21 May 2019
During a routine inspection
The Coach House is a residential care home that is registered to provide accommodation and personal care to a maximum of 66 people. At the time of our inspection, 64 people were living there, some of whom were living with dementia.
People’s experience of using this service:
People told us and we observed that staff were kind and caring in their interactions with them. Staff knew people well and used effective techniques to reassure people when they became distressed.
Auditing processes needed to be more robust and detailed to enable the service to identify where improvement was needed.
Further improvements were needed to ensure risk assessments and care plans were accurate and sufficiently detailed.
Staffing levels were observed to be adequate and staff were available to people when they needed assistance. However, given some of the feedback we received, we have made a recommendation that the service monitors staffing levels to ensure they remain adequate.
People’s end of life wishes were not always documented fully so staff knew how to deliver care effectively, and we have made a recommendation about this.
Improvements were needed to ensure the service was adhering to the principles of the Mental Capacity Act 2005. Best interests decisions were not always in place where people lacked capacity to consent to their care.
Medicines were being managed safely at the home. However, we have made a recommendation that the provider takes steps to ensure sufficient and detailed information is available for staff to refer to about how people have their medicines given to them.
Recruitment procedures were not sufficiently robust to ensure staff were suitable for the role.
Staff understood the need to keep people safe from abuse and what was required to do this. Some staff however had not received safeguarding training whilst working in the service.
We observed staff to be skilled when supporting people with complex physical and emotional needs. However, training for many staff was either overdue or had not been completed. The registered manager was addressing this and had booked relevant training sessions throughout 2019.
Health care professionals were involved in people’s care and referrals were made promptly.
We have made a recommendation that the provider reviews best practice guidance to ensure that the building is designed and decorated in a way that supports people living with dementia.
Rating at last inspection:
At the last inspection the service was rated ‘Good’ (Report published 13 December 2016).
Why we inspected:
We inspected this service in line with our inspection schedule for services currently rated ‘Good’.
Enforcement: Action we told the provider to take is outlined at the back of the report.
Follow up: We will continue to monitor the service through the information we receive. We have also requested an action plan from the provider to monitor that improvements will be made promptly.
For more details, please see the full report which is on the CQC website at www.cqc.org.uk