21 - 22 November 2023
During a routine inspection
Our rating of this service went down. We rated it as inadequate because:
- Staff had failed to follow the Mental Health Act Code of Practice when caring for a patient in long term segregation. Staff had not recognised this as segregation despite the patient not being able to freely mix with other patients on the ward for five months.
- Managers failed to ensure patients who received medicines covertly had a care plan in place detailing how staff complete this safely. Patients who received medicines through a percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) also had no detailed care plan in place instructing staff how to ensure medicines given by this route follows best practice guidance.
- Staff had not consistently followed the Mental Capacity Act when assessing capacity to make specific decisions relating to medicines and the use of an electronic cigarette (vaporiser).
- Staff could not locate all agency staff induction paperwork. We were not assured that this consistently took place. There was a lack of detail within agency staff profiles, particularly around mandatory training, what levels they had completed and when.
- Due to the provider using a number of different care agencies to cover shifts, we were not assured that they had all received reducing restrictive interventions training in line with the providers own policy, and in line with national guidance.
- The service had not had any regular psychology staff in post for at least 12 months despite some individual care plans listing psychological interventions and / or goals.
- The provider used a high volume of agency staff to cover shifts. The majority of these were healthcare assistants. Agency healthcare assistants did not have access to patients’ electronic notes. They had to rely upon other staff inputting information on their behalf.
- Staff did not always follow individual care plans relating to oral health and mouthcare, and cleaning and rotation of percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) sites.
- Patients had not consistently received feedback following on from suggestions made or concerns raised during community meetings.
However:
- Staff developed holistic, recovery-oriented care plans informed by a comprehensive assessment.
- Managers ensured staff had regular supervision and an annual appraisal of their work.
- Staff actively involved patients, families and carers in care decisions when it was possible to do so, and appropriate consent had been sought.
- Staff teams held regular team meetings which were recorded.
- We saw some kind and caring interactions between staff and patients during inspection.
- We spoke with some highly motivated and compassionate staff members.
- We saw the wards had a variety of easy read documents.