The provider is registered for this service to provide homecare and supported living services to anybody in the community. The service specialises in the care and support of people who have a learning disability. At the time of this inspection the agency was providing a regulated care service to 20 people in their own homes. This included some people living in three supported-living schemes located in both Barnet and Buckinghamshire, and some people receiving outreach services in their homes. The service did not have a registered manager at the time of this inspection. However, the manager of the service, who had been in post since January 2017, had recently applied for registration. A registered manager is a person who has registered with the Care Quality Commission to manage the service. Like registered providers, they are ‘registered persons’. Registered persons have legal responsibility for meeting the requirements in the Health and Social Care Act 2008 and associated regulations about how the service is run.
We last carried out an inspection of this service in April and May 2017. Breaches of legal requirements were found. We rated the service as Requires Improvement, and served two enforcement warning notices on the provider because of the potential impact on people using the service. These were in respect of safe care and treatment, and person-centred care. After the inspection, the provider wrote to us to say what they would do to meet legal requirements in relation to the breaches. There were also two warning notices, relating to staffing support and good governance, arising from the previous inspection of January 2017, which were not reviewed at the April and May 2017 inspection.
Our findings at this inspection reflect that, although the provider was operating one service for everyone, people still experienced different standards of care depending on their location. Where scheme manager and team leader arrangements had been stable at one Barnet scheme, there was the most evidence of good care. Improved care was evident at the Buckinghamshire scheme where a new scheme manager and team leader had been working for a few months. But at one Barnet scheme that had been without a permanent scheme manager until just before the inspection, people had been experiencing poor standards of care.
We therefore found that the provider had addressed many of the specific concerns identified in the four warning notices we had served. However, new concerns were identified in relation to the regulations relating to each of the four warning notices, and so the provider remained in breach of those regulations. Additionally, a new breach of regulations was identified relating to fit and proper persons employed. This was because recruitment checks of new staff were not robust enough to ensure they posed no significant risks to people they provided care to.
Some people were not consistently supported to access healthcare services. This applied at two schemes in respect of dentist visits. At one Barnet scheme, two people’s weight was not monitored as per their care plans, resulting in avoidable weight loss for one person and a subsequent dietitian referral. Health professional advice was not followed for this, which undermined their safe care and treatment. For example, after a recent visit to A&E, guidance on supporting the person to have a light diet for a few days was not followed.
Whilst people had comprehensive and individualised care plans, some people at one Barnet scheme received care that was not responsive to their individual needs and preferences. In particular, two people were not being supported to attend planned community activities. The wheelchair for one of them had not been safe to use for three months without being fixed.
There were occasions when people living in Barnet did not receive their assessed levels of staffing, which had potential to compromise their safety, and which impacted on people attending community activities.
Most staff treated people kindly and with respect. However, this was not so for someone we met at one Barnet scheme who experienced poor care in several different ways. Where some people needed help to communicate at this scheme, this was not consistently taking place. There was occasional use of agency staff across the service. These matters were not helping positive and caring relationships to develop.
There were inconsistencies with ensuring everyone was supported with managing their medicines and keeping medicines and household chemicals locked away where needed.
Records relating to the care of people and the management of the service at one Barnet scheme were not consistently accurate and complete. For example, one person’s care record for the whole day was found to have been completed by lunchtime of our visit. Records of injuries and bruises to people had not been consistently completed there, which meant matters of concern were not always reported as incidents. This failed to help keep people safe.
At the Barnet schemes, some staff were working excessive hours. This included shifts that were 24 hours or longer. This put people at risk of receiving unsafe care.
Whilst most staff were well-trained and supervised, many staff due annual performance appraisals had still not had them. This meant there was inconsistent support of staff to ensure that people received effective care.
There were improved systems of handling and auditing complaints. However, there were inconsistencies with ensuring all complaints were recognised and investigated thoroughly.
The provider had failed to identify and address many of the concerns we found during this inspection. The breaches we identified in respect of person-centred care, safe care and treatment, staffing, and fit and proper persons employed, showed us the provider’s quality and risk auditing processes were not consistently effective.
Nonetheless, some people received good quality care. This was evident through feedback from relatives and staff, and from our visits to schemes that had a stable management teams.
Whilst this inspection identified significant concerns for the care and welfare of some people at one scheme in Barnet, information subsequently received up until the time of drafting this report indicated improving care of people at that scheme. This included information from the new scheme manager, the manager of the whole service, and local authority staff who had visited the scheme recently. This has reduced the severity of our regulatory approach in response to what we found at this inspection.
We found five breaches of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014. You can see what action we have told the provider to take at the back of the full version of this report.