service Act 2006

205 Payments in respect of costs of sight tests

206 Pharmaceutical needs assessments

207 Control of entry on pharmaceutical lists

208 Lists of performers of pharmaceutical services and assistants etc.

PART 7
Regulation of health and social care workers

209 Power to regulate social workers etc. in England

210 Training etc. of approved mental health professionals in England

211 Orders regulating social care workers in England: further provision

212 Abolition of the General Social Care Council

213 Regulation of social workers in England

214 The Health and Care Professions Council

215 Functions of the Council in relation to social work in England

216 Appeals in cases involving social workers in England

217 Approval of courses for approved mental health professionals

218 Exercise of function of approving courses, etc.

219 Arrangements with other health or social care regulators

220 References in enactments to registered health professionals, etc.

221 Functions of the Secretary of State in relation to social care workers

222 The Professional Standards Authority for Health and Social Care

223 Functions of the Authority

224 Funding of the Authority

225 Power to advise regulatory bodies, investigate complaints, etc.

226 Accountability and governance

227 Appointments to regulatory bodies

228 Establishment of voluntary registers

229 Accreditation of voluntary registers

230 Consequential provisions and savings, etc.

231 Abolition of the Office of the Health Professions Adjudicator

PART 8
The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence

232 The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence

233 General duties

234 Quality standards

235 Supply of quality standards to other persons

236 Advice or guidance to the Secretary of State or the Board

237 Advice, guidance, information and recommendations

238 NICE recommendations: appeals

239 Training

240 Advisory services

241 Commissioning guidance

242 NICE’s charter

243 Additional functions

244 Arrangements with other bodies

245 Failure by NICE to discharge any of its functions

246 Protection from personal liability

247 Interpretation of this Part

248 Dissolution of predecessor body

249 Consequential and transitional provision

PART 9
Health and adult social care services: information

CHAPTER 1 Information standards

250 Powers to publish information standards

251 Information standards: supplementary

CHAPTER 2 The Health and Social Care Information Centre

Establishment and general duties

252 The Health and Social Care Information Centre

253 General duties

Functions: information systems

254 Powers to direct Information Centre to establish information systems

255 Powers to request Information Centre to establish information systems

256 Requests for collection under section 255: confidential information

257 Requests under section 255: supplementary

258 Information systems: supplementary

259 Powers to require and request provision of information

260 Publication of information

261 Other dissemination of information

262 Other dissemination: directions and requests under sections 254 and 255

263 Code of practice on confidential information

264 Information Register

265 Advice or guidance

Functions: quality of health and social care information

266 Assessment of quality of information

267 Power to establish accreditation scheme

Functions: other

268 Database of quality indicators

269 Power to confer functions in relation to identification of GPs

270 Additional functions

271 Arrangements with other bodies

272 Failure by Information Centre to discharge any of its functions

273 Protection from personal liability

General and supplementary

274 Powers of Secretary of State or Board to give directions

275 Interpretation of this Chapter

276 Dissolution of predecessor body

277 Consequential provision

PART 10
Abolition of certain public bodies etc

278 The Alcohol Education and Research Council

279 The Appointments Commission

280 The National Information Governance Board for Health and Social Care

281 The National Patient Safety Agency

282 The NHS Institute for Innovation and Improvement

283 Standing advisory committees

PART 11
Miscellaneous

284 Special notices of births and deaths

285 Provision of information by Registrar General

286 Provision of information by Registrar General: Wales

287 Provision of statistical information by Statistics Board

288 Monitor: duty to co-operate with Care Quality Commission

289 Care Quality Commission: duty to co-operate with Monitor

290 Other duties to co-operate

291 Breaches of duties to co-operate

292 Requirement for Secretary of State to approve remuneration policy etc.

293 Conduct of reviews etc.

294 Failure to discharge functions

295 Arrangements between the Board and Northern Ireland Ministers

296 Arrangements between the Board and Scottish Ministers etc.

297 Relationships between the health services

298 Advice or assistance to public authorities in the Isle of Man or Channel Islands

299 Certificate of consent of community patients to treatment

300 Transfer schemes

301 Transfer schemes: supplemental

