MAI-89 Accepted

CQC regulation of event healthcare standards

Manchester Arena Inquiry · Manchester Arena Inquiry: Volume 2: Emergency Response · Issued 3 November 2022 · Addressed to: Department of Health and Social Care

Source — verbatim from the inquiry

Inquiry recommendation

That standard needs to be regulated and enforced. The Care Quality Commission is the appropriate body to provide regulation and enforcement. The Department of Health and Social Care should give urgent consideration to making the necessary changes in the law to enable the Care Quality Commission to become the regulator for this sector.

Manchester Arena Inquiry, Manchester Arena Inquiry: Volume 2: Emergency Response · 3 Nov 2022 Source PDF →

Published evidence summary

Publicly available evidence relating to this recommendation:

- The Government's implementation dashboard records this recommendation as accepted in full with delivery status "In progress" (Manchester Arena Inquiry Recommendations Dashboard, Cabinet Office, February 2026).
- DHSC concluded consultations on changes to CQC regulations and published its response in December 2024 (Manchester Arena Inquiry Recommendations Dashboard, Cabinet Office, February 2026).
- DHSC continues to engage with stakeholders on plans to remove exceptions to enable CQC to regulate event healthcare at temporary events and sports venues (Manchester Arena Inquiry Recommendations Dashboard, Cabinet Office, February 2026).

Response — verbatim from government

UK Government

The Home Secretary made a written statement to Parliament on 3 November 2022 following publication of Volume 2, acknowledging the findings on emergency response failures and stating the government would work with emergency services to implement improvements. The response committed to reviewing interoperability arrangements between emergency services and strengthening joint training and exercising protocols for major incidents.

UK Government · 3 Nov 2022 Written response →

Evidence trail — what's actually happened since

  • 27 Feb 2026 The Department of Health and Social Care has concluded the consultations on changes to Care Quality Commission's regulations and published its response to these in December 2024. DHSC continues to engage with stakeholders and relevant government departments on plans to remove the exceptions to enable CQC to regulate event healthcare at temporary events and sports venues effectively. Source →
  • 14 Nov 2025 The Department of Health and Social Care has concluded the consultations on changes to Care Quality Commission's regulations and published its response to these in December 2024. DHSC continues to engage with stakeholders and relevant government departments on plans to remove the exceptions to enable CQC to regulate event healthcare at temporary events and sports venues effectively. Source →
  • 14 Nov 2025 · Cabinet Office Government published formal Manchester Arena Inquiry recommendations dashboard on GOV.UK (14 November 2025) tracking all 149 recommendations with implementation progress updates. View source → Reasonable Progress
  • 3 Apr 2025 · UK Parliament Terrorism (Protection of Premises) Act 2025 received Royal Assent 3 April 2025. Creates two tiers: Standard Duty (200-799 capacity) and Enhanced Duty (800+). SIA will be regulator. Not yet in force -- at least 24 months before enforcement (expected April 2027). View source → Reasonable Progress
  • 5 Jun 2023 · National Police Chiefs Council NPCC, Counter Terrorism Policing and College of Policing provided comprehensive updates to Sir John Saunders demonstrating "continued drive to improve collective response to terrorist incidents." View source → Reasonable Progress

Each entry above links to a primary source — gov.uk written statement, consultation response document, or inspection report. The Index does not characterise government intent; it tracks what has been published.

How this page is built

Source and Response are verbatim from primary documents. The Evidence trail records published activity since — written statements, consultation outcomes, inspection findings, parliamentary references. The Index does not paraphrase or characterise intent; it tracks what has been published. Where the evidence is the absence of action (a missed deadline, a slipped timetable), that absence is documented from primary sources rather than inferred.

This recommendation's data is verified periodically against primary sources. The Index is monitored for staleness weekly.