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Number of Local Government & Social Care Ombudsman cases with a compliance outcome recorded during the year (15415) Metric type
- Help text
- This is the total number of cases with a compliance outcome recorded by the Local Government & Social Care Ombudsman (LGSCO), formerly the Local Government Ombudsman (LGO,) during the business year. When the LGSCO find fault in the way an organisation carries out its duties, it considers whether this caused an injustice to the person who was affected. If so, it makes recommendations about what the organisation should do to put things right.
The LGSCO can look at individual complaints about councils, all adult social care providers (including care homes and home care agencies) and some other organisations providing local public services.
The LGSCO is a free service. It investigates complaints in a fair and independent way. It does not take sides. The LGSCO can look at complaints about things that have gone wrong in the way a service has been given or the way a decision has been made, if this has caused problems. The areas it can look at includes administrative fault, such as the council making a mistake or not following its own rules; poor service or no service; delay; bad advice.
LGSCO advise caution when using these statistics to monitor the performance of organisations because the number of new cases received does not simply depend on the number of problems people have with local services. There are lots of other factors to consider.
Demographics: An organisation that serves a large population is likely to see more complaints. This could also influence the kind of complaints that are made. For example, a community that includes a high proportion of older people may raise more complaints about adult social care services.
Local conditions: Sometimes, one-off events can generate multiple complaints about the same organisation. For example, there may be several complaints from people who oppose a council's decision to grant planning permission for a large housing development.
Expectations: Not everyone who receives a poor service goes on to raise a complaint and some people are less likely to complain than others. So a fall in the number of received complaints may reflect lower expectations rather than an improvement in services.
Signposting: A high number of received complaints might reflect an organisation that is good at letting people know they can ask for an independent investigation.
- Modified
- 17 Oct 2022
- Data last updated
- 17 Oct 2022
- Short label
- Number of Ombudsman cases with a compliance outcome recorded
- Status
- Live
- Output precision
- 0
- Polarity
- not applicable
- Measure
- Number of cases
- Dataset
- Remedy and compliance outcomes
- Collection
- Local government complaint reviews
- Source
- Local Government & Social Care Ombudsman
- is found in the following lists
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