Joanna Barton, National Workforce Delivery Lead, Skills for Care, explores how safe and effective delegation of healthcare tasks is strengthening collaboration between health and social care, empowering care workers, and improving outcomes for the people they support.
In adult social care, collaborative care is more than a concept—it’s a practical approach to delivering high-quality support. As the sector faces increasing demand and workforce pressures, working together across roles and organisations has never been more important. One way this is being achieved is through the safe and structured delegation of healthcare activities from registered professionals to care workers.
Delegated healthcare activities involve a registered professional—such as a nurse, physiotherapist, or occupational therapist—transferring specific activities to a care worker. These might include supporting with medication, assisting with mobility, monitoring health indicators, or helping with nutrition and hydration.
When done well, delegation strengthens the care team, improves continuity, and ensures that people receive timely, person-centred support. That’s why continued funding for delegated healthcare is a recommendation of the Workforce Strategy for Adult Social Care.
Delegation is a relationship-based approach built on trust, communication, and shared responsibility. It enables professionals and care workers to work together in new ways, recognising each other’s strengths and placing the person receiving care at the centre of every decision.
What makes delegation work?
Delegated healthcare activities are most effective when they are grounded in the guiding principles that support safe, person-led care. The Skills for Care framework outlines four key principles that underpin successful delegation:
- Person-centred care
Delegation must always begin with the individual receiving support. The activity should be tailored to their needs, preferences, and goals. Care workers, often the most consistent presence in someone’s life, can deliver delegated activities in a way that strengthens trust and continuity—provided the delegation is responsive to what matters most to the person.
Delegation should never be a one-size-fits-all approach. It must be flexible, inclusive, and rooted in a deep understanding of the person’s lived experience.
- Learning and development, skills and competency
Care workers must be supported to develop the skills and confidence needed to carry out delegated activities safely and effectively. This includes structured training, practical supervision, and opportunities for ongoing learning.
Registered professionals play a key role in assessing competence and providing feedback. Learning should be continuous—not just at the point of delegation, but throughout the working relationship. When care workers are well-trained and supported, delegation becomes a tool for empowerment and professional growth.
- Monitoring and review
Delegation is not a one-off event—it requires regular oversight. Registered professionals must monitor how delegated activities are being carried out and review them in partnership with care workers and the person receiving care.
This includes checking for changes in the person’s condition, ensuring the activity remains appropriate, and making adjustments where needed. Monitoring and review help maintain safety, build confidence, and ensure that delegation continues to meet the person’s needs over time.
- Governance, regulation and accountability
Delegation must be underpinned by clear governance. This includes written protocols, defined responsibilities, escalation routes, and documentation. Everyone involved should understand who is accountable, what is expected, and how decisions are made.
Strong governance ensures consistency, transparency, and safety. It also supports collaboration between organisations—particularly between health and social care—by creating shared standards and expectations around delegated activities.
Collaboration in action
Across the UK, examples of successful delegation are emerging. In some areas, care workers are supporting with wound care, rehabilitation exercises, or health monitoring—activities that would previously have required a registered professional to be present. These models are improving access to care, reducing delays, and enhancing the experience of people who draw on support.
Feedback from care workers shows that delegation can be empowering. It gives them a greater sense of purpose and recognition, and it opens up career development opportunities. For registered professionals, delegation allows them to focus on complex decision-making while knowing that trusted colleagues are delivering day-to-day support.
For people receiving care, the impact can be life-changing. As Rob Moriarty, who receives support from personal assistants, shared “This has completely transformed not only the way my care is delivered, but my whole life.”
This quote captures the essence of person-centred delegation—where trust, training, and collaboration come together to improve not just services, but lives.







