Safe Care provides domiciliary care and support services to people with individual needs in their own homes. At the time of our inspection 29 people were being supported by the staff with personal care and a further eight were supported with domestic and wellbeing visits. This inspection took place on 6 February 2018. This was an announced inspection which meant the provider had prior knowledge that we would be visiting the service. This was because the location provides a domiciliary care service, and we wanted to make sure the provider would be available to support our inspection, or someone who could act on their behalf.
The service is registered as an individual provider and does not require a registered manager to be in place as the provider was in day to day control. The individual provider is responsible for the day to day running of the location, and has the legal responsibility for meeting the requirements in the Health and Social Care Act 2008 and associated regulations about how the service is run.
This service was rated Requires Improvement in May 2016 and the provider was found to be in breach of three regulations. The service was re-inspected in July 2017 and was found to have remained in breach of the three breaches and a further three breaches of the Regulations were found. We took enforcement action against the provider for the overall rating of repeated ‘Requires Improvement’. We imposed a positive condition on their registration, issued a fixed penalty notice and serve a Warning notice. The provider is not able to take on any new packages of care without the prior written agreement of The Care Quality Commission and submits monthly reports including written records of staff training, audits of care plans, risk assessments and all quality monitoring conducted within the service.
At this inspection we found the service had made some improvements to meet three of the six breaches of Regulations, but however still remained in breach of three Regulations. This is the third consecutive time the service has been rated as Requires Improvement. Therefore the positive condition will remain on the provider’s registration at this time. The provider will continue to submit monthly reports so we can monitor this service and they are unable to take on any new packages of care until further agreement from The Care Quality Commission. Due to the on-going concerns we will met with this provider to seek assurance on how they will address these concerns without delay. We are now taking further enforcement action and will report on this when any representations have been concluded.
The provider and the assistant manager had spent time since our last inspection creating a risk assessment template that they felt was appropriate. However, at this inspection this was only in the early stages of being put in place and some care plans we reviewed did not have risk assessments in place and the one’s that did were not fully completed. One person’s care plan stated they had a history of falls and their carpet was loose. It recorded that the person’s walking aid would sometimes get stuck in the loose carpet which was a trip hazard. A risk assessment was in place but made no mention of this loose carpet or how staff should support the person safely in light of this risk. The service remained in breach of this Regulation.
Improvements had been made overall to the management of medicines. However when the service did not support someone with medicines this needed to be made clearer in the medicine support plan.
The care plans we reviewed were still not in an organised format. The provider and assistant manager told us they had struggled with the conflicting information received on developing their care plan format. 13 out of 37 care plans had the new template in place, however not all aspects of the person’s care were detailed. This meant a completed working care plan was not available The service remained in breach of this Regulation.
The provider had failed to meet their registration condition to submit monthly reports around risk assessments, care plans and of all quality monitoring conducted within the service. Improvements had not been made in a timely manner to ensure the service was safe, responsive and well-led. The service remained in breach of this Regulation.
The provider had ensured that all staff completed the required training to effectively fulfil their role. We saw that each staff had a training development plan in place which included regular observations, one to one meetings with the provider and an annual appraisal
People continued to praise the care they received and gave positive feedback about the staff who supported them. People told us “It’s very important to me that I only have a few carers who I know well, and that happens. If a new carer is starting, the managers will bring them out, introduce them to me and show them what to do” and “For me, they are my lifeline. I can’t praise them highly enough. Professional, well trained and just willing to take whatever time is necessary to get things right.”
The provider monitored the care people received through regular reviews with people, surveys and observations of staff. People were encouraged to be at the forefront of any care decisions made.
Staff attended team meetings and told us they felt well supported by the management in place and able to raise concerns when they needed.