Legislation – Health and Care Act 2022

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Introduction

PART 1
Health service in England: integration, collaboration and other changes

1 NHS Commissioning Board renamed NHS England

2 Power to require commissioning of specialised services

3 Spending on mental health

4 NHS England mandate: general

5 NHS England mandate: cancer outcome targets

6 Duties as to reducing inequalities

7 Duties in respect of research: business plan and annual report etc

8 NHS England: wider effect of decisions

9 NHS England: duties in relation to climate change etc

10 Public involvement: carers and representatives

11 Information about inequalities

12 Support and assistance by NHS England

13 Exercise of functions relating to provision of services

14 Preparation of consolidated accounts for providers

15 Funding for service integration

16 Payments in respect of quality

17 Secondments to NHS England

18 Role of integrated care boards

19 Establishment of integrated care boards

20 People for whom integrated care boards have responsibility

21 Commissioning hospital and other health services

22 Commissioning primary care services etc

23 Transfer schemes in connection with transfer of primary care functions

24 Commissioning arrangements: conferral of discretions

25 General functions

26 Integrated care partnerships and strategies

27 NHS England’s financial responsibilities

28 Expansion of NHS England’s duties in respect of expenditure

29 Financial responsibilities of integrated care boards and their partners

30 Expansion of financial duties of integrated care boards and their partners

31 Care Quality Commission reviews etc of integrated care system

32 Integrated care system: further amendments

33 Abolition of Monitor and transfer of functions to NHS England

34 Exercise by NHS England of new regulatory functions

35 Modification of standard licence conditions

36 Abolition of NHS Trust Development Authority

37 Merger of bodies: consequential amendment

38 Transfer schemes in connection with abolished bodies

39 Transfer schemes under section 38: taxation

40 Duties in respect of research

41 Report on assessing and meeting workforce needs

42 Arrangements for exercise of public health functions

43 Power of direction: public health functions

44 Power of direction: investigation functions

45 General power to direct NHS England

46 Reconfiguration of services: intervention powers

47 Review into NHS supply chains

48 NHS trusts in England

49 Removal of power to appoint trust funds and trustees

50 Sections 48 and 49: consequential amendments

51 Licensing of NHS trusts

52 NHS trusts: wider effect of decisions

53 NHS trusts: duties in relation to climate change

54 Oversight and support of NHS trusts

55 Directions to NHS trusts

56 Recommendations about restructuring of NHS trusts

57 Intervention in NHS trusts

58 NHS trusts: conversion to NHS foundation trusts and dissolution

59 Appointment of chair of NHS trusts

60 Financial objectives for NHS trusts

61 Licensing of NHS foundation trusts

62 Capital spending limits for NHS foundation trusts

63 Accounts, reports and forward plans

64 NHS foundation trusts: joint exercise of functions

65 NHS foundation trusts: mergers, acquisitions and separations

66 Transfers on dissolution of NHS foundation trusts

67 NHS foundation trusts: wider effect of decisions

68 NHS foundation trusts: duties in relation to climate change

69 Transfer schemes between trusts

70 Trust special administrators

71 Joint working and delegation arrangements

72 References to functions: treatment of delegation arrangements etc

73 Repeal of duties to promote autonomy

74 Guidance about joint appointments

75 Co-operation by NHS bodies etc

76 Wider effect of decisions: licensing of health care providers

77 The NHS payment scheme

78 Regulations as to patient choice

79 Procurement regulations

80 Procurement and patient choice: consequential amendments etc

81 Eradicating slavery and human trafficking in supply chains

82 Duty to provide assistance to the CMA

83 Mergers of providers: removal of CMA powers

84 Removal of functions relating to competition etc

85 Removal of CMA’s involvement in licensing etc

86 Special Health Authorities: removal of 3 year limit

87 Tidying up etc provisions about accounts of certain NHS bodies

88 Meaning of “health” in NHS Act 2006

89 Repeal of spent powers to make transfer schemes etc

90 Abolition of Local Education and Training Boards

91 Hospital patients with care and support needs: repeals etc

PART 2
Health and adult social care: information

92 Information about payments etc to persons in the health care sector

93 Regulations under section 92: enforcement

94 Regulations under section 92: consent

95 Information standards

96 Sharing anonymous health and social care information

97 General duties of the Health and Social Care Information Centre etc

98 Collection of information from private health care providers

99 Collection of information about adult social care

100 Enforcement of duties against private providers

101 Medicine information systems

PART 3
Secretary of State’s powers to transfer or delegate functions

102 Relevant bodies and Special Health Authorities

