Background to this inspection
Updated
22 November 2019
Baby Scan Studio Ashford is a private diagnostic service based in Ashford, Kent. It is owned by Baby Scan Studio Ltd and was established in 2011.
The service provides a non-diagnostic, souvenir and keepsake pregnancy ultrasound services to self-funding women in Ashford and the surrounding area.
It provides 2D, 3D and 4D scanning and produces keepsakes for women and offers early pregnancy scans, from seven weeks, as well as gender scans and scans from 16 weeks. The service completes around 40 scans per month.
The location is open four days a week, on Thursday and Friday evenings as well as all day on a Saturday and Sunday.
The hospital has had a registered manager in post since registering with the Care Quality Commission in November 2016.
Updated
22 November 2019
Baby Scan Studio Ashford is operated by Baby Scan Studio Limited. The service provides pregnancy keepsake scans to self-funding women, aged from 17 years, in Ashford and the surrounding areas. The scans are abdominal and include 2D, 3D and 4D keepsake and gender scans.
The service is registered to provide the regulated activity of diagnostic and screening procedures.
The clinic has a registered manager and three sonographers who carry out early reassurance scans as well as gender identification and bonding scans. The registered manager also works as the scanning assistant and receptionist.
We inspected this service using our comprehensive inspection methodology. We carried out a short-notice announced inspection on the 10 and 12 September 2019.
To get to the heart of patients’ experiences of care and treatment, we ask the same five questions of all services: are they safe, effective, caring, responsive to people's needs, and well-led? Where we have a legal duty to do so we rate services’ performance against each key question as outstanding, good, requires improvement or inadequate.
Throughout the inspection, we took account of what people told us and how the provider understood and complied with the Mental Capacity Act 2005.
Services we rate
This service had not previously been rated using the current methodology. We rated it as Requires improvement overall because:
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The service did not provide mandatory training for staff and there was no ongoing inhouse training for fire safety, manual handling or health and safety.
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The safeguarding adult and children’s policy was only reviewed five yearly and we found links to current local safeguarding services were out of date, no longer available and did not reference the most recent guidance.
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The service did not follow a clear process to ensure all staff had pre-employment checks before working with the service. The registered manager did not request references or apply for disclosure and barring service (DBS) checks prior to staff working there. However, the registered manager had applied for DBS checks for all staff that were relevant to the service and we saw evidence of certificates. Prior to our inspection, the registered manager contacted the sonographer’s main place of work and requested employee references.
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A risk management policy was in place. However, we found the information minimal and did not detail how a risk should be reported by staff. Staff told us they would report any risks to the registered manager but was not aware of how to document a risk. Risk assessments did not give clear guidance on the type of risk, there was no description of the risk and no documentation to show how the service reduced risks. Risk assessments were not always reviewed, documentation was at times unreadable and written in pencil. Written records are a legal document and therefore should be written in ink so as transparent and legible.
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We found policies and protocols were written by an external company and did not have a clinical oversight of the service. This meant policies did not always relate specifically to the service. For example, the complaints policy mentioned a clinic not related to the service. We found the service did not have systems or procedures in place to ensure policies were regularly reviewed or referenced current guidelines.
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The service did not have a policy which referred to the Mental Capacity Act, 2005 and there was no service specific training on mental capacity. The register manager had not received mental capacity training. However, sonographers told us they had completed mental capacity training within their other employment.
However, we found that:
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Staff cared for women who used the service with compassion. Feedback from women told us that staff treated them with kindness and patience.
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Staff spoke with women in a sensitive and calming manner. Staff provided a warm and relaxing environment for women, relaxing music and appropriate lighting for ultrasound scans. We reviewed comments from women who used the service, which indicated they felt comfortable and calm throughout their scan.
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Staff provided reassurance and support for anxious women during their first scan appointments. We saw staff speak calmly and in a reassuring manner throughout scans.
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The clinic gave women enough time during scan appointments and feedback from service users was that they did not feel rushed during their scan. We observed four women attending clinic and they were not rushed during or after their appointments.
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The service did not have a waiting list for ultrasound appointments. Women were offered appointments for the same week they asked for one. The registered manager told us they were flexible with appointments and tried to accommodate appointment requests.
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The service had comment cards for service user feedback, which women and their families were asked to complete. Women were also able to leave reviews of the service on the website and social media pages.
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We observed the registered manager engage positively with service users and staff. Staff we spoke to told us the registered manager was supportive and we observed good working relationships between manager and staff.
Following this inspection, we told the provider that it must take actions to comply with regulations and it should make improvements to help the service to improve. We issued the provider with two requirement notices. The details are at the end of the report.
Dr Nigel Acheson
Deputy Chief Inspector of Hospitals (London and South)
Updated
22 November 2019
We rated this service as requires improvement because it did not have effective governance systems in place, to manage risks, to ensure policies were right for the service and pre-employment checks took place.