We carried out a comprehensive inspection of Larkswood on 12 and 13 March 2018. The inspection was unannounced.Larkswood is a care home. People in care homes receive accommodation and nursing or personal care as a single package under one contractual agreement. The Care Quality Commission (CQC) regulates both the premises and the care provided, and both were looked at during this inspection.
Larkswood is registered to provide personal care for up to 18 older people. At the time of the inspection there were 17 people living at the service.
The service had a registered manager in post. 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 inspected the service in December 2016. At that inspection, we asked the provider to take action to make improvements as we found systems to assess, monitor and improve the quality and safety of the service were ineffective. We also identified the adaption and design of the home did not always consider the needs of people living with dementia and there was a lack of personalised activities. These areas of practice required improvement. At this inspection we checked to see if the provider had taken actions to address these issues.
Quality assurance and information governance systems were in place, however these remained in need of improvement. The service had not been able to consistently identify or act on quality and safety issues. There was no on-going development plan in place to help ensure the service could continuously learn and improve the quality of care it was delivering.
The provider had made changes to the home environment to consider the needs of people with dementia. This helped people with dementia to be at ease in the service and remain as independent as possible. There was now a range of personalised activities that people had helped choose on offer every day.
Medicines were not always being managed safely. Recording and guidance for administering medicines and ordering, storing and disposal of medicines were areas of practice that all required improvement to ensure people were not being placed at risk of avoidable harm.
The registered manager had not always complied with their obligations to submit relevant statutory notifications or display the service’s Care Quality Commission (CQC) performance assessment rating.
There was a ‘Consent to Care and Treatment Policy’ in place. Staff received MCA training and could explain the consent and decision making requirements of this legislation. Staff had a good awareness of people’s capacity and gave us examples of how they put this into practice when supporting various people.
However, formal assessments of people’s mental capacity to be able to make decisions about different activities had not always been carried out. It was not always documented that people, or a relevant person acting in their best interests, had been involved and consented to their care. This requires improvement to help make sure people have the right support to make their own decisions.
An assessment of people’s physical, psychological and social needs was carried out with the person and other relevant people before they started using the service. People’s differences were respected during the assessment process and there was no discrimination relating to their support needs or decisions. The assessment process required improvement to make sure there was enough detail about the support they needed, why this was and what their preferred support outcomes were.
People had been involved in planning their care and had the opportunity to regularly review this. Staff talked to people, relatives and other staff to be able to know about them and how they liked to be supported. Care plans required more detail about people’s likes and dislikes, backgrounds and personal history to help staff know to meet people’s needs in a personalised way.
Everyone we spoke with said they felt safe. People had risk assessments in place and were supported to identify and manage any potential hazards to their well-being. There were systems and processes to keep people safe from abuse. Staff received safeguarding training and knew how to recognise and report any signs of abuse, including discriminatory abuse, to help stop or prevent this.
The service had enough staff working during each day and night to meet people’s needs. There was a call bell system in operation that people could use at any time to alert staff they required support. People said staff answered calls promptly. There were safe recruitment practices. The service was clean and free from odours. Staff received infection control and food hygiene training and followed best practice guidance in these areas.
Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards (DoLS) had been applied for people that required them using the correct processes. Conditions on authorisations to deprive a person of their liberty were being met appropriately.
Staff had regular training, updates and supervisions and had the right skills, knowledge and experience to deliver effective support to people. People received timely support with their medical and health care needs. The service also shared information and worked with other agencies to support people with on-going health needs. People had enough to eat and drink and had support with any nutritional or complex food and drink needs.
People told us that staff were caring. One person said, “They are always kind and helpful”. Another person said, “The staff are very nice and I get on well with all of them”. Staff said they thought being caring was one of their main responsibilities. One staff said, “Our main priority is caring. You have to be very kind and take people’s feelings into consideration”.
People were involved in making decisions about their care and encouraged to be as independent as possible. Staff listened to people and communicated with them in ways they understood.The service took steps to remove barriers to understanding for people with protected characteristics under the Equality Act 2010. People’s privacy and dignity was respected. People’s confidentiality was kept and information about them was managed in line with the principles of the Data Protection Act.
People had support to develop and carry on with their established social interactions and relationships to avoid becoming isolated. There was a complaints policy in place and people told us they felt confident if they complained they would be listened to and staff would help them resolve their problem.
People had sensitive and empathetic support with planning, managing and making decisions about their end of life care, including their religious or spiritual wishes. Staff worked with relevant health and social care services to ensure people had as comfortable and dignified a death as possible.
People spoke highly of the manager and said they thought the atmosphere and culture of the service was good. Staff told us the registered manager was good at communicating with them and they felt they could speak with them openly. One staff said, “The manager is always free to talk to if anything is wrong”. Staff well-being and equality, diversity and human rights (EDHR) were respected. However, the service required improvement to introduce formal policies to uphold staff
EDHR rights in the workplace.
There was a clear set of values that staff were expected to put into practice when supporting people. Supervisions, appraisals and disciplinary processes were used as ways to support staff to understand how to do this in a constructive manner. People and staff were involved in developing the service. The service also shared information and worked in partnership with the local authority and health and social care professionals to help gain input and advice about how improve people’s care.
Full information about the Care Quality Commission’s regulatory response to more serious concerns found during inspections is added to reports after any representations and appeals have been concluded.