This was an announced inspection which took place on 15,16 and 19 June 2017. Two days before our inspection we contacted the service and told them of our plans to carry out a comprehensive inspection. This was because the location provides a domiciliary care service and we needed to be sure that the registered manager would be at the office. True Homecare Limited is a domiciliary care service that provides personal care to people who live in their own homes. At the time of the inspection there were 93 people using the regulated services of personal care. The inspection was undertaken by one adult social care inspector.
The service was last inspected in June 2016. During that inspection we found breaches of one of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) regulations 2014. This resulted in us making two requirement actions. This was because medicines were not being managed safely and risks were not being assessed or mitigated properly. We also made three recommendations; that the service developed recording systems in relation to monitoring service quality and safety, that a structured approach to the provision of supervision and appraisal to staff be developed and that it improved its approach to care planning and assessment.
Following the inspection the provider wrote to us to tell us what action they intended to take to ensure they met all the relevant regulations. During this inspection we checked if the required improvements had been made. We found that improvements had been made, the requirement actions had been met and the service had acted on our recommendations.
The service has a registered manager who was present during our inspection. 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.
All the people we spoke with were positive about the registered manager and the way they ran the service. Staff spoke very respectfully and fondly about the registered manager. We spent time with the registered manager throughout our inspection and found them to be committed to providing a good quality person centred service. Staff we spoke with shared this commitment.
There was a safe system in place for managing people’s medicines.
Individual and environmental risk assessments were person centred and gave staff guidance on how to minimise and manage identified risks. Care records, including initial assessments, were detailed and person centred. They contained information based on people’s needs and wishes and were sufficiently detailed to guide staff in how to provide the support people required. One staff member said, “The care plans tell us everything people want us to do and how they want things to be done.”
Care records, including care plans and risk assessments, had been reviewed regularly to ensure they reflected people’s changing needs and wishes. We saw that people who used the service had been involved in the reviews.
People who used the service told us they felt safe. Staff had received training in safeguarding adults. Staff were able to tell us how to identify and respond to allegations of abuse. They were also aware of the responsibility to ‘whistle blow’ on colleagues who they thought might be delivering poor care to people.
There was a safe system of recruitment in place which helped protect people who used the service from unsuitable staff. Staff received the induction, training, support and supervision they required to ensure they had the skills and knowledge needed to carry out their roles effectively. Staff told us they felt supported.
Visits were planned well. People told us the service was reliable and staff had enough time to provide them with the support they required. One person said, “They come at regular times and know what I want.”
Procedures were in place to prevent and control the spread of infection and systems were in place to deal with any emergency that could affect the provision of care.
People in their own homes are not subject to Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards ( DoLS). However, staff were trained in the Mental Capacity Act (MCA) and DoLS to ensure they were aware of the principles. People who used the service told us they were consulted about the care provided and staff always sought their consent before providing support.
People supported by the service lived in their own homes and could therefore eat what they wanted. People we spoke with told us staff supported them with their meals. Staff had received training in food hygiene, nutrition and hydration.
People we spoke with told us staff arranged health care appointments for them and accompanied them if needed. People who used the service said, “I am going to the dentist next week. Straight away [when the appointment was made] they said they would go [with the person]” and “They support me to go to the hospital and to appointments.”
People who used the service told us the staff were helpful, caring and friendly. They told us “They carers are good people”, “They are absolutely wonderful, nothing is too much trouble for them.” During our inspection we saw staff had a good rapport with the people they were supporting. We observed interaction that were relaxed and friendly. Staff we spoke with took pride in the person centred and caring nature of the service provided.
Staff and managers of the service had detailed knowledge of people and were able to tell us what was important to people, their likes and dislikes and the support they required.
Staff meetings were held regularly where staff had an opportunity to raise any issues and were used to look a developing good practice. Staff we spoke with liked working for the service and one told us, “We are more than work colleagues, we’re like family. We [the service] have doubled in size but we have retained that.”
There was a good system of quality assurance in place. The registered manager and other managers of the service carried out weekly and monthly checks and audits. These were used to assess, monitor and review the service.
Information was given to people who used the service to let them know what to expect from the service. Arrangements were in place to seek feedback from people who used the service. People we spoke with knew how to complain and were confident the managers of the service would deal with any issues they raised.
The CQC rating and report from the last inspection was displayed in the office and on the providers website.