1 and 2 March 2023
During an inspection looking at part of the service
The Langford Centre is an independent mental health hospital providing care and treatment to working-age adults with severe mental illness or a learning disability. The service provides one low secure forensic ward, two high-dependency mental health rehabilitation wards and three acute mental health wards for adults of working age.
The Care Quality Commission (CQC) conducted an unannounced inspection of The Langford Centre on the 1 and 2 March 2023. The inspection was carried out to check if the improvements required following the inspection in May 2022 and detailed in an action plan submitted by the provider in October 2022 had been made.
One of the acute mental health wards for adults of working age (Arlington ward) had recently opened in September 2022 and this was the first time we had inspected this ward.
Due to the concerns we identified during this inspection, the CQC used its urgent powers under section 31 of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 and issued the provider a Letter of Intent. The letter instructed the provider to provide assurance of its immediate action to improve the assessment and management of ligature risks. Subsequently, the provider supplied evidence of revised ligature audits which were an accurate reflection of ligature risks on the wards and the mitigation actions for these risks. The provider also acted promptly by removing or reducing identified ligature risks which had not previously been identified, supplied staff with appropriate ligature cutting equipment in line with their policy and rolled out additional ligature awareness training for all staff.
Our rating for The Langford Centre stayed the same. We rated it as requires improvement because:
- Each of the three core services were rated as requires improvement overall. Potential ligature anchor points still existed across the wards which had not been identified on the providers’ ligature risk assessment document, despite the provider implementing a programme of works to minimise the presence of potential ligature risks after the last inspection in May 2022. A ligature anchor point is anything that could be used to attach a cord or other material for the purpose of hanging or strangulation.
- Equipment for managing ligature risk, such as wire cutters, were not available for staff to use in line with the provider’s policy. Staff did not know how many ligature cutters should be available on the wards and ligature cutters which were present were not always in working order.
- We issued a Letter of Intent because the governance was not robust enough to ensure that ligature risks were assessed and managed well. The governance processes around how ligature risks were systematically reviewed, and actions carried out were not evident or documented effectively, and this had not been identified by the provider. Although immediate improvements were made in relation to the assessment and management of ligature risks, these improvements needed to be sustained and embedded.
- Staff did not always follow systems and processes to safely administer, record and store medicines and did not routinely check medical equipment.
- Whilst the provider had recruited additional occupational therapy assistants, there was only one qualified occupational therapist working across the hospital. This meant that there was limited occupational therapy support, particularly on the high-dependency rehabilitation wards where patients needed to be supported for discharge to community settings after long stays in hospital.
- Although the provider had plans to review the service model for the two high-dependency rehabilitation wards, this service did not adhere to the current model. Whilst there had been some improvement, the length of stay for patients on the rehabilitation wards was over two years, which was much longer than the anticipated maximum stay of one year for this type of service, as outlined in the CQC’s brief guide for high-dependency unit specification.
- There were limited activities of daily living during weekends and evenings which were basic and nurse led.
- The quality and detail of patient care plans was inconsistent across wards. Patient care plans on Seaford and Balmoral wards did not always capture patient views or goals. Positive Behaviour Support (PBS) plans on Pevensey ward were not always tailored to patient’s needs and not updated regularly.
- Record keeping was inconsistent across wards. Staff recorded patient clinical information on both paper and electronic records, which posed a risk that all the information they needed to deliver safe care and treatment would not be accessible or up to date. Some staff reported that there was a lot of duplication and that documents were often disorganised and difficult to find.
- Patients’ privacy and dignity was not maintained. On Arlington ward, staff searched patients returning from leave in an area which could be observed by others. On Seaford and Fairlight wards, staff did not routinely close the nursing office door which meant confidential discussions including patient identifying information could be overheard.
- A hospital wide systematic process for sharing lessons learned from incidents and complaints was inconsistent and not embedded.
However:
- Staff treated patients with compassion and kindness and understood the individual needs of patients. All patients we spoke with were positive about their experience using the service. Staff felt there was an inclusive culture and found their managers approachable.
- The provider had made progress with international nurse recruitment which had improved staffing levels and reduced the use of agency staff. Leaders ensured shifts had appropriate staff skill mix to ensure temporary staff had the right skills and experience to safely meet the needs of patients. Staff received support from ward managers and had access to clinical supervision and appraisals.
- Staff carried out comprehensive risk assessments for all patients. They understood their responsibilities in relation to safeguarding and knew how to identify issues of potential abuse and how to escalate these.
- The provider was taking proactive steps to enable patients to access Independent Mental Health Advocacy (IMHA) services on admission and routinely throughout their admission by referral, despite ongoing challenges regarding the IMHA service provision.
- Staff understood their roles in relation to the Mental Capacity Act 2005 and the Mental Health Act 1983 (MHA) and the application of the MHA was monitored closely by MHA administrators