Aylestone Health Centre

Accessible Information Standard

Accessible Information Standard 

Summary

The Accessible Information Standard (AIS) aims to make sure that people who have a disability, impairment or sensory loss get information that they can access and understand and any communication support that they need from health and care services.

The Standard tells organisations how they should make sure that patients and services users and their carers and parents can access and understand the information they are given.  This includes making sure that people get information in accessible formats.

The Standard also tells organisations how they should make sure that people get support from a communication professional if they need it and about changing working practices to support effective communication.

By law (Section 250 of the Health and Social Care Act 2010), all organisations that provide NHS care or adult social care must follow the Standard in full. 

Organisations that commission NHS care and / or adult social care for example; Clinical Commissioning Group (CCGs), must also support implementation of the Standard by providing organisations.

What does the Standard tell organisations to do?

As part of the Accessible Information Standard, organisations that provide NHS care or adult social care must do five things.  They must:

1. Ask people if they have any information or communication needs and find out how to meet their needs.

2. Record those needs clearly and in a set way.

3. Highlight or flag the person’s file or notes so it is clear that they have information or communication needs and how to meet those needs.

4. Share information about people’s information and communication needs with other providers of NHS and adult social care, when they have consent or  permission to do so.

5. Take steps to ensure that people receive information which they can access and understand and receive communication support if they need it.

What does the Standard include?

The standard says that patients, service users, carers and patients with a disability, impairment or sensory loss should:

1. Be able to contact and be contacted by services in accessible ways i.e. via email or testing.

2. Receive information and correspondence in formats they can read and understand i.e. braille, easy read or large print.

3. Be supported by a communication professional at appointments if this is needed to support conversation, i.e. a British Sign Language Interpreter.

4. Get support from health and care staff and organisations to communicate i.e. to lip-read or use a hearing aid.