This inspection took place on 19 April 2016 and was announced. The provider was given 72 hours’ notice of our inspection because the location provided a small domiciliary care service and we needed to be sure that someone would be in the office. The service provided domiciliary care and support to people living in and around Market Harborough and surrounding villages. At the time of our inspection there were 45 people using the service.The service had a registered manager. 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 very safe with the staff team who supported them. Care workers had received training on how to keep people safe and they knew what to do if they felt that someone was at risk of harm. The management team were aware of their responsibilities for keeping people safe. This included referring any concerns to the local safeguarding team and the Care Quality Commission (CQC).
Risks associated with people’s care and support had been assessed. This was so that any risks could be identified and minimised wherever possible. This enabled the care workers to provide care and support in the safest possible way.
There was a robust recruitment process in place and this had been followed when new members of staff had been employed. All the required checks had been carried out so that only suitable people worked for the service.
Care workers had been provided with an induction into the service and training relevant to their role had been provided. Care workers we spoke with felt supported by the management team and they told us there was always someone available to speak with should they need any help or advice.
People using the service had been visited prior to their care and support packages commencing. This was so that an assessment of their needs could be completed. From the assessment of need a care plan had been produced and this was agreed and signed by both the person using the service and a member of the management team.
People were always asked for their consent before their care and support was provided. Care workers had received training on the Mental Capacity Act 2005 (MCA) when they had first started working for at the service and care workers we spoke with understood and applied its principles.
Care workers knew their responsibilities with regards to people’s medicines. They knew that they could only prompt medicines that were recorded on the medicine administration record and prompt medicines that had been prepared by a pharmacist.
People using the service told us that the care workers who provided their care and support were caring. They told us that they were treated with respect and their dignity was maintained when personal care was provided.
People told us that they had regular carers who visited them. They told us that the care workers knew them well, they always turned up and stayed for the right amount of time. Nobody felt rushed by the care workers who supported them.
There was a complaints process in place and this had been followed when a concern had been raised with the management team. The people using the service knew what to do if they were unhappy about the service they received, though those we spoke with had no concerns.
People using the service had been provided with the opportunity to have a say on how the service was run. This was through the use of surveys and visits to people’s homes. The staff team also had opportunities to share their thoughts of the service. This was through attending team meetings and individual meetings with a member of the management team. This showed us that the management team were interested in people’s thoughts of the service.
There were systems in place to monitor the service being provided though these were not always formally recorded. The care manager acknowledged this and stated that a more formalised system would be adopted.