Highbury New Park is a care home owned by Care UK Community Partnerships Limited providing residential and nursing care service to 53 men and women from the local community. The majority of people using the service suffer with dementia.
This inspection took place on 3 February 2015 and was unannounced. At our last inspection in January 2014 the service was meeting the regulations we looked at.
At the time of our inspection a registered manager was employed at 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.
The staff of the service had access to the organisational policy and procedure for protection of vulnerable adults from abuse. They also had the contact details of the London Borough of Islington which is the authority in which the service is located and only this authority places people at the service. The members of staff we spoke with said that they had training about protecting vulnerable adults from abuse, which we verified on training records and most were able to describe the action they would take if a concern arose. However, we found that two care assistant staff did not appear to recall if they had received training about this.
We saw other risks assessments concerning falls and risks associated with epilepsy. The instructions for staff were detailed and clear. However, in one example a care plan said a person should be up and in their chair in the mornings but put to bed in the afternoons. It also said they should be turned regularly. The carer we spoke with about this demonstrated no apparent knowledge of this. Risks were identified and reviewed, and acted upon, however, there was a lack of consistent awareness among the staff team about how to respond to all potential risks.
Regulation 9 (1) (b) (ii) of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2010, which corresponds to regulation 9 (3) (b) of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014.
We saw there were policies, procedures and information available in relation to the Mental Capacity Act 2005 (MCA) and the Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards (DoLS) to ensure that people who could not make decisions for themselves were protected. The service was applying MCA and DoLS safeguards appropriately and making the necessary applications for assessments when these were required.
People were supported to maintain good health. Nurses were on duty at the service 24 hours and a local GP visited the home twice each week, but would also attend if needed outside of these times. Staff told us they felt that healthcare needs were met effectively and we saw that staff supported people to make and attend medical appointments, for example at hospital.
Everyone we spoke with who either uses the service, and relatives, praised staff for their caring attitudes. The care plans we looked showed that considerable emphasis was given to how staff could ascertain each person’s wishes despite their dementia and to maximise opportunities for people to make choices that they were able to make. For example, we saw information in one person’s care plan informing staff about how the person might be more able to make decision at some times of the day rather than others, to allow time for the person to respond and to observe their physical reactions. We noted in another person’s care plan file that staff were to respect a person’s right not to join in with certain activities that they did not enjoy.
Staff said two people who chose to remain in their rooms on the 1st floor were reluctant to mix with the all-female group in the lounge. In one instance it wasn’t possible to ascertain whether this meant the person was isolated although they did spend much of the day in their own room. However, a care worker was heard asking a person who did not think there were many activities if they would like to go to a special film showing at a nearby cinema the following week. This member of staff was also seen talking with people about outings once the weather improved.
One concern about communication was raised. During the morning a group of students arrived and were dispersed throughout the facility. The assistant manager who brought them into the different floors said only that they would be doing work experience for two weeks. It was left to a carer to show them around and introduce them to people. This carer later said she was trying to find out what they could do and how much responsibility they could be given as staff had not been told anything about them.
However, we did see that there was usually clear communication between the staff team and the managers of the service. People’s views were respected as was evident from conversations that we had with staff and that we observed. We saw that staff were involved in decisions and kept updated of changes in the service and were able to feedback their views and opinions through daily staff handover meeting.
The service complied with the provider’s requirement to carry out regular audits of all aspects of the service. The provider carried out regular reviews of the service and sought people’s feedback on how well the service operated.