The inspection site visit took place on 18 June 2018 and was announced. This service is a domiciliary care agency. It provides personal care to adults living in their own homes. One hundred people were receiving the regulated activity of ‘personal care’ at the time of our inspection visit. The site visit was carried out by two inspectors. The service did not have a registered manager. However, a manager from another Universal Care Services branch, who is registered with us for the Corby branch, was covering at Coleshill. This manager has applied to become registered with us for Coleshill as well, though on a temporary basis, whilst a new manager is recruited.
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.
At the last inspection the service was rated ‘Requires Improvement’ overall, with the safety of the service being rated 'Inadequate.' We identified four breaches of the regulations. The breaches of the regulations related to medicines not always being administered safely and as prescribed. The provider had not always recorded or acted on complaints received about the service. The provider had not ensured there were enough skilled and appropriately trained staff to meet people’s needs safely. The provider had not ensured staff were properly deployed to meet people’s needs safely. The provider had not planned appropriately to ensure an expansion of the service could be safely managed. Systems designed to check on and improve the quality of the service were not used. People, relatives and staff did not feel well supported by the provider.
We asked the provider to send us a report that said what action they were going to take to make improvements. A detailed report was sent to us and we have been monitoring the service since our last inspection.
At this inspection we found some improvements had been made, though these were insufficient to meet the requirements of the regulations. We identified two continued breaches of the regulations. The overall rating given to the service continued to be Requires Improvement.
People, relatives and care staff felt some improvements had started to be made from February 2018 onwards, when a new management structure was put into place by Clece Care. Most people told us there was greater consistency with the care staff that undertook their care calls now. People and their relatives gave us mostly positive comments about their care staff. Staff felt more able to raise issues with the manager and deputy manager than previously. However, further improvements were needed in all areas. People, relatives and staff were in agreement further improvements were needed and many comments made to us focused on office staff and their role, such as communication, needed improvement.
There was some improvement with systems that checked the quality of the service provided to help it improve now being in place and used. However, these were not always effective. The provider had not ensured staff undertaking audits had the necessary skills to implement improvements when actions needed were identified.
Some improvements had been made to the systems designed to ensure safe administration of medicines. However, these improvements had not been fully implemented to everyone supported by care staff with their medicines. Some people did not have the new, improved medicine administration record. This meant some people continued to be at risk from medicines not always being administered as prescribed because their administration record was not detailed. Some medicine records had signature gaps and action had not been taken to ascertain whether the medicine had been given or not.
People’s needs had been assessed, however potential risks of harm or injury to people were not consistently identified.
Actions had not been consistently taken by the provider following a serious incident of an accidental house fire. The fire occurred outside of the agency’s care calls, during March 2018. Timely action had not been taken to ensure risks to people currently using the service, from potential fires, were assessed and actions taken to minimise those risks.
People had experienced missed and late care calls and did not always find it possible to contact on-call staff when the office was closed.
Care staff understood the importance of recording accidents and incidents. However, accident and incident reports were not consistently logged at the office and there was no overall system in place for accident analysis and actions were not always taken to minimise the risks of reoccurrence.
Some improvements had been made to how complaints were handled.
Staff understood their responsibilities to protect people from the risks of abuse. Staff had been trained in what constituted abuse and would raise concerns under the provider’s safeguarding policies. The provider checked staff’s suitability to deliver care and support during the recruitment process.
Staff had received training in the Mental Capacity Act 2005 and worked in line with this to promote people’s best interests. Staff offered choices to people and gained consent before, for example, supporting them with personal care.
There were enough staff employed to undertake care calls to people. However, people did not always receive their care calls at the agreed times because care call scheduling did not always allow staff sufficient travel time between calls. The call monitoring system was not effective in identifying missed or late calls to people.
Improvements had been made to ensure staff received training and used their skills, knowledge and experience to, overall, provide effective and responsive care. Further plans were in place to refresh care staff skills.
People were supported to eat and drink enough and care staff left people with drinks when needed.
We found continued breaches of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014. You can see what action we told the provider to take at the back of the full version of the report.