25 May 2021
During an inspection looking at part of the service
Precious Homes Wembley is a supported living service for people with a learning disability or autistic spectrum disorder. It provides personal care for people who live in their own accommodation from three locations, Verney Street, Sanderling Place and 75 The Avenue. At the time of the inspection one person was receiving care at Verney Street, two at Sanderling Place and four at 75 The Avenue.
We expect health and social care providers to guarantee autistic people and people with a learning disability the choices, dignity, independence and good access to local communities that most people take for granted. Right support, right care, right culture is the guidance Care Quality Commission (CQC) follows to make assessments and judgements about services providing support to people with a learning disability and/or autistic people.
This was a targeted inspection and our focus and judgement in relation to Right support, right care, right culture was limited to the use of restraint and consistency in staffing. We have judged that, in as much as the provider had made progress there was still some work to be accomplished and further embedding of systems and processes to meet the underpinning principles of Right support, right care, right culture.
We received information about the use of inappropriate restraint. Therefore, we inspected the service to see current usage of restrictive practices, such as physical restraint, seclusion and as required medicines. Seclusion is the supervised confinement of an individual receiving care in a room, which may be locked, to protect the person and others from significant harm. We observed the provider adopted a least restrictive approach in supporting people whose behaviours posed challenges to services.
However, there was still some work in progress relating to creating a consistent and predictable environment for people. Generally, people with autism spectrum disorders and related needs find it difficult to cope with change. We found evidence people had not benefitted from a stable and consistent environment, including receiving care from regular staff for a significant period prior to this inspection. At this inspection we saw evidence the provider had begun taking action to address that. We made a recommendation about an effective recruitment and retention strategy.
Although there was a system for learning lessons from incidents, we judged this was underutilised. We found the system did not ensure underlying as well as immediate causes of accidents and incidents were understood, taking full account of organisational factors. We have made a recommendation about this.
In the final analysis, we were satisfied that there was a minimum use of physical restraint. Physical restraint had been used on one person since January 2021. The person was no longer receiving care from the provider. During the inspection we observed staff using effective reactive strategies, including distraction and de-escalation to minimise use of restrictive interventions. Furthermore, the provider had put in place interim measures to minimise further use of physical restraint. Therefore, although more improvements were required, the provider had responded promptly to make people safe by reducing the use of physical restraint.
Rating at last inspection
The last rating for this service was Requires Improvement (published 8 March 2021).
Why we inspected
We undertook this targeted inspection to follow up on specific concerns about the use of inappropriate restraint at the service. A decision was made for us to inspect and examine those risks.
CQC have introduced targeted inspections to follow up on Warning Notices or to check specific concerns. They do not look at an entire key question, only the part of the key question we are specifically concerned about. Targeted inspections do not change the rating from the previous inspection. This is because they do not assess all areas of a key question. We found no evidence during this inspection that people were at risk of harm from these concerns.
Follow up
We will continue to monitor information we receive about the service until we return to visit as per our re-inspection programme. If we receive any concerning information we may inspect sooner.