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L'Arche Ipswich

Overall: Outstanding read more about inspection ratings

320 Woodbridge Road, Ipswich, IP4 4BD (01473) 729744

Provided and run by:
L'Arche

All Inspections

16 April 2019

During a routine inspection

About the service: L'Arche Ipswich The Cornerstone provides outstanding care and support to people living in a ‘supported living’ setting, so that they can live as independently as possible and reach their full potential. People’s care and housing are provided under separate contractual agreements. CQC does not regulate premises used for supported living; this inspection looked at people’s personal care and support.

This continues to be an outstanding service that is registered for personal care and offers an innovative style of care and support. The majority of staff share the same home as the 15 people living with a learning disability, that they support. The people who use the service call themselves and are referred to within the community as core members. The core members, or people who use the service, live in their home, as a community, along with their assistants (staff) in four shared houses in Ipswich. As well as the staff that share the accommodation with the people, they are also supported by other staff that live outside the community.

L'Arche Ipswich The Cornerstone has been closely developed and designed in line with the principles and values that underpin Registering the Right Support and other best practice guidance. This ensures that people who use the service can live as full a life as possible and achieve the best possible outcomes. The principles reflect the need for people with learning disabilities and/or autism to live meaningful lives that include control, choice, and independence. People using the service continued to receive outstandingly well planned and coordinated person-centered support that is appropriate and inclusive for them.

People’s experience of using this service:

People who used the service and their relatives were extremely complimentary about the quality of service they received. One person told us, “I am more than happy, they are brilliant.” One person’s relative said, “We believe L’Arche is the best place for [our relative] to live and we are grateful for that.” Another relative told us, “My overall view of the support [my relative] receives at L’Arche is excellent, they go above and beyond. Families are encouraged to visit, keep in contact and are always welcomed into the community.”

All the staff we talked with had an empathetic understanding of the people who used the service and the help and support they needed to stay safe, to maintain their wellbeing and to reach fulfilment.

Some of the staff lived amongst the people they supported and used shared facilities. They interacted with people in an open and inclusive way, people told us that it felt as if the staff were part of their family.

The service supported people in positive risk taking, in a way that kept people safe but allowed them to make their own decisions about the way they lived.

Staff continued to receive safeguarding training and acted when necessary to prevent any harm or abuse.

Recruitment practices remained robust and contributed to protecting people from staff who were unsuitable to work in care.

People who use the service were included as part of the recruitment team in a meaningful way, meaning that people were able to help decide who was going to work and live with them. People told us this made them feel in control, one person said, “It’s like choosing a flatmate.”

There were ample staff to enable people to live active and enriched lives.

People were supported by staff who were skilled, highly motivated and very caring. This led to people being able to develop loving, longstanding friendships with staff that were maintained once staff had left the service.

People continued to be consulted over their care needs and were actively encouraged to make their own decisions, so they could retain control of their lives.

Care plans were very person centred and individual to each person. People took an active role in developing their care plans and took ownership of them. One person told us that staff took time to sit with them and go through their care plan while it was reviewed, which they looked forward to.

Staff were responsive in identifying and reviewing changes to support people’s wellbeing, including their physical and mental health.

The service continued to be outstandingly well run by a committed management team and there were detailed and robust systems in place to constantly assess and monitor the service. The service had continued to make plans to develop, improve and grow so they could offer more people an outstanding level of care and support.

Rating at last inspection: Our last inspection report of this service was published July 2016 and the service was rated as outstanding in three of the five key questions, caring, responsive and well led.

For more details, please see the full report which is on the CQC website at www.cqc.org.uk

4 April 2016

During a routine inspection

We inspected this service on 4 April 2016 and the inspection was unannounced.

L'Arche Ipswich The Cornerstone is an outstanding service that is registered for personal care and offers live-in support to people living with a learning disability. The people who used the service call themselves and are referred to within the organization as core members. The core members, or people who use this service, live as a community along with their assistants (staff) in two lively shared houses close together in Ipswich. The majority of the assistants share the accommodation with the people they support.  On one site seven people live with five assistants living in the community and three assistants living outside it. On the other site three people live with two assistants, they are also supported by other assistants that live outside the community.

The provider has progressive and unquestionably high expectations of itself; one of their stated aims is to make known the gifts of people with learning disabilities revealed through mutually transforming relationships. Another is ‘Creating mutually supportive communities with people with learning disabilities.’ L’Arche is a Christian based organisation, but welcomes all people whether they follow a faith or not.

