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NHSScotland Lone Working Workforce Policy: Equality Impact Assessment

This EQIA finds Lone Working Policy supports safe, fair and consistent practices for all lone workers. It identifies positive impacts across protected groups, with no negative effects, and confirms ongoing monitoring to ensure equality, accessibility and person‑centred risk assessment.


Executive summary

The Equality Act 2010 places a duty (known as the Public Sector Equality Duty, or PSED) on public authorities to have due regard to the need to eliminate discrimination, advance equality of opportunity, and promote good relations between people who share a protected characteristic and those who do not. The Equality Act 2010 (Specific Duties) (Scotland) Regulations 2012 (Regulation 5) require public authorities to assess and review policies and practices against the three needs of the PSED.

The Scottish Government has undertaken national equality impact assessments (EQIAs) as part of the policy development process to refresh the extant NHSScotland Partnership Information Network (PIN) workforce policies. This EQIA Results Report provides a summary of the key findings from the EQIA Record prepared for each workforce policy.

The EQIA evaluates how a policy may affect different segments of the population both positively and negatively. If adverse effects are identified, efforts have been made to reduce or remove them. However, the focus is not solely on negating negative impacts, as there is also a proactive duty to promote equality. The development of the EQIA has been guided by equality legislation and addresses the protected characteristics of age, disability, gender reassignment, sex, pregnancy and maternity, race, religion or belief, marriage and civil partnership and sexual orientation.

The NHSScotland Lone Working Policy has been equality impact assessed, and it has been determined that there are no barriers to any of the protected characteristics. The policy is expected to positively impact on eliminating unlawful discrimination, harassment and victimisation across all protected characteristics. Additionally, it will advance equality of opportunity across all protected characteristics. The Lone Working Policy may also promote good relations among and between different protected characteristics. The key findings section below provides a summary of the policy’s impact on individuals with protected characteristics.

This EQIA will be subject to further periodical review in view of any policy revision, to ensure that any negative impacts, whether direct or indirect, on individuals with protected characteristics are addressed and mitigated.

Contact

Email: ofs.pm@gov.scot

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