We undertook this unannounced comprehensive inspection on 05 March 2018. At the last comprehensive inspection on 03 and 10 August 2017, we found breaches of Regulations 9, 12, 17, 20A of the Health and Social Care Act (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014. We gave the provider an overall rating of Inadequate. The breaches related to the provider’s failure to ensure people received care at the right time and in the right way so people’s safety was maintained. In addition, the provider had not made sure people’s care was consistently focused on each person and the provider’s quality checks had not assisted in people receiving high quality care. The provider sent us an action plan setting out the improvements they intended to make.
This service has been in Special Measures. Services that are in Special Measures are kept under review and inspected again within six months. We expect services to make significant improvements within this timeframe. During this inspection the provider showed improvements have been made and is no longer rated as inadequate overall or in any of the key questions. Therefore, this service is now out of Special Measures.
At this comprehensive inspection, we found the provider had made improvements to the services people received in their homes, and they were now meeting the Regulations. People received care centred on each person, shaped around their individual safety needs, choices and preferences due to improvements in care call scheduling and monitoring. The provider had improved the effectiveness of their checking systems to monitor the quality of the service people received. This included a planned rolling programme of checks targeted on key aspects of the service, such as monitoring care calls, incidents and accidents and people's care plans. Based on the outcomes of the last comprehensive inspection, the provider had increased their oversight of the services provided to support the registered manager in driving through improvements.
Evolving Care Limited is a domiciliary care agency. It provides personal care to people living in their own houses and flats in the community. It provides a service to older adults, younger disabled adults and children. At the time of this inspection 60 people were provided with ‘personal care’ in their own homes.
Not everyone using Evolving Care Limited receives regulated activity; CQC only inspects the service being received by people provided with ‘personal care’; help with tasks related to personal hygiene and eating. Where they do we also take into account any wider social care provided.
There was a registered manager in post at the time of our inspection. 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.
People told us they felt safe in the knowledge staff knew how to meet their individual needs. Staff knew people well and the management of care calls supported staff to arrive at people’s homes at the right times so people’s safety was not impacted on. The provider’s management arrangements relevant to scheduling and monitoring people’s care calls now needs to be sustained together with gaining people’s views of their care.
The provider had arrangements in place to make sure there were enough staff to meet people’s assessed needs and risk plans had been developed further. Staff had undergone recruitment checks so the provider could assure themselves potential new staff were not barred from supporting people who used the service.
People were supported by staff who had the knowledge to make sure all safety precautions were taken. This included supporting people with the right equipment so cross infections were reduced. The provider had developed a system whereby the management and staff team were able to learn from incidents and accidents to reduce future risks to people.
People told us they believed staff had received the training they required as their needs were met by the care provided. Staff showed they were aware of people’s needs and how assistive technology and aids could support staff in supporting people’s diverse needs in an effective way.
Staff consistently felt they were supported by their colleagues and the management team. There had been improvements made to follow through staff performance to ensure people received positive outcomes from the care provided.
People were supported to have maximum choice and control of their lives and staff supported them in the least restrictive way possible; the policies and systems in the service supported this practice. This included involving people in decisions about their day to day care. Staff knew which people may need help to make some key decisions about their lives and understood what action to take so people received the support they needed in these circumstances.
When required people were supported to eat and drink enough. Staff followed the arrangements in place to support people with their health needs.
People were complimentary about the staff they knew well and how they were caring in their approaches. People told us staff supported them in different ways so their dignity and privacy was maintained during the care provided. Staff valued the improved management of care calls as this supported them in providing continuity of care to people in their homes. Staff respected people’s right to confidentiality which included care records being stored securely at the provider’s office. The provider made sure staff had information to support people if they should need an advocate.
People felt their individual needs were responded to by staff who knew how to involve people in their care so people’s choices and preferences became part of their support received in their homes. Staff were consistent in how they responded to changes in people’s needs. Staff told us how daily records together with conversations with colleagues and the management team supported people to receive the right care at the right times.
People told us the improvements made following the last inspection had a positive impact on the care they received and this had influenced people’s responses in stating the service they received was well managed.
Following the last inspection the provider had recognised they needed to have a clearer oversight of the services provided. This was so they could assure themselves care developed was of a consistently high quality. The provider and the management team had worked hard to ensure improvements were driven through however; there has not been sufficient time to show the provider has embedded and sustained their quality assurance systems over a longer period of time.
Further information is in the detailed findings below.