There was a committed registered manager in post, who is creative in finding ways to support the people that use the service. 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.

There were more than sufficient assistants in place to enable people to live active and enriched lives. The assistants knew what to do if they suspected someone was being abused or harmed, and recruitment practices were robust and contributed to protecting people from staff who were unsuitable to work in care. People who use the service were included as part of the recruitment team in a meaningful way and the manager and staff were looking at ways to expand this within the organisation. The service found ways to make sure that people were able to be in control and manage their own medicines safely if they are able to do so. Medicines were managed and stored properly so that people received them as the prescriber intended.

The assistants had received a wide range of training so that they had a good understanding of how to meet people’s needs. They understood the importance of gaining consent from people while working with them and they were clear about their roles.

People participated in all the stages of choosing, planning and the preparation of their meals. People we spoke with enthusiastically talked about their role in cooking meals for their housemates. House meetings were held weekly to discuss and plan the week’s menu and shopping, among other things. One meeting we took part in provoked fervent discussion about what they wanted from life as well what activities they wanted to take part in and people who used the service lead the discussions from the front.

The assistants treated people in a way that reflected how they themselves expected to be spoken to and supported them to reach their full potential. Their interaction was indicative of two adults talking together on an equal basis. They were respectful of the people’s privacy and dignity and offered guidance and reassurance if they needed it to maintain their health and wellbeing. The assistants also made sure that, if people became unwell, they were supported to access healthcare professionals for treatment and advice about their health and welfare. They did this in partnership with people so that the outcome matched their expectations.

The assistants showed commitment to understanding and responding to each person’s needs and preferences so that they could engage in the way they wanted to. It was evident that people passed their time in the way they desired. The assistants worked hard in making sure this could happen for them while still taking risks in their day to day living. The service supported people in positive risk taking; taking a positive attitude to risk assessing helps services to find positive ways to manage risks that empowers people to make choices, while supporting them to take informed everyday risks.

The assistants understood the importance of responding to and resolving concerns quickly if they were able to do so. They also ensured that more serious complaints were passed on to the management team for investigation. The complaints procedure, as with all other communications, was produced in a format people could easily understand. People told us that if they had a complaint to make or a worry to voice, they felt confident to raise them in the open and inclusive atmosphere there was in the community.

The manager told us that they believed that complaints and concerns raised gave them opportunities to find way to improve the service they offered people.

The service was outstandingly well led by a management team that was committed to finding new and innovative ways to support the people to be citizens in the wider community, to lead a full and active life and to be in full control of what happened to them. The assistants told us that the manager led by example and was supportive and easy to talk to. The manager was responsible for monitoring the quality and safety of the service, which they did in a stalwart fashion as they did in all their duties.

The service continually asked people for their views about the day to day care they received through the services’ annual quality assurance surveys. They were also given many opportunities to take part in debates and discussions about improving their quality of life nationally and internationally. This meant that their thoughts and expectations led improvement to the service they received. The provider’s outlook was reflected in the way this service was run and they included the people who used the service in decisions about how the organisation was run.

12 September 2013

During a routine inspection

The six people who used this service lived alongside the staff who often came from abroad to work and live in the service. They all lived together as a community, which was how they referred to themselves. As a community, staff would often spend their leisure time with the people who used the service and celebrated birthdays and special occasions together.

We talked with three of the six people who used the service, they told us that they liked living in the Cornerstone. People also told us that they got on well with the staff and that they supported them to go out to do their personal shopping, to follow their favourite activities, to be part of the local community and to go on holiday. This was substantiated by the records we looked at. People also told us that their views were listened to and that staff made sure they gave them as much or as little support as they needed. One person told us, 'The staff are good, they make things happen for me.' We observed that there was a good rapport between the people who used the service and the staff. We saw that staff interacted with people in a friendly, respectful and professional manner.

There were systems in place to enable people to take their medication and to manage it safely. The staffing levels were set at a sufficient level to support people and the provider had an effective system in place to identify, assess and manage risks to the health, safety and welfare of people who used the service and others.

27 April 2012

During a routine inspection

We had the opportunity to talk with two of the people who lived in Cornerstone and where the agency is also based. Both of the people we spoke with were very happy with the care they received. They told us that they were supported to live the way they wanted to live and were able to make their own minds up about what decisions they took. They were complimentary about the people who supported them.