302 Subsequent property transfer schemes

PART 12
Final provisions

303 Power to make consequential provision

304 Regulations, orders and directions

305 Financial provision

306 Commencement

307 Commencement: consultation with Scottish Ministers

308 Extent

309 Short title

SCHEDULES

SCHEDULE 1 The National Health Service Commissioning Board

SCHEDULE 2 Clinical commissioning groups

SCHEDULE 3 Pharmaceutical remuneration

SCHEDULE 4 Amendments of the National Health Service Act 2006

SCHEDULE 5 Part 1: amendments of other enactments

SCHEDULE 6 Part 1: transitional provision

SCHEDULE 7 Abolition of the Health Protection Agency: consequential amendments

SCHEDULE 8 Monitor

SCHEDULE 9 Requirements under section 77: undertakings

SCHEDULE 10 References by Monitor to the Competition Commission

SCHEDULE 11 Further provision about Monitor’s enforcement powers

SCHEDULE 12 Procedure on references under section 120

SCHEDULE 13 Part 3: minor and consequential amendments

SCHEDULE 14 Abolition of NHS trusts in England: consequential amendments

SCHEDULE 15 Part 7: consequential amendments and savings

SCHEDULE 16 The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence

SCHEDULE 17 Part 8: consequential amendments

SCHEDULE 18 The Health and Social Care Information Centre

SCHEDULE 19 Part 9: consequential amendments

SCHEDULE 20 Part 10: consequential amendments and savings

SCHEDULE 21 Amendments relating to relationships between the health services

SCHEDULE 22 Property transfer schemes

SCHEDULE 23 Staff transfer schemes

PART 3Regulation of health and adult social care services

CHAPTER 2Competition

72Functions under the Competition Act 1998

(1)

The functions referred to in subsection (2) are concurrent functions of Monitor and the Office of Fair Trading.

(2)

The functions are those that the Office of Fair Trading has under Part 1 of the Competition Act 1998, other than sections 31D(1) to (6), 38(1) to (6) and 51, so far as relating to any of the following which concern the provision of health care services in England—

(a)

agreements, decisions or concerted practices of the kind mentioned in section 2(1) of that Act (anti-competitive practices),

(b)

conduct of the kind mentioned in section 18(1) of that Act (abuse of dominant position),

(c)

agreements, decisions or concerted practices of the kind mentioned in Article 101 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (anti-competitive practices),

(d)

conduct which amounts to abuse of the kind mentioned in Article 102 of that Treaty (abuse of dominant position).

(3)

So far as necessary for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2), references in Part 1 of the Competition Act 1998 to the Office of Fair Trading are to be read as including references to Monitor, except in sections 31D(1) to (6), 38(1) to (6), 51, 52(6) and (8) and 54.

73Functions under Part 4 of the Enterprise Act 2002

(1)

The functions referred to in subsection (2) are concurrent functions of Monitor and the Office of Fair Trading.

(2)

The functions are those that the Office of Fair Trading has under Part 4 of the Enterprise Act 2002 (market investigations), other than sections 166 and 171, so far as relating to activities which concern the provision of health care services in England.

(3)

So far as necessary for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2), references in Part 4 of the Enterprise Act 2002 to the Office of Fair Trading (including references in provisions of that Act applied by that Part) are to be read as including references to Monitor, except in sections 166 and 171.

(4)

Before the Office of Fair Trading or Monitor first exercises functions which are exercisable concurrently by virtue of this section, it must consult the other.

(5)

Neither the Office of Fair Trading nor Monitor may exercise in relation to any matter functions which are exercisable concurrently by virtue of this section if functions which are so exercisable have been exercised in relation to that matter by the other.

(6)

Section 117 of the Enterprise Act 2002 (offences of supplying false or misleading information) as applied by section 180 of that Act is to have effect so far as relating to functions exercisable by Monitor by virtue of this section as if the references in section 117(1)(a) and (2) to the Office of Fair Trading included references to Monitor.

74Competition functions: supplementary

(1)

No objection may be taken to anything done by or in relation to Monitor under the Competition Act 1998 or Part 4 of the Enterprise Act 2002 on the ground that it should have been done by or in relation to the Office of Fair Trading.

(2)

Subject to subsection (3), sections 62 and 66 (general duties of Monitor) do not apply in relation to anything done by Monitor in the carrying out of its functions by virtue of section 72 or 73.

(3)

In the carrying out of any functions by virtue of section 72 or 73, Monitor may nevertheless have regard to any of the matters in respect of which a duty is imposed by section 62 or 66 if it is a matter to which the Office of Fair Trading is entitled to have regard in the carrying out of those functions.

