About the service: Beach Lawns Nursing and Residential Home is registered to provide accommodation with nursing and personal care for up to 82 people. When we visited, 78 people lived there.
People’s experience of using this service and what we found:
We received positive feedback from people, their relatives and healthcare professionals. All of the people we spoke with felt well cared for and spoke positively of staff. A resident survey from 2019 reflected this feedback and showed a very high level of satisfaction.
Although people felt well cared for, and we found no current impact to people’s health and welfare, we identified risks people were exposed to. We found that known risks were not always comprehensively managed due to inaccurate and incomplete records. Records relating to the level of support people received in repositioning and oral healthcare did not evidence people had received the appropriate level of support. In addition to this, a risk was identified in relation to an out of date medicine held at the service that would have been required in the event of an emergency. We have made a recommendation about the medicine management at the service.
Governance systems included internal and provider level audits and regular checks of the environment and service to ensure people received good care. It was evident these systems were not fully effective, as they had not identified the risks to people we found during the inspection.
People were supported to have maximum choice and control of their lives and staff supported them in the least restrictive way possible and in their best interests. Provider level policies supported this. However, we found that records did not always contain information about who had been involved in decisions made in a person’s best interest when they lacked capacity. We have made a recommendation about this.
Staff received safeguarding training and the service had appropriate safeguarding systems and processes. Staff understood safeguarding reporting processes and felt confident that where needed, action would be taken by the service management. There were effective systems that ensured the service and environment were safe. Staffing levels were appropriate to meet people’s needs and recruitment was safe.
People were supported by staff who received regular training. Staff were positive about the training they received and told us they were supported through a supervision and appraisal process. Staff were positive about the leadership and management of the service. The service worked together with a range of healthcare professionals to support people where needed. Overall the service was well furnished, however we found that in the ‘Memory Lane’ area of the service, the current decoration could be reviewed to support people living with dementia.
Since 2016 onwards all organisations that provide publicly funded adult social care are legally required to follow the Accessible Information Standard (AIS). The standard was introduced to make sure people are given information in a way they can understand. There was evidence that where needed, the service supported people to communicate.
People's records were personalised, but we found that some improvements could be made in relation to the depth of detail recorded about life histories and end of life care planning for some people. Where needed, concerns and complaints were listened to and responded to. People and their relatives commented positively about the service management and the quality of care provided. People were positive about the activity provision within the service and the service had been innovative in their approach to the personalisation of some activities or challenges people wanted to partake in.
There were systems to encourage continual improvement. The service had empowered people and their relatives with active involvement in the relative and resident committee meetings and when interviewing prospective new staff members. The registered manager had developed strong links with the local community, including the local church, school, Dementia Friends and with the local hospital.
For more details, please see the full report which is on the CQC website at www.cqc.org.uk
Rating at last inspection:
The last rating for this service was Good (published July 2017)
Why we inspected:
This was a planned inspection based on the previous rating.
Enforcement:
We have identified breaches in relation to the record keeping to mitigate known risks and we further identified governance systems were not fully effective.
Please see the action we have told the provider to take at the end of this report.
Follow up:
We will request an action plan for the provider to understand what they will do to improve the standards of quality and safety and will return to visit as per our re-inspection programme. If we receive any concerning information we may inspect sooner.