Quality and safety in the independent healthcare sector 2025

Building a culture of greater transparency and openness – listening to patients and staff

Freedom to Speak Up

The independent healthcare sector continues to play a leading role in the national Freedom to Speak Up (FTSU) agenda. In 2024/25, independent providers submitted 2,114 FTSU cases, a 24% increase on the previous year, demonstrating the sector’s growing maturity in fostering open and transparent cultures.

Independent providers now account for nearly half of all non-NHS FTSU cases, underlining the sector’s proactive engagement in championing staff voice and psychological safety. However, variation in reporting levels and a modest rise in detriment cases (4.6%) highlight the ongoing need for leadership visibility, consistent guardian support, and compassionate follow-through.

During 2025, the independent healthcare sector continued to make significant progress in embedding Freedom to Speak Up as a cornerstone of patient safety, workforce wellbeing and organisational culture.

Growing reach and infrastructure

  • The number of Freedom to Speak Up guardians operating across the independent sector grew to over 600 in 2025. This represents a doubling of numbers over the past two and a half years since mid-2023. In addition to these guardians, there are many more FTSU ambassadors in the sector.
  • This expansion means that the majority of IHPN member organisations now have at least one trained guardian or ambassador, providing a safe, independent route for staff to raise concerns.
  • Many providers have established dedicated FTSU networks that link directly to board-level champions and patient safety leads, ensuring that concerns raised translate into tangible learning and improvement.

Embedding Speaking Up in culture

  • Providers are increasingly integrating FTSU principles into their governance, training and leadership programmes, reflecting a shift from compliance to culture.
  • Staff awareness of how to speak up has risen markedly – internal surveys from leading independent providers show over 85% of staff now know how to raise a concern and more than 80% feel confident that their concern will be listened to and acted upon.
  • The FTSU agenda is becoming part of everyday safety conversations, supported by open staff forums, “you said, we did” feedback loops, and inclusion in clinical governance reviews.

Positive outcomes and impact

  • Guardians in the independent sector reported increased early escalation of safety and wellbeing issues, enabling prompt intervention and reducing potential harm.
  • Case themes raised mirror the wider system picture: staff wellbeing, culture, and behaviours remain key topics – but with an increasing proportion of proactive, improvement-focused concerns rather than reactive complaints.

Several independent providers have been recognised for sector-leading approaches, as illustrated in the following case study.


In summary, the independent healthcare sector is demonstrating strong, visible leadership in Freedom to Speak Up. Through expansion of guardian networks, improved staff engagement and greater board-level accountability, the sector is showing that creating open learning cultures is fundamental to delivering safe, high-quality care for every patient.

Martha’s Rule

Martha’s Rule was introduced in England to strengthen patient safety by ensuring that patients, families and carers can request an urgent clinical review if they feel a patient’s condition is worsening or their concerns are not being addressed. In response, some independent sector providers are introducing services such as Call 4 Concern, giving patients and families a direct route to seek additional clinical assessment when they are worried about care or deterioration. These services provide reassurance, encourage open communication and help ensure concerns are acted upon promptly, ultimately supporting safer care, improving patient confidence, and strengthening partnership between patients, families and clinical teams.



Jess’s Rule

Jess’s Rule is a primary care initiative to encourage GP teams to rethink a diagnosis if a patient presents three times with the same symptoms or concerns, particularly if symptoms unexpectedly persist, escalate or remain unexplained.

In 2026, we will work with primary care providers to identify ways to embed the principles of ‘reflect, review and rethink’ into their practice in situations where a patient presents three times with the same or escalating symptoms.


Supporting sexual safety

We continue to take the issue of sexual safety extremely seriously, building on the foundations laid last year to strengthen the sector’s collective response. In 2025, we brought members together for a dedicated Sexual Safety learning event, providing a space for open discussion, shared learning and practical actions to ensure that every organisation within the independent sector upholds a zero-tolerance approach to bullying, harassment and sexual misconduct of any kind within the workplace.

A key development in 2025 was the growing momentum behind the NHS Sexual Safety in Healthcare Charter, which sets out clear expectations for organisations to actively prevent, respond to and learn from any unwanted, inappropriate or harmful sexual behaviours. We are proud that:

  • 57 IHPN member organisations are now signatories, demonstrating a strong and growing commitment across the sector.
  • 94% of IHPN Strategic Council members have also signed the charter, reflecting leadership-level commitment to cultural change.
  • As an organisation, we have formally signed the charter, underscoring our organisational dedication to driving standards and setting expectations for members.

In addition, we continue to support providers through practical tools and opportunities for shared learning. Our Sexual Safety managers’ toolkit, launched in 2024, remains an available resource for members, outlining six key steps for well-led organisations to promote safe cultures, respond effectively to concerns and support staff with confidence and clarity.

Together, these efforts demonstrate that the independent healthcare sector is not only aligned with national expectations on sexual safety but is actively working to enhance standards, empower staff and embed a culture where sexual safety is understood, prioritised and championed at every level.


Patient safety partners

Patient safety partners (PSPs) have become a growing area of focus within safety governance across the independent healthcare sector. Emerging from NHS England’s Framework for Involving Patients in Patient Safety, PSPs offer valuable lived experience perspectives that enhance organisations’ commitment to patient-centred safety. Our sector-specific document: ‘Recruitment of PSP’s Best Practice Principles’ is supporting providers as they develop and adapt PSP roles to reflect diverse organisational structures and needs.

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