Source · SPSO (Scottish Public Services Ombudsman)

Lothian NHS Board - Acute Division

SPSO (Scottish Public Services Ombudsman) Upheld Reference 201609479 Sector Health Category admission / discharge / transfer procedures Decided 01 October 2018

View NHS Lothian scorecard

Full decision

Summary

Mr C was seeking a referral to children's Occupational Therapy (OT) services for an assessment. Mr C was told he was not eligible for this service as he was 17  and no longer attended school. He was asked to make a new referral for adult OT services. Mr C did this and was assessed but discharged as the OT decided that his needs would be best met by local services in a community setting. Mr C was unhappy about this and complained to the board. He made a further referral to children's OT Services at the same time as his complaint and was this time seen by the service. Mr C complained that the board failed to progress his referrals to OT in a reasonable manner.

Mr C had also highlighted that the NHS website states the children's OT service is for children aged 0-18 and, therefore, he should have been assessed by them from the outset. The board responded by initially reiterating that Mr C was 17  years old and not at school so was more suited for adult services. However, in subsequent responses to Mr C they clarified that the children's OT service only has standardised assessments from age 0-16. They also advised there is no set criteria but instead, a flexible approach is adopted depending on the patient's individual circumstances. They acknowledged that Mr C had not received a clear explanation about why he was referred to adult OT services and apologised for this failing.

We considered that there had been poor communication and mixed reasons given to Mr C for directing his referral and upheld his complaint. However, the board advised that they had taken steps to review the triage service (a process in which things are ranked in terms of importance or priority) for the OT department. This included staff phoning children or parents who made referrals to gather more information to help signpost or assess patients from the outset. Additional staff have had training to make these calls and the board advised that the data they had reviewed so far indicated this was a positive change to the process. As a result of the positive steps taken by the board, we made no further recommendations.

Related reading

View Decision Report 201609479 as a PDF (11.65 KB) Updated: December 2, 2018

View original on SPSO (Scottish Publ… website

Other decisions involving Lothian NHS Board - Acute Division

Reference Date Summary Outcome
202301188 01 Dec 2024 C complained that Lothian NHS Board (Board 1) unreasonably failed to maintain records of specialist advice they provided to another … Partly Upheld
202301420 01 Nov 2024 C complained that the board failed to provide them with appropriate orthopaedic (specialists in the treatment of diseases and injuries … Not Upheld
202208872 01 Nov 2024 C complained about the care and treatment that their late parent (A) received while in hospital. A suffered a fall … Upheld
202303330 01 Sep 2024 C complained about the care and treatment that they received from the board. C underwent a left total hip replacement … Upheld
202208467 01 Sep 2024 C complained about the nursing care and treatment provided to their late parent (A). A had a fall during an … Upheld
View all decisions for this organisation