This depends on the size of your organisation and the purpose of your policies.
This is what you should aim to have for a typical organisation with less that 50 staff:-
CQC Policies | 20 to 30 |
HR | 5 to 10 |
Health & Safety | 5 to 10 |
Admin | 5 to 10 |
For larger organisations, the numbers might go up by say 20% due to the complexities of dealing with stricter and more centralised systems.
Minimise the number of policies
- Focus on key policies and get them right
- A common sense approach to safety will cover most unusual situations
- It is better to invest time in developing staff and instilling common sense
- Do not overwhelm staff with paperwork to cover every eventuality.
CQC says they're not that interested
Is it about policies?
"Absolutely not. We are much less interested in policies and protocols than in knowing what care is like for your patients, whether staff know what to do about things like child protection, and so on. Good practices shouldn't need to do anything they aren't already doing."
Professor David Haslam, National Clinical Adviser to the Care Quality Commission
(Interview in Healthcare Leader News May 2012)
"We won't normally spend a great deal of time reading policy or procedure documents, unless we need to look at them to substantiate other evidence or what staff or patients have told us about their experiences."
James Hedges, media officer at the CQC (statement to MDDUS May 2013)
This is where the CQC focus their inspections:-
- Experiences people have when they receive care and the impact the care has on their health and well-being.
- Talking to patients, their families and their carers.
- Looking at records or speaking with staff and how they reach their judgements.
British Medical Association says don't bother with large numbers
Question: Is 'CQC' all about policies and protocols?
What the BMA says:
"We believe that most providers will already be compliant with the essential standards" and "CQC registration should not involve the development of large numbers of new policies and protocols."
Extracts from the BMA CQC Registration guidance for GPs.