Tensions between safety, autonomy, compliance and culture create complex challenges for care leaders to navigate – as well as for regulators responsible for oversight and accountability, as James Arrowsmith, partner in social care at UK and Ireland law firm Browne Jacobson, explores.
When Tragedy Happens
Sometimes, things go wrong. Even with the best people, policies and processes in place, tragedy can strike. This is the reality for those working across the care sector, who despite the right intentions can still find themselves overseeing the wrong outcomes.
While there are entirely avoidable situations resulting from poor decision-making, scrutiny must remain honest and fair rather than rushing to punishment. Disproportionate reactions can create change that appears positive on the surface but ultimately causes different forms of harm and reduces organisations’ ability to manage the most complex risks effectively.
The examples referenced here involve serious harm and deserve more than passing reflection. They matter because they raise difficult questions about how systems respond when things go wrong — and whether current approaches genuinely improve safety or simply intensify fear and defensiveness.
Local authority care teams carry immense responsibility in trying to keep every child in their area safe. When a young or vulnerable person comes to harm, the public response is understandably emotional. Media attention quickly follows, alongside an urgent search for accountability, often directed towards the care system itself.
The Risks of a Blame Culture
The serious case review following the death of Baby P identified failings across multiple agencies. Sharon Shoesmith, then Director of Children’s Services, was dismissed in 2008 before later winning a Court of Appeal ruling that she had been unfairly dismissed and “unfairly scapegoated”. Any suggestion of scapegoating in safeguarding should concern us all because it risks shifting attention away from the deeper systemic issues that need addressing.
The tragedy also coincided with a significant rise in children being taken into care. Some interventions were clearly necessary and appropriate, but difficult questions remain about whether some children were removed from families unnecessarily.
It is important to remember that the Children Act 1989 emerged not only because of child deaths, but also following the Cleveland abuse scandal, where children were removed from their homes without sufficient justification. The principle underpinning the legislation is that children should remain with families wherever possible.
That principle exists because removal itself is a trauma that can shape lives permanently. The government’s recent review into the disproportionate deaths of young care leavers may well identify this trauma as a contributing factor. Unnecessary removals may not receive the same public attention as child deaths or serious injuries, but they too can represent devastating outcomes.
These examples highlight the danger of confusing accountability with blame. Accountability should mean taking ownership of decisions and being willing to examine openly why intended outcomes were not achieved. Too often, however, accountability becomes synonymous with punishment.
Fear, Compliance and Defensive Practice
An excessive focus on compliance can unintentionally drive negative behaviours. Fear of blame, criticism or litigation can leave individuals overwhelmed by processes, paperwork and defensive practice instead of focusing on the human context surrounding decisions. When this happens, accountability is weakened because professionals become more concerned with avoiding criticism than achieving positive outcomes.
Crucially, the damage caused by blame cultures extends beyond excessive risk aversion. Blame can also prevent people and organisations from acting decisively when action is urgently needed.
The Southport Inquiry identified as a central problem the “failure by any organisation, or multi-agency arrangement, to take ownership of the risk.” One of the inquiry’s clearest conclusions was that agencies must stop passing responsibility between one another or minimising their involvement. Yet this is precisely the kind of behaviour a blame culture encourages.
Regulation, Leadership and Learning
Regulation and oversight remain essential parts of the health and care system, but regulators and sector leaders must remain aware of the fear they can unintentionally create — and the impact this has on organisational culture, confidence and effectiveness.
Ofsted’s decision to revise its inspection system following concerns that over-rigorous accountability contributed to the suicide of a headteacher demonstrates the wider consequences of high-pressure oversight systems. There are important lessons here for health and social care. If regulation affects people to this extent, then its influence on culture, leadership and decision-making cannot be ignored.
Good accountability should acknowledge that outcomes are often complex and influenced by factors beyond any single individual’s control. Where decisions are made with the right intentions, appropriate information and professional judgement, that is often the best organisations and individuals can realistically achieve.
This does not mean avoiding scrutiny or excusing failure. Serious mistakes must always be examined properly. But if the immediate response to negative outcomes is punishment rather than reflection, organisations risk losing learning opportunities and undermining the very cultures that support good care.
Positive outcomes should be recognised and celebrated. Equally, when things go wrong, systems should focus on learning, improvement and shared responsibility rather than instinctively searching for someone to blame.





