Seanad debates
Wednesday, 25 March 2009
Health Care Professionals Bodies
7:00 pm
Seán Haughey (Dublin North Central, Fianna Fail)
I will be taking this matter on behalf of my colleague, the Minister for Health and Children, Deputy Mary Harney.
The Health and Social Care Professionals Act 2005 provides for the establishment of a system of statutory registration for 12 health and social care professions. This new system of statutory registration will apply to those in the 12 specified professions regardless of whether they work in the public or private sector or are self-employed. This is the first time that fitness to practice procedures will be put in place for those professionals on a statutory basis. The structure of the system of registration includes a registration board for each of the professions to be registered, the Health and Social Care Professionals Council, which has overall responsibility for the regulatory system, and a committee structure to deal with disciplinary matters.
As a first step in the implementation of the system of statutory registration, the Health and Social Care Professionals Council was established by the Minister for Health and Children in March 2007. The council recruited a chief executive officer in May of last year and is currently working to put in place the necessary structures for registration, education and fitness to practise for the 12 health and social care professions designated in the Act. The council has decided that social workers and physiotherapists are the two professions from among the designated 12 which are most suitable for early registration. It has accordingly prioritised the establishment of the social worker registration board and the physiotherapist registration board during 2009.
While the proposed system of statutory registration applies in the first instance to 12 health and social care professions, the legislation empowers the Minister for Health and Children to include, by regulation and on the basis of specific criteria, additional health and social care professions in the regulatory system as appropriate. Section 4 of the Health and Social Care Professionals Act provides for the inclusion of additional professions in the system of statutory registration and constitutes a framework for guiding future decisions in this regard. The factors used to consider the inclusion of professions in the system of statutory registration include the extent to which the profession has established itself, including whether there is at least one professional body representing a significant proportion of the profession's practitioners, the existence of defined routes of entry into the profession and of independently assessed qualifications and the commitment to continuing professional development. The future consideration of hypnotherapy and psychotherapy for registration as designated professions under the Health and Social Care Professionals Act 2005 will be examined in this context.
The immediate priority of the Health and Social Care Professionals Council is to put in place the regulatory structures for the 12 designated professions. It is not envisaged that additional structures will be considered for inclusion within the scope of the system until registration boards for these professions are established. Until the council has put in place the structures required to establish the 12 initial registration boards, the Minister for Health and Children strongly encourages all relevant professional bodies within hypnotherapy and psychotherapy to continue to collaborate in order to strengthen self-regulation.
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