Oxlip House is a newly built building consisting of 52 apartments, which can be part owned or rented. It is a joint venture between Bedford Pilgrims Housing Association (BPHA) and The Orders of St John Care Trust (OSJCT).The BPHA developed the building , will maintain it and provide the sales service. The OSJCT will manage the accommodation and provide the very sheltered, extra care service. The Orders of St John Care Trust is registered with us at this location, as a domiciliary care agency. They work within the restraints of agreed care packages, drawn up with each individual based on their care needs. Everyone who lives in one of the apartments are contracted to buy a minimum number of care hours from the care agency, three hours a week for those with a shared ownership and four hours a week for those renting. This may involve complex care packages or simply shopping and cleaning.
Extra care housing is designed to provide accommodation with a care agency based in the same location so that the care they provide, within a care package, can be flexible and available 24-hours a day.
During our visits to Oxlip House, we spoke to the majority of the people living in the apartments. They had many concerns about various elements of the service they were provided with.
Some of the concerns involved the way the apartments were sold to people. The care agency was not involved in the sale of the apartments and so we were not able to comment on this aspect of people's worries.
People also had concerns about some of the services provided within the building, for example the call bell system, the phone exchange, the way staff communicated with each other and how entry into the building was managed. These areas did have an impact on the quality of care people received, but were not strictly speaking the responsibility of the care agency as these facilities were installed to the specification of the developers and the Orders of St John Care Trust were not consulted on their functionality beforehand. However, because of the detrimental impact they were having on people, the agency have undertaken to negotiate with the manufacturer to improve their effectiveness.
Some of the people we spoke with told us that they thought that they were moving into a care home. They were disappointed to find out that that the support they would receive from the care staff would be constrained by the contracted hours they had agreed to pay for or had been allocated within a care package drawn up by the local authority.
The agency provided 24-hour care, but only to those people who have been assessed as needing 24-hour care as part of their care package or have agreed to pay for that facility. The care staff will respond if people need emergency assistance outside their contracted hours but, unlike a care home, they are unable to do favours and carryout non-care related tasks outside people's care visits.
People using the agency also told us about the problems they had when staff supported them. They told us that their visits were often interrupted by the staff having to respond to the phones that they carried. Staff used them to communicate with each other and the call bell system diverted calls through to these phones.
In addition, when there was no one based in the office, the front door intercom was also directed to the handsets carried by staff. This led to staff being called away in the middle of people's allotted visits to deal with emergency calls and visitors. People felt that their care support time was wasted by staff needing to stop to answer the phone while they were working with them.
People using the agency told us how disturbing this was and that they never really felt that they were getting the carer's full attention and sometimes, that they were not getting the time they had paid for.
People also told us that at times staff arrived late and then needed to rush off and cut visits short. One person told us that they only needed assistance with a medical appliance in the morning to enable them to be able get themselves up and out of bed. They would like this task to be done early, otherwise the result was they got up late and sometimes missed appointments. They had been told that due to the pressure on staff at this time of the morning their request could not be met, they felt this was unfair as it impacted on the whole of their day.
We were also told that the manager was not approachable, did not always communicate effectively, was dismissive and was sometimes rude to people.