We inspected this service on 3 and 25 November 2015. The inspection was unannounced. Baytree Lodge is a care home registered for a maximum of twelve adults who have mental health needs. At the time of our inspection there were eleven people living at the service. The provider is also registered to provide personal care at a supported living unit next door.
The service is located in two large adjoining houses, on two floors with access to a back garden.
We previously inspected the service on 7 September 2015. Breaches of legal requirements were found. This was because we found that medicines were not being managed safely. There were ineffective procedures in place that could place people at risk of infection and there were some repairs required to the premises to make the building safe for the people living at the service. In relation to these breaches we served an enforcement warning notice against the provider.
There were other breaches of legal requirements relating to employment of staff, managing people’s money, meeting people’s nutritional needs and the overall management of the service.
You can read the report from our last comprehensive inspection by selecting the 'all reports' link for Baytree Lodge on our website at www.cqc.org.uk
We carried out a full comprehensive inspection on 3 and 25 November to check the progress the provider had made in relation to the enforcement warning notice and the other breaches of legal requirements.
At the time of the inspection there was no registered manager in place due to changes in personnel within the organisation. An acting manager was responsible for the day to day running of 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.
At this inspection, we found that all medicines were now stored safely, and there was no backlog of medicines awaiting disposal. When we checked supplies of medicines against people’s medicines records, there were no discrepancies, providing assurance that people were now receiving their medicines as prescribed. This meant the provider was no longer in breach of the regulations in relation to the issues previously identified.
At the inspection on 7 September 2015 we found that people were not protected from the risks of infection, as there were ineffective cleaning and food hygiene processes in place. The residents’ fridge was not clean. In the fridge in the main kitchen there were two open cartons of food with no date of opening on them so people were at risk of eating food that was no longer fresh.
Also, some of the equipment for cleaning the home was not in good condition and there was evidence of poor cleanliness in some communal areas.
At this inspection on 3 and 25 November we found there were significant improvements and people were no longer at risk of infection. The residents’ fridge was clean, and we saw packets of food that were opened, dated and sealed. Sinks in the communal bathrooms were clean and there were facilities for people to dry their hands. The cupboards in the main kitchen and the residents’ kitchen were clean. There had been evidence of pests in the main kitchen but the provider had ensured a pest control organisation were managing the problem.
The mops for cleaning the home which were identified as a hygiene risk at the last inspection due to their condition, were now replaced and there were suitable buckets to implement effective hygiene control. We noted the floor in the residents’ kitchen whilst not yet repaired was clean. The provider has since confirmed the flooring has been replaced.
The mice droppings we identified in the airing cupboard on the first floor at the previous inspection were no longer in evidence. The pest control agency had identified them as pellets of poison not mice droppings.
At the inspection on 7 September 2015 we saw parts of the building were in a poor state of repair. In one of the laundry rooms there was a cupboard door hanging off its hinges and the shelf was sufficiently damaged to be unsafe to hold anything of weight. At this inspection we saw this was now replaced by a new cupboard.
The provider had identified additional maintenance issues that required repair in the bedrooms of people who lived at the service. With the exception of one shower these had been completed.
During this inspection we observed good interactions between staff and people using the service. People using the service informed us they were mostly satisfied with the care and services provided.
At the inspection on 7 September we found Halal food was not routinely provided for a Muslim person who used the service. At this inspection we found evidence of Halal meat being bought on a regular basis and people living at the service told us the range and amount of food had improved in the last few months.
We reviewed risk assessments and care plans for people using the service. We found most risk assessments and care plans had been updated, however there was not enough detail in some of the documents to support staff to provide the best care to the people using the service.
Staff recruitment procedures had improved since our inspection on 7 September, and there was evidence of supervision taking place on a regular basis.
The home had an activities programme but people still did not have enough social and leisure opportunities.
The quality monitoring systems and records had improved since our inspection on 7 September. The acting manager was now monitoring hygiene and infection control processes and carrying out audits in relation to medicines management and financial management of people’s money. Management of people’s money was well managed to prevent abuse.
Staff had been provided with some training but there was no systematic process to check all staff had received mandatory training in areas such as safeguarding adults or the Mental Capacity Act 2005. This meant that staff did not have sufficient training to enable them to care effectively for people.
We identified a new breach in relation to staff training that placed people at risk of not receiving care from suitably skilled staff.
You can see what action we told the provider to take at the back of the full version of the report.