About the service Tru Care Limited is a supported living service providing personal care to people living in a number of houses, most of which were on the same site as the office. Not all people living in these houses received the regulated activity of ‘personal care’. At the time of inspection, the service was providing personal care to four people with a learning disability.
People’s experience of using this service and what we found
People were supported to have choice and control over all aspects of their lives, according to their ability. An ethos of encouraging and enabling independence and building life skills was clear and promoted by staff at all levels.
People told us that the staff, including the provider, were nice to them and knew them well. Observations supported that staff knew people as individuals.
People were supported to keep safe by staff who understood the risks to each individual and how to minimise these without compromising their independence. Risk assessments and care plans set out the support people required.
There were sufficient numbers of staff to meet people’s needs. A low staff turnover meant that people benefitted from a consistent staff team who knew them well. Staff received appropriate training and supervision to carry out their role. Staff told us they felt well supported.
People were supported to live full and active lives. Where it was part of their care plan, people were supported with meaningful engagement and to take part in activities they enjoyed.
The service sought people’s feedback and acted upon it. People were given easy read questionnaires which staff supported them to complete. People were also able to attend regular meetings where they expressed their views on how the service was run and whether they would like anything to change. People’s views were documented and acted upon.
The management team were enthusiastic, dedicated and passionate about delivering high quality support. This culture was evident at all staff levels.
There was an appropriate quality assurance system in place to monitor the quality of the service and identify any area’s for improvement.
We expect health and social care providers to guarantee autistic people and people with a learning disability the choices, dignity, independence and good access to local communities that most people take for granted. Right Support, right care, right culture is the statutory guidance which supports CQC to make assessments and judgements about services providing support to people with a learning disability and/or autistic people.
The service was able to demonstrate how they were meeting the underpinning principles of Right support, right care, right culture.
Right support:
• The service set out in care plans what support people needed to increase their independent living skills. Since our last inspection the service was providing the regulated activity of ‘personal care’ to less people, because they had been supported to live more independently.
Right care:
• Staff knew people as individuals and individualised care planning and risk assessment was in place.
Right culture:
• The provider was committed to a culture of increasing independence and promoting the rights of people using the service. They had taken steps to modify the way the service operated over time to ensure people had more independence and lived more autonomously.
For more details, please see the full report which is on the CQC website at www.cqc.org.uk
Rating at last inspection:
The last rating for this service was Good (report published 30 January 2018).
Why we inspected
This was a planned inspection based on the previous rating.