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Institutional corruption is the phenomenon in public bodies of placing the protection of reputation above fidelity to the truth, especially in the context of an independent or public inquiry.
Institutional corruption is differentiated from corruption by the institution's willingness to frustrate or slow the work of independent formal inquiries,[1] even after official reports and documentation recognise that such an inquiry is necessary.[2]
Institutional corruption is not limited to national-scale institutions. It can be as small as a single recommendation of a report rejected[3] because an institution wishes not to admit meaningful change,[4] or the misreporting of statistics in the Stafford Hospital scandal.[5]
26. The Trust to produce a statement that captures in an easy format document as to what has changed in relation to charging so that members of the public can see quickly those positive changes.
Recommendation not accepted: Whilst the Trust is not planning to develop the statement as recommended by the panel, the Trust is committed to the learning enabled by the work of the panel...
During the course of both the first inquiry and the present there has been a constant refrain from those charged with managing, leading, overseeing or regulating the Trust's provision of services that no cause for concern was drawn to their attention, or that no one spoke up about concerns.