Have you complained about your health care or social care?

While in the vast majority of cases people are satisfied with the care they or their relatives receive from the NHS or from Social Care providers sometimes they don't get the services they want or expect and sometimes things go wrong.
Woman in healthcare setting

When this happens people often want to register their concerns in an attempt to help prevent the same problems happening to others, get answers to their questions and receive an acknowledgment that things should have been done better. When this happens the route most people take is to lodge a formal complaint.

We want to know about people’s experience of doing this, not only if people achieved the outcome they sought through the complaint but also their experience of making the complaint, did they feel supported, did they have the information they needed, how they were treated and if they felt listened to.

Lynn Cawley, Chief Officer of Healthwatch Shropshire, said, “Everybody has a right to complain about their care and treatment when they feel that it has not gone as well as it should have done. Our Independent Health Complaints Advocacy Service can support people through the NHS complaints process. We know from our experience how difficult it can be for patients and relatives to go through the process as it often involves raising difficult issues, from a distressing time in their lives, which can be emotionally challenging.”

“Every health and social care provider, from large hospitals to GPs through to care homes has a complaints procedure for people to follow. We would like to hear from people who have either lodged a complaint or have considered lodging a complaint and decided against it in the last two years. We can then use these experiences to work with the health and social care sector to highlight where things have gone well and where there may be room for improvement.”

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