(4)

In section 9E of the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986 (specified regulators in cases of disqualification for competition infringements), in subsection (2) after paragraph (e) insert “;

(f)

Monitor.”

(5)

In section 54 of the Competition Act 1998, in subsection (1) (definition of “regulator” for the purposes of Part 1 of that Act)—

(a)

omit the “and” preceding paragraph (g), and

(b)

after that paragraph insert “; and

(h)

Monitor.”

(6)

In section 136 of the Enterprise Act 2002 (investigations and reports on market investigation references)—

(a)

in subsection (7) (meaning of “relevant sectoral enactment”), at the end insert—

“(i)

in relation to Monitor, section 73 of the Health and Social Care Act 2012.”,

(b)

in subsection (8) (meaning of “relevant sectoral regulator”), for “Communications or” substitute “Communications,”, and

(c)

in that subsection, after “Utility Regulation” insert “or Monitor”.

(7)

In section 168 of that Act (regulated markets)—

(a)

in subsection (3) (meaning of “relevant action”), after paragraph (o) insert—

“(p)

modifying the conditions of a licence issued under section 87 of the Health and Social Care Act 2012.”,

(b)

in subsection (4) (meaning of “relevant statutory functions”), after paragraph (q) insert—

“(r)

in relation to any licence issued under section 87 of the Health and Social Care Act 2012, the duties of Monitor under sections 62 and 66 of that Act.”, and

(c)

in subsection (5) (meaning of “sectoral regulator”), after paragraph (i) insert—

“(ia)

Monitor;”.

75Requirements as to procurement, patient choice and competition

(1)

Regulations may impose requirements on the National Health Service Commissioning Board and clinical commissioning groups for the purpose of securing that, in commissioning health care services for the purposes of the NHS, they—

(a)

adhere to good practice in relation to procurement;

(b)

protect and promote the right of patients to make choices with respect to treatment or other health care services provided for the purposes of the NHS;

(c)

do not engage in anti-competitive behaviour which is against the interests of people who use such services.

(2)

Requirements imposed by regulations under this section apply to an arrangement for the provision of goods and services only if the value of the consideration attributable to the services is greater than that attributable to the goods.

(3)

Regulations under this section may, in particular, impose requirements relating to—

(a)

competitive tendering for the provision of services;

(b)

the management of conflicts between the interests involved in commissioning services and the interests involved in providing them.

(4)

The regulations may provide for the requirements imposed, or such of them as are prescribed, not to apply in relation to arrangements of a prescribed description.

76Requirements under section 75: investigations, declarations and directions

(1)

Regulations under section 75 may confer on Monitor—

(a)

a power to investigate a complaint that the National Health Service Commissioning Board or a clinical commissioning group has failed to comply with a requirement imposed by the regulations;

(b)

a power to investigate on its own initiative whether the Board or a clinical commissioning group has failed to comply with a requirement imposed by virtue of section 75(1)(c);

(c)

a power to require the Board or a clinical commissioning group to provide it with such information as Monitor may specify for the purposes of an investigation it carries out by virtue of paragraph (a) or (b);

(d)

a power to require the Board or a clinical commissioning group to provide an explanation of such information as it provides by virtue of paragraph (c).

(2)

A power conferred by virtue of subsection (1)(a) is exercisable only where Monitor considers that the person making the complaint has sufficient interest in the arrangement to which the complaint relates.

(3)

Regulations under section 75 may confer on Monitor a power to declare that an arrangement for the provision of health care services for the purposes of the NHS is ineffective.

(4)

A power conferred by virtue of subsection (3) is exercisable only in prescribed circumstances and subject to prescribed restrictions and only where Monitor is satisfied that—

(a)

the National Health Service Commissioning Board or a clinical commissioning group has failed to comply with a requirement of regulations under section 75, and

(b)

the failure is sufficiently serious.

(5)

On a declaration being made by virtue of subsection (3), the arrangement is void; but that does not affect—

(a)

the validity of anything done pursuant to the arrangement,

(b)

any right acquired or liability incurred under the arrangement, or

(c)

any proceedings or remedy in respect of such a right or liability.

(6)

Regulations under section 75 may confer on Monitor a power to direct the National Health Service Commissioning Board or a clinical commissioning group—

(a)

to put in place measures for the purpose of preventing failures to comply with requirements imposed by the regulations or mitigating the effect of such failures;

(b)

to remedy a failure to comply with such a requirement;

(c)

not to exercise in a prescribed manner prescribed functions in relation to arrangements for the provision of health care services;

(d)

to vary or withdraw an invitation to tender for the provision of health care services;

(e)

to vary an arrangement for the provision of health care services made in consequence of putting the provision of the services out to tender.

