Save the date: Conferenza Stampa 15 novembre 2018 ore 11.45 - Toscana

Date of article: 14/11/2018

Daily News of: 14/11/2018

Country:  Italy - Tuscany

Author:

Article language: it

Si terrà giovedì 15 novembre 2018 alle ore 11:45 presso il Consiglio regionale della Toscana Sala Barile Via Cavour 4 la Conferenza Stampa di presentazione del protocollo di intesa tra il Comitato regionale consumatori e utenti della Regione Toscana (C.R.C.U.) e il Difensore civico della Toscana. Con gli interventi del Presidente del C.R.C.U. Monica Barni (Vice Presidente della Regione Toscana ) e del Difensore Civico regionale Sandro Vannini.
Sarà presente e introdurrà il Presidente del Consiglio Regionale Eugenio Giani.
Durante la conferenza sarà illustrato l’accordo sottoscritto.

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Heavily pregnant woman left to ‘sofa surf’ by Hounslow council

Date of article: 14/11/2018

Daily News of: 14/11/2018

Country:  United Kingdom - England

Author:

Article language: en

A homeless woman left to sofa surf by London Borough of Hounslow while heavily pregnant, has been given permanent accommodation during a Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman investigation.

The woman was seven months pregnant when she was made homeless after falling out with her parents, but instead of taking her homelessness application and offering her interim accommodation, officers gave the woman a form and asked her to return with further documents.

For the next 10 months, despite the woman making regular contact with the council, particularly after her baby was born, the Ombudsman found the council left her to sleep on friends’ sofas.

The Ombudsman’s investigation found the council at fault for not taking the homeless application and for the poor quality of records kept on the woman’s case file.

Because the council did not take a homelessness application or give her a decision on her homelessness status, it denied the woman the right of review in court. It still had not taken a homelessness application from her more than a year after she first approached the council.

It was only after the Ombudsman started investigating, that the woman was offered - and has now accepted - permanent social housing.

Michael King, Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman, said:

“Hounslow council had a duty to take a homelessness application from this woman when she initially presented herself as homeless. She should not have been turned away – she was vulnerable as a heavily pregnant woman turned out of her parental home. The council should not have needed more proof.

“I welcome the council’s readiness to remedy the case and welcome its willingness to work with us to improve complaint handling going forward.  I hope the lessons learned will ensure other vulnerable people will not be put into the same position as this woman in future.”

The woman was first made homeless in May 2017, but was repeatedly told to return with documents, which she then provided. She was told there was no accommodation in the area, but she did not want to move out of the area as she needed to attend hospital appointments because there were concerns about the baby.

For five months, the woman kept in touch with the council but every time it told her it would be another two weeks before it could offer her local accommodation. She was also asked to consider a move to Manchester or Birmingham, but this was not realistic due hospital appointments for the baby.

After 10 months, the woman and her baby were still staying with various friends, but still the council did not take a homelessness application. The council asked her parents if they would accommodate her for six months on the condition the council would house her in Hounslow.

The council then argued that because the woman was living with her parents, she was no longer homeless or threatened with homelessness.

The Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman’s role is to remedy injustice and share learning from investigations to help improve public, and adult social care, services.

In this case the council has agreed to apologise and pay the woman £3,500 for the injustice it caused in the 10 months she was homeless.

The Ombudsman has the power to make recommendations to improve a council’s processes for the wider public.

In this case the council has agreed to review its procedures and tell the Ombudsman what action it will take to ensure it takes a homelessness application as soon as someone approaches it as homeless.

It will also tell the Ombudsman what action it will take to ensure it meets its legal duties to find accommodation for homeless applicants and provide evidence it is fulfilling its duties to homeless applicants who have approached it after 3 April 2017.

Article date: 14 November 2018

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Ombudsman’s 2015 report into health care still not fully implemented

Date of article: 14/11/2018

Daily News of: 14/11/2018

Country:  Ireland

Author:

Article language: en

Ombudsman Peter Tyndall has expressed his disappointment that the HSE has not fully implemented the recommendations made in his 2015 investigation into the health care system.

The Ombudsman’s 2015 reportLearning to Get Better, found that many people were afraid to complain about the treatment they receive in hospitals and that many hospitals were not learning important lessons from complaints they receive.  The HSE and Department of Health accepted all 36 recommendations in the report which were aimed at:

  • making it easy for people to complain

  • ensuring that people have access to an effective independent advocacy service

  • establishing a single, consistent complaints system and

  • ensuring that thmost serious complaints are examined independently.

Today, the Ombudsman published Learning to Get Better: Progress Report which found that only 10 of the recommendations were fully implemented by the HSE, while seventeen were partially implemented and 9 were either not implemented or are still being considered.

In the report, the Ombudsman acknowledges positive developments such as improved facilities for complaints officers and patients making complaints (Tallaght hospital), initiatives to ensure early resolution of complaints (St John’s Community hospital Sligo), and audits of patient complaints to assess the quality of the complaints process (RCSI hospital group).

However, the Ombudsman said:

We have carried out an extensive investigation into hospital complaints systems and we found that they fall short of what we would expect from effective systems. People can die when lessons are not learned from complaints. 

The Ombudsman said that often people have to make multiple complaints to have their issue addressed, the HSE’s Complaint Management System is not used in all areaof the HSE, and not every voluntary hospital can accept complaints online.

He called on the HSE and Department of Health to build on the progress that has been made and ensure that all the recommendations in his report are fully implemented across the entire health care system.

END

 

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Partenariat Ouest-France : quelles pistes pour obtenir sa carte grise malgré les difficultés rencontrées sur la plateforme en ligne ?

Date of article: 13/11/2018

Daily News of: 14/11/2018

Country:  France

Author:

Article language: fr

Dans Ouest-France cette semaine, le Défenseur des droits donne des clés aux personnes rencontrant des difficultés dans leurs démarches en ligne d'obtention d'un permis de conduire ou d'une carte grise.

La chronique est à retrouver dans la page « Vie quotidienne – Droits – consommation » de Ouest-France ainsi que sur internet.

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Padova. Corso di formazione per tutori volontari di minori di età

Date of article: 12/11/2018

Daily News of: 14/11/2018

Country:  Italy - Veneto

Author:

Article language: it

Parte oggi, lunedì 12 novembre, a Padova (sala Polivalente, via Piovese 74), il corso di formazione per tutori volontari di minori di età, promosso e organizzato dal Garante dei diritti della persona del Veneto, nell'ambito delle proprie competenze di promozione e formazione di persone idonee a svolgere attività di tutela a vantaggio di minori d’età previste, nella propria legge di disciplina (cfr. art. 13, c. 1 lett. a, l.r. 24 dicembre 2013, n. 37 “Garante regionale dei diritti della persona”).

Il corso, che è riservato a quanti risiedono nella provincia di Padova, si svolge in collaborazione con il Comune di Padova, l'azienda Ulss 6 euganea e la cooperativa sociale Nuovo Villaggio nell'ambito del progetto Never Alone.

I posti disponibili sono stati esauriti attraverso le iscrizioni formalmente giunte alla segreteria organizzativa del corso entro la data utile per provvedervi, già comunicata in precedente news su questo sito web e indicata nel materiale informativo sull'iniziativa, che è stato diffuso (cfr. nostra news di lancio dell'iniziativa del 25/10/2018).  

In calce, il pieghevole con il programma del corso. 

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Risorse


 Corso di formazione per tutori volontari di minori di età. Padova, nov. 2018 - genn 2019. PROGRAMMA

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