103 Power to transfer functions between bodies

104 Power to provide for exercise of functions of Secretary of State

105 Scope of powers

106 Transfer schemes in connection with regulations

107 Transfer schemes: taxation

108 Consent and consultation

PART 4
The Health Services Safety Investigations Body

109 Establishment of the HSSIB

110 Investigation of incidents with safety implications

111 Deciding which incidents to investigate

112 Criteria, principles and processes

113 Final reports

114 Interim reports

115 Draft reports

116 Response to reports

117 Admissibility of reports

118 Powers of entry, inspection and seizure

119 Powers to require information etc

120 Voluntary provision of information etc

121 Offences relating to investigations

122 Prohibition on disclosure of HSSIB material

123 Exceptions to prohibition on disclosure

124 Offences of unlawful disclosure

125 Restriction of statutory powers requiring disclosure

126 Co-operation

127 Assistance of NHS bodies

128 Investigations relating to Wales and Northern Ireland

129 Failure to exercise functions

130 Review

131 Offences by bodies corporate

132 Offences by partnerships

133 Obligations of confidence etc

134 Consequential amendments relating to Part 4

135 Interpretation of Part 4

PART 5
Virginity testing and hymenoplasty offences

CHAPTER 1 Virginity testing offences

Virginity testing offences: England and Wales

136 Offence of virginity testing: England and Wales

137 Offence of offering to carry out virginity testing: England and Wales

138 Offence of aiding or abetting etc a person to carry out virginity testing: England and Wales

139 Virginity testing offences in England and Wales: penalties

Virginity testing offences: Scotland

140 Offence of virginity testing: Scotland

141 Offence of offering to carry out virginity testing: Scotland

142 Offence of aiding or abetting etc a person to carry out virginity testing: Scotland

143 Virginity testing offences in Scotland: penalties and supplementary

Virginity testing offences: Northern Ireland

144 Offence of virginity testing: Northern Ireland

145 Offence of offering to carry out virginity testing: Northern Ireland

146 Offence of aiding or abetting etc a person to carry out virginity testing: Northern Ireland

147 Virginity testing offences in Northern Ireland: penalties

CHAPTER 2 Hymenoplasty offences

Hymenoplasty offences: England and Wales

148 Offence of carrying out hymenoplasty: England and Wales

149 Offence of offering to carry out hymenoplasty: England and Wales

150 Offence of aiding or abetting etc a person to carry out hymenoplasty: England and Wales

151 Hymenoplasty offences in England and Wales: penalties

Hymenoplasty offences: Scotland

152 Offence of carrying out hymenoplasty: Scotland

153 Offence of offering to carry out hymenoplasty: Scotland

154 Offence of aiding or abetting etc a person to carry out hymenoplasty: Scotland

155 Hymenoplasty offences in Scotland: penalties and supplementary

Hymenoplasty offences: Northern Ireland

156 Offence of carrying out hymenoplasty: Northern Ireland

157 Offence of offering to carry out hymenoplasty: Northern Ireland

158 Offence of aiding or abetting etc a person to carry out hymenoplasty: Northern Ireland

159 Hymenoplasty offences in Northern Ireland: penalties

CHAPTER 3 Consequential amendments

160 Consequential amendments relating to Part 5

PART 6
Miscellaneous

161 Pharmaceutical services: remuneration in respect of vaccines etc

162 International healthcare arrangements

163 Regulation of local authority functions relating to adult social care

164 Default powers of Secretary of State in relation to adult social care

165 Care Quality Commission’s powers in relation to local authority failings

166 Cap on care costs for charging purposes

167 Provision of social care services: financial assistance

168 Regulation of health care and associated professions

169 Medical examiners

170 Commercial dealings in organs for transplantation: extra-territorial offences

171 Storage of gametes and embryos

172 Advertising of less healthy food and drink

173 Hospital food standards

174 Food information for consumers: power to amend retained EU law

175 Fluoridation of water supplies

176 Fluoridation of water supplies: transitional provision

177 Review into disputes relating to treatment of critically ill children

178 Early medical termination of pregnancy

179 Child safeguarding etc in health and care: policy about information sharing

180 Licensing of cosmetic procedures

181 Mandatory training on learning disability and autism

PART 7
General

182 Power to make consequential provision

183 Regulations

184 Financial provision

185 Extent

186 Commencement

187 Short title

SCHEDULES

SCHEDULE 1 Renaming of NHS Commissioning Board

SCHEDULE 2 Integrated care boards: constitution etc

SCHEDULE 3 Conferral of primary care functions on integrated care boards etc

SCHEDULE 4 Integrated care system: minor and consequential amendments

SCHEDULE 5 Abolition of Monitor and transfer of its functions

SCHEDULE 6 Intervention powers over the reconfiguration of NHS services

SCHEDULE 7 NHS trusts in England and removal of power to appoint trustees: consequential amendments

