At our inspection we gathered evidence that helped answer our five questions.Below is a summary of what we found. The summary is based on our observations during the inspection, speaking with people using the service, their relatives, the staff supporting them and from looking at records.
If you want to see the evidence supporting our summary please read the full report.
Is the service safe?
We saw several examples of how staff treated people with dignity and respect and as individuals. Staff respected people's choices about how they wanted to be supported. Staff spoke politely to people, offered encouragement and explained why they provided support. Relatives we spoke with told us their family members were safe at the home. A relative told us, "I can go home knowing I do not have to worry about my mum." Other relatives said similar things.
Staff we spoke with told us about the training they had received. They told us their training had enabled them to provide care that was safe and met people's individual needs.
People received their medications at the right time. Staff explained why they were giving people their medicines and respected people's choices when they declined their medicines.
Staff told us that they felt enough staff were always on duty. Relatives and two health care professionals who visited the home at the time of our inspection also felt that enough staff were on duty. We saw that staff attended to people's needs promptly. We found that people who used the service were safe because enough staff were on duty.
Staff we spoke with understood how to identify and report signs of abuse. Staff also knew how to report accidents and injuries. Procedures were in place for managers and staff to learn from events such as accidents and incidents. That meant the service placed a high priority on people's safety.
Staff we spoke with had a good understanding of the Mental Capacity Act (MCA) 2005 and Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards (DoLS). This is legislation that protects vulnerable people who are or may become deprived of their liberty through the use of restraint, restriction of movement and control. This showed that staff understood how people's safety was respected and their best interests taken into account.
We saw that people's bedrooms and communal areas were clean, tidy and free from odours. A relative told us, "The girls [care workers] keep the home clean."
Is the service effective?
People's health and care needs were assessed with them or their relatives. Care plans included details of people's needs and information about how people were supported with their needs. Care plans and records we looked at that showed that people had received the support they required.
A person who used the service told us, "People are well looked after here." Another person told us, "I'm happy here." Relatives were complimentary about the service. One told us, "It's a family home, it's not institutionalised." Another relative told us, "It's very important for me that I know my mum is very well looked after." Two health care professionals who visited the home regularly told us that the service was effective. One told us, "The care is good. The residents always look well."
Relatives were able to visit the home at times they wanted.
We found from the evidence we gathered that the service had effectively planned and delivered care that met people's needs.
Is the service caring?
People told us they were well looked after. One person told us, "It's nice here." Another told us, "I'm happy here." We saw that staff showed patience and gave encouragement when they supported people. Staff used people's preferred names when they spoke with them and showed a caring attitude. We saw staff engaged with people in a caring manner.
People we spoke with were complimentary about the staff. One relative told us, "The staff are extremely caring. They go over and above with the care they provide." A visiting health professional told us, "The personal care here is very good." Care records we looked at showed that people had been supported with their personal care routines. People had been supported to improve their mobility. This was important because it meant that people could be more independent and move freely around the home.
People had been supported with their health and nursing needs because the service worked closely with providers of those services. We found that staff monitored people's health and made referrals to the appropriate specialists when required.
People's preferences, interests and diverse needs had been respected. People had been able to attend church services or receive visits from representatives of local churches. People took part in social activities that involved other people and had also been supported to enjoy activities that were of particular interest to them. Each day a care worker had been assigned to provide and support people with meaningful activities.
Two relatives we spoke with told us that they would be happy to live at the home in older age.
We found that the service understood people's individual needs and had supported people with those needs in a caring way.
Is the service responsive?
People told us they were well looked after. Records we looked at showed that people had been supported with their personal care and health needs. Relatives told us that they knew how they could make suggestions or raise concerns and that they were confident they would be listened to. One relative told us, "I've been involved in discussions and decisions about my mother's care. I've seen her care plan and notes. I've been able to express my views, even about minor issues and they have been addressed."
We saw that the service had responded to changes in people's needs. People's care plans had been updated to show how their needs had changed. We saw that people's care and support routines had been modified or added to in order to support people with new or short term requirements. It was evident that staff regularly read people's care plans and had provided care and support that met people's new and changing needs.
All relatives we spoke with told us that the service had kept them informed about their family member's welfare.
We found that the service had been responsive to people's on-going and new needs.
Is the service well-led?
The service had a system for monitoring the quality of service. This included checks of documentation and records and observations of care worker's practice. Staff meetings took place at regular intervals. We saw from records of those meetings that the manager had shared information about the outcome of monitoring activity.
The service had procedures for reporting of accidents and injuries. We saw that reports were reviewed and analysed and that action had been taken to reduce the risk of the same type of accident occurring again.
The manager regularly sought the views of people who used the service and their relatives. That had been through one to one discussions with people and reviews of people's care plans. Relatives told us that they valued the way the service was run.
We found that staff understood their roles and had been supported to deliver care and support to people who used the service. The service worked closely with doctors, district nurses and other health professionals to ensure that people's health and well- being had been provided for. This showed that the service had been well led.