(7)

A failure to comply with a requirement imposed by regulations under section 75 which causes loss or damage is actionable, except in so far as the regulations restrict the right to bring such an action.

(8)

Regulations under section 75 may—

(a)

provide for a specified defence to such an action;

(b)

prevent a person who has brought such an action under the Public Contracts Regulations 2006 (S.I. 2006/5) from bringing such an action under the regulations under section 75 in respect of the whole or part of the same loss or damage.

77Requirements under section 75: undertakings

(1)

Regulations under section 75 may confer on Monitor a power to accept an undertaking (referred to in this Chapter as a “section 77 undertaking”) from the National Health Service Commissioning Board or a clinical commissioning group to take such action of a kind mentioned in subsection (2) as is specified in the undertaking within such period as is so specified.

(2)

The specified action must be—

(a)

action of a description given in paragraphs (a) to (e) of section 76(6), or

(b)

action of such a description as may be prescribed.

(3)

Where Monitor accepts a section 77 undertaking then, unless the Board, or (as the case may be) the clinical commissioning group from whom the undertaking is accepted, has failed to comply with the undertaking or any part of it, Monitor may not—

(a)

continue to carry out the investigation in question,

(b)

make a declaration by virtue of subsection (3) of section 76 in relation to the arrangement in question, or

(c)

give a direction by virtue of subsection (6) of that section in relation to the failure in question.

(4)

Where the Board, or (as the case may be) the clinical commissioning group from whom Monitor has accepted a section 77 undertaking, has failed to comply fully with the undertaking but has complied with part of it, Monitor must take the partial compliance into account in deciding whether to do something mentioned in paragraphs (a) to (c) of subsection (3).

(5)

Schedule 9 (which makes further provision about section 77 undertakings) has effect.

78Guidance

(1)

Monitor must publish guidance about—

(a)

compliance with requirements imposed by regulations under section 75;

(b)

how it intends to exercise powers conferred on it by regulations under that section.

(2)

Before publishing guidance under subsection (1)(a) or (b), Monitor must consult—

(a)

the National Health Service Commissioning Board, and

(b)

such other persons as Monitor considers appropriate.

(3)

Before publishing guidance under subsection (1)(a) or (b), Monitor must obtain the approval of the Secretary of State.

(4)

Monitor may revise guidance under this section and, if it does so, must publish the guidance as revised.

(5)

Before publishing guidance revised under subsection (4), Monitor must consult the persons mentioned in subsection (2).

79Mergers involving NHS foundation trusts

(1)

For the purposes of Part 3 of the Enterprise Act 2002 (completed and anticipated mergers), each of the following cases is to be treated as being (in so far as it would not otherwise be) a case in which two or more enterprises cease to be distinct enterprises.

(2)

The first case is where the activities of two or more NHS foundation trusts cease to be distinct activities.

(3)

The second case is where the activities of one or more NHS foundation trusts and the activities of one or more businesses cease to be distinct activities.

(4)

Where the Office of Fair Trading decides to carry out an investigation under Part 3 of the Enterprise Act 2002 of a matter involving an NHS foundation trust, it must as soon as reasonably practicable notify Monitor.

(5)

As soon as reasonably practicable after receiving a notification under subsection (4), Monitor must provide the Office of Fair Trading with advice on—

(a)

the effect of the matter under investigation on benefits (in the form of those within section 30(1)(a) of the Enterprise Act 2002 (relevant customer benefits)) for people who use health care services provided for the purposes of the NHS, and

(b)

such other matters relating to the matter under investigation as Monitor considers appropriate.

(6)

In subsections (2) and (3), a reference to the activities of an NHS foundation trust or a business includes a reference to part of its activities.

(7)

In this section, “enterprise” and “business” each have the same meaning as in Part 3 of the Enterprise Act 2002.

80Co-operation with the Office of Fair Trading

(1)

Monitor and the Office of Fair Trading must co-operate with each other in the exercise of their respective functions under the Competition Act 1998 and the Enterprise Act 2002.

(2)

In particular each must give the other—

(a)

such information in its possession as the other may require to enable it to exercise those functions,

(b)

such other information in its possession as it considers would assist the other in exercising those functions, and

(c)

such other assistance as the other may require to assist it in exercising those functions.