NHS England highlights the existing advice available on the NHS Choices website and the role of Health Visitors in delivering the Healthy Child Programme. PHE aims to reduce preventable accidents as part of the national priority on Best Start in Life (2020-2025) through the modernisation of the Healthy Child Programme. (AI summary)
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specifically mentions blind safety. You also asked NHSEI to address your concern around the need for healthcare professionals such as midwives and district nurses who look after new mums and their babies to be reminded of this particular danger. We have consulted with Public Health England (hereafter ‘PHE’) who have advised that the national Healthy Child Programme (HCP) published by the Department of Health and Social Care, the universal public health programme for 0-19 year olds and their parents/carers, recommends that home safety information is discussed with families from birth and throughout the first 5 years. The Healthy Child Programme (0-
5) is led and delivered by Health visitors. Health visitors are specialist public health nurses, who are the lead professionals working with children 0-5 years. They deliver Professor Stephen Powis National Medical Director NHS England & NHS Improvement Skipton House 80 London Road London SE1 6LH 27th May 2020
evidence based public health interventions and are skilled in identifying issues early, determining potential risks, and providing early intervention to prevent issues escalating. Health visitors deliver the five mandated health reviews which include:
• 28/40 weeks of pregnancy
• 10-14 days post birth
• 6-8 weeks
• 1 year
• 2.5 years
PHE sets out more specific guidance on the role of the health visitor in the Six High Impact Areas which support local delivery of the HCP. High Impact Area five focuses on managing minor illnesses, reducing accidents and outlines how health visitors provide evidence-based safety advice to parents, including through child health clinics, baby groups and other parenting activities. PHE has worked with the RoSPA and CAPT to publish a report on reducing unintentional injuries in and around the home among children in 2018. This highlighted the most prevalent causes of unintentional injury hospital admissions and preventable death and serious long-term harm, including strangulation, and made recommendations around accident prevention at the local level. Moving forward, PHE has outlined an aim to reduce preventable accidents as part of the national priority on Best Start in Life (2020-2025). It aims to achieve this through the modernisation of the Healthy Child Programme which is taking place between 2020-2023. Thank you for bringing these important patient safety issues to my attention and please do not hesitate to contact me should you need any further information.