SCHEDULE 8 Trust special administrators: NHS trusts and NHS foundation trusts

SCHEDULE 9 References to functions: treatment of delegation arrangements etc

SCHEDULE 10 The NHS payment scheme

SCHEDULE 11 Patient choice: undertakings by integrated care boards

SCHEDULE 12 Removal of functions relating to competition etc

SCHEDULE 13 The Health Services Safety Investigations Body

SCHEDULE 14 Prohibition on disclosure of HSSIB material: exceptions

SCHEDULE 15 Consequential amendments relating to Part 4

SCHEDULE 16 Virginity testing and hymenoplasty: consequential amendments

SCHEDULE 17 Storage of gametes and embryos

SCHEDULE 18 Advertising of less healthy food and drink

SCHEDULE 19 Licensing of cosmetic procedures

Changes to legislation:

There are currently no known outstanding effects for the Health and Care Act 2022, SCHEDULE 10. Help about Changes to Legislation

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Changes to Legislation

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SCHEDULES

SCHEDULE 10The NHS payment scheme

Section 77

1

The Health and Social Care Act 2012 is amended as follows.

2

In section 97 (conditions of licences for health care service providers), in subsection (1)(g), for “the national tariff (see section 116)” substitute “the NHS payment scheme (see section 114A)”.

3

In Part 3, for Chapter 4 substitute—

“CHAPTER 4The NHS payment scheme

114AThe NHS payment scheme

(1)

NHS England must publish a document, to be known as “the NHS payment scheme”, containing rules for determining the price that is to be payable by a commissioner—

(a)

for the provision of health care services for the purposes of the NHS;

(b)

for the provision of services in pursuance of arrangements made by NHS England or an integrated care board in the exercise of any public health functions of the Secretary of State, within the meaning of the National Health Service Act 2006, by virtue of any provision of that Act.

(2)

The commissioner and the provider of services mentioned in subsection (1) must comply with rules under that subsection.

(3)

Rules under subsection (1) may, in particular—

(a)

specify prices;

(b)

specify amounts, formulae or other matters on the basis of which prices are to be determined;

(c)

provide for prices to be determined for, or by reference to, components of services or groups of services;

(d)

make different provision for different services or provision for some services but not others;

(e)

make different provision for the same service by reference to different circumstances or areas, different descriptions of provider, or other factors relevant to the provision of the service or the arrangements for its provision;

(f)

confer a discretion on the commissioner of a service or on NHS England.

(4)

Rules under subsection (1) may allow or require a price to be agreed between the commissioner and the provider of a service.

(5)

Rules made by virtue of subsection (4) may—

(a)

make provision about how the price is to be agreed;

(b)

allow the agreement to make any provision that could be made by rules by virtue of subsection (3);

(c)

provide for the publication by the commissioner, the provider or NHS England of information relevant to the agreement.

(6)

For the purpose of securing that the prices payable for the provision of services mentioned in subsection (1)(a) or (b) result in a fair level of pay for providers of those services, NHS England must, in exercising functions under subsection (1), have regard to—

(a)

differences in the costs incurred in providing those services to persons of different descriptions, and

(b)

differences between providers with respect to the range of those services that they provide.

(7)

The NHS payment scheme may contain rules relating to the making of payments to the provider of a service for the provision of that service.

(8)

The NHS payment scheme may contain guidance as to the application of rules under subsection (1).

(9)

A commissioner of a service mentioned in subsection (1) must have regard to any such guidance.

(10)

The NHS payment scheme has effect for the period specified in the NHS payment scheme or, where a new edition of the NHS payment scheme takes effect before the end of that period, until that new edition takes effect.

114BThe NHS payment scheme: enforcement

Where the commissioner of a service fails to comply with rules contained in the NHS payment scheme, NHS England may direct the commissioner to take steps specified in the direction, within a period specified in the direction—

(a)

to secure that the failure does not continue or recur, or

(b)

to secure that the position is (so far as practicable) restored to what it would have been if the failure was not occurring or had not occurred.

114CThe NHS payment scheme: impact assessment and consultation

(1)

Before publishing the NHS payment scheme, NHS England must—

(a)

carry out an assessment of the likely impact of the proposed scheme, or

(b)

publish a statement setting out its reasons for concluding that such assessment is not needed.

