Written by Stephanie Austin, Owner & Lead Trainer, Prima Cura Training
Last reviewed: May 2026 | Next review: May 2027
Privacy and dignity are rarely the loudest parts of care. They do not appear easily in incident statistics. They are not usually visible in spreadsheets or dashboards. They are also not particularly easy to measure.
Yet they are often the first things people notice when care feels right, and the first things they notice when it does not.
This article forms part of the Care Certificate Standards series, where we explore each of the 16 standards and what they actually look like in day-to-day practice.
Care Certificate Standard 7 exists because privacy and dignity underpin trust. Without them, communication begins to feel transactional, person-centred care can become superficial, and safeguarding becomes reactive rather than preventative.
Within the March 2025 Care Certificate framework, this standard quietly asks a deeper question:
Are we protecting the person’s sense of self as carefully as we protect their physical wellbeing?
On paper, the expectations within Standard 7 appear straightforward. Workers are expected to understand:
Yet anyone working in health and social care will recognise that privacy and dignity rarely exist as isolated tasks. They live within everyday behaviour.
They appear in tone of voice, the timing of conversations, how someone is positioned during personal care, how documentation is handled and how decisions are explained.
Privacy and dignity are therefore demonstrated through consistent behaviour rather than policy statements.
Privacy and dignity sit at the heart of person-centred care, shaping how people experience support rather than simply how tasks are completed.
Privacy and dignity are not simply values promoted within care settings. They are reinforced by legislation and regulatory frameworks that shape how services must operate.
Key legal and regulatory expectations include the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014, particularly:
These regulations require providers to ensure individuals are treated with respect, supported to maintain privacy and protected from degrading or disrespectful treatment.
Alongside this sits wider responsibility for confidentiality, data protection and safeguarding obligations.
For regulated services in England, these expectations are monitored by the Care Quality Commission (CQC). During inspection, inspectors will consider whether people feel respected, whether personal information is handled appropriately and whether care practices protect dignity in everyday situations.
Care Certificate Standard 7 introduces these expectations during induction, so respectful practice becomes embedded within culture rather than introduced only during inspection preparation.
When people hear the word privacy, they often picture doors, curtains or screens. Those practical steps certainly matter:
However, privacy extends well beyond physical space. It also includes:
Privacy is ultimately about control. It ensures people maintain control over their personal information, personal space and personal experiences. Supporting that control requires awareness as much as instruction.
Dignity is sometimes difficult to define formally, yet people recognise it immediately when it is present, and especially when it is missing.
Dignity is supported when:
Dignity begins to erode when people feel:
Care Certificate Standard 7 expects workers to recognise these differences and adjust their behaviour accordingly.
One of the most effective ways to preserve dignity is to support independence wherever possible. Even small opportunities for participation can reinforce a person’s sense of autonomy. For example:
Allowing someone to choose their clothing.
Encouraging participation in personal care.
Taking time to explain choices and options.
There is often pressure within services to work efficiently. Efficiency is important, particularly in busy environments. However, when speed begins to replace sensitivity, dignity can quietly erode.
A person who is dressed quickly without consultation, hurried through personal care or spoken about rather than spoken to may not raise a complaint. But they will notice the experience.
Over time, those small moments influence trust.
Standard 7, therefore, encourages workers to pause and recognise the value of supporting independence wherever possible.
Privacy and dignity connect closely to confidentiality. Workers must understand:
Confidentiality is not secrecy. It is responsible for information management. Poor confidentiality practices can damage trust, undermine professional relationships and create regulatory risk.
Understanding professional boundaries is therefore an essential part of maintaining dignity in care settings.
Care Certificate Standard 7 also introduces an important responsibility: recognising and challenging behaviour that compromises dignity. This may include:
This expectation overlaps closely with Duty of Care and safeguarding responsibilities introduced elsewhere within the Care Certificate.
Protecting dignity is not optional. It is both an ethical responsibility and a regulatory requirement. Workers should feel confident raising concerns when something does not feel respectful, and leadership teams must reinforce that expectation consistently.
When assessing Standard 7, written responses alone rarely provide sufficient evidence. A meaningful assessment should explore:
For example, if someone is asked, “How would you protect dignity during personal care?” A thoughtful response should go beyond simply saying “close the curtains.”
It should reflect understanding of consent, explanation, positioning, reassurance and patience.
Observation often provides the clearest evidence because dignity is demonstrated through behaviour rather than description.
For organisations supporting staff through induction or refresher learning, structured Privacy and Dignity training can help teams explore these situations in a safe learning environment and strengthen respectful care in everyday practice.
Privacy and dignity rarely collapse dramatically. More often, they weaken gradually.
Staff may begin speaking in shorthand around individuals. Handover may occur within earshot of others. Documentation may be left visible. Personal care may become rushed as the workload increases. None of this is usually malicious. It is a habit. But habit shapes culture, and culture shapes the experience of care.
Reflective supervision and open team discussions can help identify this drift early and reinforce respectful practice before habits become normalised.
When privacy and dignity are consistently protected:
When dignity is compromised, the opposite occurs. Confidence declines, dissatisfaction grows, and concerns may remain unspoken.
Care Certificate Standard 7 reminds us that respectful care is not an additional layer on top of technical competence. It is foundational to safe and compassionate care.
People often remember how they were treated long after they forget which procedure was completed.
Is Care Certificate Standard 7 only about personal care?
No. It applies to communication, documentation, professional boundaries and everyday interactions across all areas of care delivery.
Does Standard 7 require observation during assessment?
Yes. Observation of respectful behaviour provides strong evidence that privacy and dignity are maintained in practice.
How does privacy relate to confidentiality?
Privacy refers to control over personal space and information, while confidentiality ensures personal information is shared lawfully and appropriately.
Care Certificate Standard 7 does not require complicated systems; it requires awareness.
It requires leaders to model respectful behaviour consistently. It requires supervision conversations that explore lived experience rather than simply compliance.
If you are reviewing your Care Certificate framework, this is often the moment to pause and ask a few honest questions.
Do staff demonstrate dignity in the small moments?
Are confidentiality practices consistent across the service?
Is respectful language reinforced every day?
Culture determines whether privacy and dignity are genuinely protected.
This article is provided for guidance and educational purposes only. It does not replace organisational policy or legal advice. Providers should ensure alignment with current legislation and regulatory expectations, including Regulation 10 (Dignity and Respect) and oversight by the Care Quality Commission.
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