Over 20 years experience of training in the care sector

Call us on

020 3129 5667

How Can Supported Living Services Keep People Safe?

Supported Living

Introduction 
Supported living gives people more independence, but providers must still make sure care is safe, effective and dignified. Safety in this context is about much more than physical security, it includes safeguarding, health and wellbeing, rights, and the balance between independence and protection. Regulators across the UK (CQC, SSSC, Social Care Wales, NISCC) expect providers to show clear systems for managing risk while enabling choice. 

Key areas of safety in supported living 

  • Safeguarding. Staff must recognise and report concerns promptly. Services should follow local safeguarding procedures for adults and children. 
  • Health and safety. Safe homes, equipment checks, fire safety drills and clear infection control procedures are essential. 
  • Medication safety. Where staff support with medicines, robust policies, competency checks and accurate recording are required. 
  • Risk management. Risk assessments should be person-centred, focusing on positive risk-taking that supports independence while reducing harm. 
  • Staff competence. All staff must complete mandatory training (e.g. safeguarding, IPC, moving & handling) and be regularly refreshed and supervised. 
  • Culture of openness. The Duty of Candour requires honesty when things go wrong, with learning used to improve practice. 


Balancing safety with independence
 

  • Over-protection can take away rights; under-support can create avoidable harm. 
  • Staff should work with people, families and advocates to agree how risks are managed. 
  • Regulators will look for evidence that services balance these needs, promoting freedom while safeguarding wellbeing. 


What inspectors look for (CQC England)
 

  • Evidence that policies and practice prevent abuse, neglect and unsafe care. 
  • Records showing how risk assessments link to personal goals. 
  • Examples of staff acting on concerns and learning from incidents. 


Practical advice for teams
 

  • Make safeguarding everyone’s business: use supervision, team meetings and training refreshers. 
  • Review care and risk plans regularly, adapting as needs or preferences change. 
  • Encourage a culture where staff and tenants feel safe to raise issues without fear. 


References
 

 

Download our Knowledge Hub E-Book.

Click below to access our full Knowledge Hub E-Book, featuring this article, related insights, and other key topics across health and social care, with links to trusted resources and official websites.


CareTutor delivers training that is fully accredited and regulator aligned.

👉 Book a free demo today.