This inspection took place on 18 July 2016 and was unannounced.The last inspection of Marsh House took place on 29 February 2016. At that time we found significant concerns in the service’s arrangements to safeguard people against the risk of; not receiving person centred care, inadequate nutrition and hydration, inadequate arrangements to identify potential risks in order to protect people from harm or injury, inadequate measures to assess and consider people’s consent to care, inadequate systems to identify or address issues that affected the quality of the service, poor medication management, lack of staff supervision and training, inadequate measures to deal with complaints and concerns and lack of governance and leadership.
The provider did not have suitable arrangements in place to ensure that staff were suitably qualified, supervised and competent to provide safe care and the provider was not notifying the Care Quality Commission of reportable incidents. As a result of our findings the service was put in special measures. Special measures ensure that providers found to be providing inadequate care, significantly improve and provides a framework within which we use our enforcement powers in response to inadequate care and work with, or signpost to, other organisations in the system to ensure improvements are made.
As a result of our findings we ensured appropriate action was taken to keep people safe. We received from the provider an action plan on how they were going to meet the requirements of regulations Regulation 9 - Person centred care, Regulation 11 – Need for consent, Regulation 12 – Safe care and treatment, Regulation 13 – Safeguarding service users from abuse and improper treatment, Regulation 14- Meeting Nutritional and Hydration needs, Regulation 16 receiving and acting on complaints, Regulation 17 – Good governance, Regulation 18 – Staffing, and Regulation 20A – Requirement as to display of performance.
During this inspection we reviewed actions the provider told us they had taken to gain compliance against the ten breaches from the previous inspection in February 2016. We also looked to see if improvements had been made in respect of the additional shortfalls in people’s care we had identified. We found improvements had been made in respect of receiving and acting on complaints, sending notifications to the Care Quality Commission (CQC), reporting safeguarding incidents to the local authority, seeking people’s views on the quality of the service, and referring people to the local authority for deprivation of liberties authorisation.
Some minor improvements were noted with the information within people’s care files and seeking support from health professionals for people involved in accidents and falls. However, little in the way of improvements was found with respect to; managing medication safely, staff performance management, staff training , management of people’s risks from harm and risks of abuse and ill treatment, management of nutrition hydration, management of risks of infection and contamination, governance and quality assurance systems.
Marsh House provides personal care for up to 33 adults. Nursing care is not available at this location. The home is situated in a rural area close to the towns of Chorley and Leyland.
Some of the bedrooms have en-suite facilities. There is a large dining room, communal areas, hairdressing room and conservatory available for people living at the home. The grounds are well maintained with seating and patio areas. These are accessible for those who use wheelchairs and there is also a stair-lift in place. Public transport links are available and ample car parking spaces are provided.
The service had a new registered manager who had been in post since April 2016. This followed the departure of the previous manager who had been in post at the time of our inspection in February 2016. The registered manager was present throughout the 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.
The findings of this report relate to findings and evidence from March 2016 onwards when we had asked the provider to rectify the breaches in regulation.
At the time of this inspection there were 31 people who lived at Marsh House. We spoke with seven people living at the home, feedback varied due to some people having limited communication skills. We spent time observing care delivery and spoke with people who visited the service.
Some people told us that they felt safe and that they noticed improvements in the care however, some people told us things had got worse. They expressed that a lack of a consistent and regular staff team had impacted on the quality of care they had received.
People were not protected against avoidable harm. Quality assurance systems at the home had continued to fail in identifying and resolving associated risk in a timely manner, therefore exposing people to significant risk of harm and neglect. We communicated our concerns to the local safeguarding team after the inspection to ensure that risks were appropriately managed for one person we identified to be at significant risk of neglect.
We found people’s safety had continued to be compromised in a number of areas. This included how people’s medicines were managed, induction of new staff and temporary staff, how staff were supported to do their job through training and supervision, how risk assessments had been assessed and the guidance that had been provided to staff to reduce the risks, how emergency evacuation was planned and how people were protected from the risk of infections and contamination.
Mental capacity assessments were not always completed for people who lacked capacity to make specific decisions. Staff lacked knowledge and understanding of the mental capacity act and how people should be supported. For example, the provider had not ensured that people had best interest decisions meetings if they lacked capacity. We were told that people who had been assessed as lacking mental capacity were making unwise decisions and that this was not something the home could prevent or address, regardless of the fact they lacked capacity to understand what they were doing.
People’s health care needs had been assessed however, adequate risk assessments had not been developed to guide care staff. This placed people at risk of avoidable harm. Plans for safe evacuation of people had not been completed which meant people could not be assured safe evacuation during emergencies. This was the case for the most vulnerable people in the home.
Relatives told us people had been offered drinks and snacks. Especially people living with dementia and people at the end of their life. However risks of malnutrition, dehydration and personal hygiene were not sufficiently managed. People who could not eat in the dining room were left longer waiting for food. Choice was compromised by a directive by the service not to offer people a cooked breakfast after 10.30am. There were no goals in place for people who required food and fluid monitoring charts. Staff had recorded what people had drank however there was no evidence how they determined whether they had given people enough or what was a sufficient amount of fluids. This exposed people to risks of harm.
People told us they were treated with dignity and respect and we saw care staff speaking to people in a respectful manner. However, we observed incidents where people’s dignity was not supported. We raised concerns regarding the home’s ability to meet people’s needs. People had waited for up to one hour to use the toilet and staff could not toilet people because the hoist was faulty and there was no immediate replacement hoist. This had caused significant distress to people involved.
Evidence we saw showed the home had made efforts to involve people in decisions around the care they received. However, this was not consistent and had been undermined by lack of knowledge on mental capacity and consent within the home.
Feedback from relatives was mixed. Some people felt they had seen gradual improvements in the quality of care however some relatives informed us the quality of care had further deteriorated. Relatives felt the high use of agency workers had impacted the quality of care provided. They also felt the home could do with more staff as staff looked rushed at all times. We observed call bells were ringing for long periods of time without being answered. People had complained being left on the commode for up to 45 minutes. This had been reported to us before the inspection and had been investigated by the local authority safeguarding department.
There had been an attempt to improve management systems in the home however, we found on going concerns with quality assurance, audits and oversight. The systems were not robust and had not identified some of the concerns that we found.
Staff had not been effectively supported for their roles. There was no induction in place for care staff who were new to the home. This had exposed people to actual harm. There had been a number of safeguarding incidents involving agency staff which were attributed to lack of knowledge about people’s needs. There was no induction policy in place to ensure agency staff were made aware of people’s needs before they started their role. We found significant shortfalls in staff training and development. This was an on going concern which the home had failed to address and had impacted the quality of care that people received.
There was no robust infection control measures within the home. Staff were observed not following infection control measures throughout the day.