Accessible Information Standard
The Accessible Information Standard (AIS) is a law in the UK that ensures people with disabilities or sensory loss receive information they can easily read and understand, and the communication support they need to access NHS and adult social care services. It requires organisations to identify, record, flag, share, and meet these information and communication needs.
Here is a more detailed breakdown:
Practical resources to help you with implementation
What is easy read?
Easy read is just one way of making information more accessible. It is a style of information often chosen by people with learning disabilities, although other groups can find it useful too.
There is no one way to make written information easy read but there are some general guidelines that are usually followed.
- Who is the information for?
- Using easy words
- Use images to support the text
- Large print
- Plain fonts
- Short sentences
Of course, easy read might not be the best choice for someone. Not everyone with a learning disability will find easy read useful. For some people it might be easier to talk to someone.
What guidance is available on the Accessible Information Standard?
Detailed NHS guidance on the Accessible Information Standard is available here:
NHS England » Accessible Information Standard
NHS England » Accessible Information Standard – implementation guidance
NHS England » Accessible Information: Terminology
Meeting the Accessible Information Standard – Care Quality Commission
Shorter factsheets about the Accessible Information Standard are available here:
NHS England » Accessible Information Standard – accessible versions
The AIS Partnership Group
NHS Cheshire and Merseyside facilitates the Accessible Standard Partnership Group; some details are below.
Accountability
The steering group makes plans, recommendations and shares best practice approaches and support / guidance on implementing the Accessible Information Standard across Cheshire and Merseyside. We collaborate with partners including NHS Cheshire and Merseyside corporate functions and Places, and wider system partners including Primary Care Networks, NHS Providers and Local Authority social care organisations.
Membership
Membership currently includes:
- Local Authority officers
- Consultation communication and engagement lead (Sefton Metropolitan Borough Council)
- Communication and engagement lead (NHS Cheshire and Merseyside)
- Digital inclusion leads (Informatics Merseyside)
- EDI officer Cheshire and Merseyside (NHS Cheshire and Merseyside)
- EDI leads NHS Providers (Mersey Care and Liverpool University Hospitals)
- EMIS digital support
- Primary care network (PCN) information and marketing officers
Aims and objectives
The aims and objectives of the group are to:
- Review requirements for AIS implementation following the national review
- Understand the relationship of the reasonable adjustment flag
- To work in coproduction
- Web accessibility – accessibility guidelines
- Ensuring information uploaded onto websites is accessible
- Developing a repository of training and resources to enable improved accessibility
- Accessible meetings and events guide
- Developing and formalising procedures across ICB and Place to access translation and interpretation (T&I) services (language, BSL, easy read and a range of different formats through the NHS Cheshire and Merseyside T&I framework)
- Developing a how-to guide to support functions across ICB, Places and PCNs to improve accessibility and quality
- Use of CYPHER at Place to support community-centred approaches and understanding accessibility needs, including average reading ages / adult literacy
- Feeding work into the digital exclusion / inclusion team
- Communication at all levels and leadership
- Roll out the accessible information advocate programme developed in Sefton
Commissioning
ICB contracts include a requirement to meet the AIS. Contracts are monitored on a regular basis as per NHS Contract requirements. In addition, the Equality Impact Assessment process includes reference to the AIS and as such, requires consideration
5 Rights campaign
The 5 Rights campaign aims to:
- Increase awareness amongst NHS staff of the five core rights of all patients with communication needs and/or language barriers when accessing any NHS healthcare.
- Increase awareness amongst individual patients with communication needs, and their carers/relatives, about what their rights are when receiving NHS care – and how to ask to for/access the communication support they need.
- Support patients with communication needs to have a better overall experience of care.