Bangor Mail

‘THIS WILL COMPROMISE STAFF CONFIDENTI­ALITY’

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A HEALTH board chief says he is fighting an Informatio­n Commission­er ruling which told it to release a report into whistleblo­wer complaints at a mental health unit.

The controvers­ial Holden Report into whistleblo­wers’ concerns on the Hergest unit at Ysbyty Gwynedd was completed in 2013.

Yet Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board refused to make it public, citing confidenti­ality worries for staff who contribute­d.

Earlier this month our sister paper the Daily Post revealed how a senior case officer at the ICO, Catherine Dickenson, ruled on June 30 the health board was wrong. She said it must release the document after a 14-month Freedom of Informatio­n battle with a member of the public.

The Commission­er’s Office ordered the board to “disclose a full copy of the report with only the names of individual­s subject to the grievances redacted–- dismissing Betsi’s claims the study would compromise staff confidenti­ality.

She gave the health board 35 days to publish the damning document, or be in contempt of court.

Yet interim chief executive Simon Dean used exactly the same argument of staff confidenti­ality to justify appealing the ICO’s decision, right on the 28-day deadline.

He said: “We have a duty of care to our employees and are concerned that publishing this full report would breach the confidence of those members of staff who contribute­d to it.

“Since this report was produced in 2014, we have taken a range of actions to improve standards of care on the Hergest Unit.

“Reports from unannounce­d inspection­s of the unit by Healthcare Inspectora­te Wales show standards of care, staff morale and leadership arrangemen­ts have improved in recent years.”

The Holden Report centred on the management of mental health commission­ing, mental health services and other issues on the 42-bed psychiatri­c unit.

Staff blew the whistle on practises there over concerns for the care of vulnerable patients.

The report’s author Robin Holden said staff relationsh­ips on the unit had “broken down to a degree where patient care is undoubtedl­y being compromise­d”.

ICO investigat­or Ms Dickenson referred to Tawel Fan ward at Ysbyty Glan Clwyd in her ruling against the health board – referencin­g the Ockenden Report into institutio­nal abuse there. She said it contained more detail than the Holden

Report but “did not result in claims pursued for breach of confidence”.

She also rapped the board for the length of time it took to reply to the FOI request asking for the report’s release.

At the time of the ICO’s ruling Geoff Ryall Harvey, chief officer of patient advocates North Wales Community Health Council, said the board should not appeal.

He said: “North Wales CHC welcomes the decision of the ICO to ask for the release of this important report. Had it been released in early 2013, then the events at Tawel Fan may have been avoided.

“We believe it is in the public interest for BCUHB not to appeal this decision.”

The First-tier Tribunal (informatio­n Rights) confirmed it received the board’s appeal on the morning of July 28, deadline day for challengin­g the ICO’s ruling.

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