(2)

Before publishing the NHS payment scheme, NHS England must consult the following—

(a)

each integrated care board;

(b)

each relevant provider;

(c)

such other persons as NHS England considers appropriate.

(3)

NHS England must give those persons a notice—

(a)

describing the proposed NHS payment scheme,

(b)

setting out any impact assessment carried out under subsection (1)(a), and

(c)

specifying when the period within which representations may be made about the proposed NHS payment scheme (“the consultation period”) will come to an end.

(4)

The consultation period is the period of 28 days beginning with the day after that on which the notice is published.

(5)

NHS England must publish the notice given under subsection (3).

(6)

If, having consulted under this section—

(a)

NHS England decides to make amendments of the proposed NHS payment scheme that are, in its opinion, significant, and

(b)

it would, in NHS England’s opinion, be unfair to make the amendments without further consultation,

NHS England must consult again under this section.

(7)

Subsection (6) does not apply where section 114D applies.

(8)

In this section “relevant provider” means—

(a)

a licence holder, or

(b)

another person, of a prescribed description, that provides—

(i)

health care services for the purposes of the NHS, or

(ii)

services in pursuance of arrangements made by NHS England or an integrated care board by virtue of section 7A or 7B of the National Health Service Act 2006 (Secretary of State’s public health functions).

114DObjections to proposed NHS payment scheme

(1)

This section applies where—

(a)

within the consultation period under section 114C, NHS England receives objections to the proposed NHS payment scheme from one or more integrated care boards or relevant providers, and

(b)

either or both of the following apply—

(i)

the objection percentage for integrated care boards exceeds the prescribed percentage;

(ii)

the objection percentage for relevant providers exceeds the prescribed percentage.

(2)

In subsection (1)(b) the “objection percentage” is the proportion (expressed as a percentage) of integrated care boards or (as the case may be) relevant providers that objected.

(3)

NHS England must consult such persons as appear to NHS England to be representative of the integrated care boards or relevant providers from whom objections were received.

(4)

If, having complied with subsection (3)—

(a)

NHS England decides to make amendments of the proposed NHS payment scheme that are, in its opinion, significant, and

(b)

it would, in NHS England’s opinion, be unfair to make the amendments without further consultation,

NHS England must consult again under section 114C.

(5)

If, having complied with subsection (3), NHS England decides not to amend the proposed NHS payment scheme, it may publish the scheme but, before doing so, must—

(a)

publish a notice stating that decision and setting out the reasons for it, and

(b)

send a copy of the notice to—

(i)

the persons consulted under subsection (3), and

(ii)

the integrated care boards or relevant providers from whom objections were received.

114EAmendments of the NHS payment scheme

(1)

NHS England may amend the NHS payment scheme during the period for which it has effect, provided that, in the opinion of NHS England, the amendments are not so significant as to require publication of a new edition of the NHS payment scheme.

(2)

In deciding whether the amendments are so significant as to require the publication of a new edition of the NHS payment scheme, NHS England must have regard to—

(a)

the proportion of integrated care boards that would be affected by the proposed amendments;

(b)

the proportion of relevant providers that would be affected by the proposed amendments;

(c)

the impact that the proposed amendments would have on integrated care boards and relevant providers that would be affected by them;

(d)

whether any integrated care boards or relevant providers would be disproportionately affected by the proposed amendments;

(e)

the amount of any increase or decrease in prices that would result from the proposed amendments.

(3)

If NHS England amends the NHS payment scheme, it must publish the NHS payment scheme as amended.

(4)

Before amending the NHS payment scheme, NHS England must, in accordance with subsections (5) to (7), consult the following about the proposed amendments—

(a)

any integrated care boards that would be affected by the proposed amendments;

(b)

any relevant providers that would be affected by the proposed amendments;

(c)

such other persons as NHS England considers appropriate.

(5)

NHS England must publish a notice specifying—

(a)

the proposed amendments, and

(b)

when the period within which representations may be made about the proposed amendments (“the consultation period”) will come to an end.

(6)

The consultation period is the period of 28 days beginning with the day after that on which the notice is published.

(7)

NHS England must send a copy of the notice to each of the persons to be consulted under subsection (4).

114FInterpretation

In this Chapter—

commissioner”, in relation to a service, means the person who arranges for the provision of the service;

the NHS payment scheme” means the document published under section 114A(1);

relevant provider” has the meaning given by section 114C(8).”

4

In section 304 (regulations, orders and directions), in subsection (5), for paragraph (g) substitute—

“(g)

regulations under section 114D(1)(b)(i) or (ii) (percentage to be prescribed in cases of objections to proposals for NHS payment scheme);”.