8-9, 22, 24 August 2022
During a routine inspection
Elm Park is a specialist neuro-rehabilitation service treating people with complex neurological needs following a traumatic or acquired brain injury. Elm Park provides individual treatment programmes for men with complex behaviour issues, and those with a forensic history including patients detained under the Mental Health Act or informal patients.
Our rating of this location went down. We rated it as requires improvement because:
- The provider had not ensured that there had been sufficient numbers of suitably qualified, competent, skilled and experienced persons to meet the requirement of staffing. In 11% of shifts ward staffing numbers during the weekdays were below the required staffing levels of registered nurses. In 41% of shifts at the weekend there had been only one registered nurse on duty. In addition, 43% of early shifts did not have the required number of healthcare assistants on duty. There was one late shift in early May 2022 where the registered nurse arrived late, and the service was left without a registered nurse for a short period. We were concerned about the oversight at the service and the impact on patients. The service had a high staff turnover.
- Managers had not ensured that staff had been trained in stoma care, when they had a patient with stoma bag.
- The provider had not ensured that staff were in receipt of clinical supervision and appraisal. The figures for supervision between January and August 2022 were 47% for registered staff and 30% for unregistered staff. This included nursing, psychology and speech and language therapy staff.
- The patient call bell lead was not long enough to reach the bathrooms for patients with disability. A patient had to shout for help, and no one answered and had to help himself in the bathroom. This was not recorded as an incident. A patient with wheelchair was room bound for 2 days because the chair lift and main lift was broken.
- Due to current staffing levels, there had been no one to one individualised rehabilitation therapies for over six months. The treatment model of the hospital (as outlined in their mission statement) stated that therapies would be delivered on an individual basis. There were two occasions in the six-month period reviewed, when there was no registered nurse on duty. There was no incident reported in relation to these two occasions.
- The provider had not ensured that systems were in place to ensure that the cleaning of tumble drier lint, had been undertaken daily and had not ensured that all daily food safety checks and records had been completed.
- The medication key after a shift had been handed over to a non-clinical staff because there was no qualified nurse on the shift at the time of handover.
- There were gaps in the observation records of five patient records reviewed who were on different levels of observation.
- Managers had not ensured that patient emergency evacuation plans were in place for a patient who was unable to leave their room due to the ward lift being broken. Therefore, there were no plans in place to identify how staff should respond in the event of a fire.
- Managers had not ensured that systems and processes were in place to obtain feedback from staff, for the purposes of continuous evaluation and ongoing service improvements. Managers had not ensured that regular staff team meetings had taken place.
- Staff had not notified a patient of one incident involving a medication error in line with the duty of candour.
However:
- The clinic room was clean, organised and well equipped.
- The ‘as required’ (pro re nata; PRN) medication had been reviewed regularly with good prescribing practice.
- The occupational therapist assistant group activity was well attended by patients, and a manual register and daily orientation sheet were kept by the occupational therapist assistant.
- All staff had good rapport with patients, they knew their patients and were caring. Staff interactions were positive, caring and kind with patients.
- The service had appointed a dietitian to meet the dietary needs of patients for food choices and meals for diabetes patients.
- The multi-disciplinary team (MDT) treatment reviews were comprehensive.
- The feedback survey from patients was positive and indicated that staff were caring and approachable.
The Care Quality Commission completed an inspection of the services provided by Partnerships in Care Limited (BRAND -Priory Group) as part of our inspection methodology. For this inspection we looked at the registered location, Elm Park in Colchester Essex. This inspection was unannounced, meaning the provider did not have advanced notice of the inspection.
This report describes our judgement of the quality of care at this location. It is based on a combination of what we found when we inspected and a review of all information available to CQC including information given to us from patients, the public and other organisations. For this inspection, we looked at all domains, and have applied ratings to each domain and an overall rating.
Due to the concerns identified during the inspection, we served the provider with nine Requirement Notices in respect of Regulation 9, patient-centred care; Regulation 10, Dignity and respect; Regulation 11, Need for consent; Regulation 12, Safe care and treatment; Regulation 13, Safeguarding service users from abuse and improper treatment; Regulation 15, Premises and equipment; Regulation 17, Good governance; Regulation 18, Staffing and Regulation 20, Duty of candour.