Care Home Open Week is your shop window. Families walking through your doors will ask how staff are trained, and CQC inspectors know this is a good week to drop in unannounced. If your training records are incomplete, out of date, or scattered across three filing cabinets and someone's email inbox, June is the month to fix that.
CQC's inspection framework assesses care homes under five key questions. Training records sit mainly under "Are services safe?" and "Are services well-led?" Inspectors don't just check that training happened. They check it happened recently enough, that the right people completed the right courses, and that you can prove it quickly.
Each record should show the staff member's name, the date of training, the course provider, the accreditation body (CPD, ILM, or equivalent), and the renewal date. Under the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974, employers have a general duty to provide adequate training — and the First Aid Regulations 1981 require adequate first aid provision on every shift.
Staff who complete eLearning modules but never download or file their certificates leave a gap that's fully visible to inspectors. From CQC's perspective, if the record doesn't exist, the training didn't happen.
Work through these lists in the first two weeks of June. They're designed so a registered manager or deputy can complete them without pulling anyone off the floor. If gaps remain before Open Week, book sessions now — a scheduled booking carries more weight with inspectors than a vague intention.
Care Home Open Week typically falls in late June. CQC has historically increased inspection activity around this period, and homes recently rated "Requires Improvement" are particularly likely to receive a visit. Getting training sorted now, rather than reacting to an inspection outcome later, saves time, money, and stress. A half-day group session at your premises can cover fire marshal refresher training for your entire team in one go. Book your place on the next Penrith course here.
All care home staff should complete fire awareness training annually. Fire marshal or fire warden training should also be refreshed every 12 months. The Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 requires the responsible person to make sure staff receive adequate and regular fire safety instruction. Annual refresher training is the widely accepted standard across the care sector.
CQC inspectors typically ask to see your staff training matrix, individual training certificates, induction records for recent starters, and evidence of refresher training. They focus on fire safety, first aid, manual handling, safeguarding, and any role-specific training relevant to the care you provide. Records should show the date, provider, and accreditation for each course.
Yes. CPD-accredited online courses are available for fire awareness, COSHH, safeguarding, and other compliance topics through providers like CFST's VideoTile platform. Online training works well for awareness-level courses. Practical courses like fire extinguisher handling, manual handling, and first aid at work still need to be completed in person to meet regulatory requirements.
CPD accredited fire safety and first aid training delivered online or at your premises anywhere in Cumbria.
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