Local Government Reorganisation 2026
Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman unveils new five-year strategy, plans for name change
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The Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman (PHSO) has launched its new five-year strategy and announced plans to rename itself as the ‘Public Service Ombudsman’.
The Ombudsman investigates complaints ranging from issues with child maintenance, driving licences and immigration, to serious failings in the NHS, including delayed treatment, misdiagnosis and avoidable harm.
The PHSO said the changes take place “in a challenging environment where demand for Ombudsman services is increasing”.
Last year, the NHS received more than 256,000 written complaints - almost double the number a decade ago - while the PHSO considered more than 43,000 complaints, over 14% higher than the year before.
The PHSO said its new strategy, running from April 2026 to March 2031, sets out a vision to become “a more established and influential voice in public service improvement, raising standards and driving system-level change across the NHS, government departments and other public bodies”.
It added that it would take a more active role in using complaints data and wider evidence to identify risks, prevent harm and strengthen accountability.
The strategy focuses on three priorities:
- Driving public service improvement: “Focusing on systemic issues, making evidence and data more accessible, working with partners to set standards, and tracking the impact of recommendations.”
- Improving the user experience: “Creating a clearer, more accessible and person-centred service, using digital tools and AI-enabled pathways to reduce delays and improve engagement.”
- Raising awareness and trust: “Building a stronger identity, supporting Parliamentary scrutiny, and reaching underrepresented groups whose voices are often unheard.”
The name change will meanwhile take place in late 2026 “to better reflect the wider mission to improve public services”.
The PHSO said: “The change will make it clearer what the organisation does, helping more people understand how it can support them and how it uses complaints to improve public services.”
Ombudsman Paula Sussex said: “Public services are under immense pressure, and trust between citizens and the state is fragile. Mistakes will happen – how those mistakes are addressed, and what is learned from them, is crucial to rebuilding that trust.
“People need to know their voice will not disappear into the system and that their voices can lead to meaningful change.
“Our strategy marks a new chapter. Alongside delivering fair outcomes for individuals, we will take a more active role in helping public services learn from mistakes, prevent harm and improve for everyone.
“This means identifying risks earlier, identifying and tackling root causes with partners, and strengthening accountability across public services.”
She added: “Our name change reflects our mission — creating a clear, recognisable identity so people can find us, understand what we do, and trust our role in shaping better public services.”
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