In a letter received in February 2011 a relative wrote 'Please pass on our thanks to all the staff who helped make Mum's stay with you so pleasant. I felt that Mum was treated as an individual not as just another patient'St Helens Council carried out a contracts monitoring visit on 17 January 2011 and the Quality Monitoring Officer reported:
I spoke to a few residents on the day of the visit and they informed me that they were happy and settled at the home, the staff are very nice and the food is very good. One family member commented that they were very happy with the care at the home and they were always made to feel welcome by the staff. They were able to relax knowing that their relative was being looked after and that the home would contact them if there were any problems. They also informed me that they were aware of how to make a complaint should the need arise.
The home has a fully equipped salon and a hairdresser attends the home every Friday and the service is well accessed by the service users. A chiropodist visits the home on a regular basis and this is also accessed well by the service users. There is a church service provided at the home, some residents are registered with the local dentist and family or staff can chaperone the service user to the surgery. A library service attends the home once a month and occasional days out are organised for the service users. Entertainment is brought into the home twice a month, which includes, singer/dancer for all the residents to enjoy.
The home has a comments and suggestion box in the main reception area and a service user meeting is held every 4-6 months, to enable service users/family/representatives to be included in decision making at the home. The manager informed me she is looking at setting up a service user/family/representative forum in the near future to work towards improving involvement and participation.
The focus of our visit on 1 April 2011 was to observe the care provided for people who have dementia. The first floor of the home is light, bright and spacious which means that people can walk around safely. There is a choice of five lounges so people can find somewhere to sit down that suits their mood, they may also choose to spend time in their own bedroom. Many of the bedrooms had a picture board outside with a photograph of the person and some biographical details to give staff information about their past lives.
The two small lounges are domestic in style and two men were sitting in one of these lounges and three women in another. A member of staff was doing manicures for them. Another lounge is fitted with relaxation equipment. Four people were using this room and all appeared to be very comfortable and relaxed. Another lounge has been fitted out with furniture and equipment, for example a record player, from the mid 20th century to encourage reminiscence
Most people were sitting in the biggest lounge and at least one member of staff was always present. We spoke with the staff about how they support people to make choices about daily living such as what they prefer to eat and what activities they join in. There were many smiles and spontaneous shows of affection between staff and residents. One of the carers was communicating with a resident through another language that was common to both of them.
We were invited to join a meeting that the clinical manager had arranged with the relatives of a person whose health was deteriorating. The person's GP and key worker also attended. All aspects of his care were explained and discussed in a most sensitive and supportive manner. The family's wishes, and any preferences that he himself had expressed, were given great importance and decisions about end of life care were agreed and recorded. It was evident that the family members felt reassured that everything would be done to ensure that he would be pain free and that they would be fully involved with all decisions.
They said that they were very happy with the care that he had received since he came to live at Victoria six months ago. They had planned to move him to a care home closer to his home, but he was so settled and had built up such a good relationship with the staff that they decided not to do this.
The Quality Monitoring Officer from St Helens Council reported that the appropriate consent had been sought for important decisions to include the appropriate use of bed rails and advance care decisions to include DNR (do not resuscitate). There were capacity assessments found in two of the files one of which was detailed and clearly documented the decision to be made, the other was not so clear.
One file included a service user that was on the care of the dying pathway. Documentation was found to be clear, respectful of the service users wishes, person centred, consent sought where needed, GP consent, advance decisions in place and signed appropriately, next of kin details etc.
In a letter received in March 2011, a family member wrote 'After a day or so Mum was in a deep sleep but the staff still came in day and night, they turned her every two hours to stop her getting bed sores, they washed and changed her at least once a day and changed her bedding daily, they brushed her hair and put perfume on her so she looked and smelled beautiful, all the time explaining to mum what they were doing even though she was unaware of what was happening around her. The girls came in every morning to say hello and they kissed mum every night as they were leaving.'.
A letter received in September 2010 read 'We would like to express our heartfelt thanks for the care and dignity you gave to Dad whilst he was with you. He had been in and out of hospital and another home since January and nobody throughout all that time treated him with the humanity that you and your team showed him'.
A member of the care management team was part of the contract monitoring visit to Victoria in January 2011 and her findings were:
The care plans were found to be detailed and the documentation was accurate in that appropriate risk assessments were found to be in place. The care plans were person centred and easy to read and I was able to build a mental picture of the service user on reading the detail in the file. Nutrition and Waterlow charts were found in the files and were appropriately recorded. The files included socialisation, body maps, pain scales, and photographs of injuries, identification photographs and very clear documentation.' Overall the care manager was happy with the care files.
A letter received in March 2011 said 'From Christmas Mum stopped eating and drinking properly but the staff tried to coax her with all kinds of titbits and spent a lot of time trying to get her fluid intake up.'
The Quality Monitoring Officer from St Helens Council found that:
A 'Malnutrition Universal Screening Tool' is in use at the home, service users are weighed regularly monthly or weekly depending on needs. Portable scales are used and there is a scale on the one of the hoists also. Food and fluid intake charts are in use at the home and there is a four weekly roll on menu in place and the cook is flexible in meeting the needs of the service users. Read the full inspection report (PDF)