25 October 2016
During a routine inspection
The registered manager of the service was given 24 hours’ notice of the inspection, because the location provides a domiciliary care service; we needed to be sure that the registered manager and other staff would be present to talk with. We also wanted the service to make initial contact with some people, who we had identified we would like to visit, to ask them if we could visit them in their own homes.
Creative Care and Support is registered to provide personal care. Support is provided to younger adults and older people living in their own homes. Support can range from personal practical care or support from a short visit to a 24 hour package. The agency office has recently moved and is now in the Priory Campus Building in the area of Lundwood close to transport links.
Our last inspection at Creative Care and Support took place on 28 April 2014. The service was found to be meeting the requirements of the regulations we inspected at that time.
There was a manager at the service who was registered with CQC. 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 and associated Regulations about how the service is run.
We received lots of positive feedback about the service. The majority of people spoken with told us they were satisfied with the service they were provided with.
People who used the service and their relatives spoke highly about the staff, particularly the care staff.
The main issues for some people who used the service and their relatives were the timing of visits varying. There had been three recent missed visits. Records checked showed these were the first missed visits in the last six months. The business manager had met the family of the person who had experienced the missed visits, apologised and put in systems to prevent a reoccurrence.
Some people who used the service felt communication between the office staff and themselves needed improvement. We spoke with the registered manager and business manager present on inspection with regard to communication. They accepted that communication was a vital component of the service and they were striving to improve this part of the service.
People who used the service told us they felt safe and staff had received training in safeguarding people from abuse. They understood how to protect people from avoidable harm and how to report their concerns.
People's care plans contained up to date information about their care and support including risk assessments. These were regularly reviewed and updated when the person's needs changed.
People were supported to take their medicines as prescribed. There were systems in place to ensure care staff were competent in the administering of medicines.
Staff had received training in the Mental Capacity Act 2005, and we saw the registered provider and registered manager followed and worked within the principles of the Act.
Staff received regular training and were knowledgeable about their roles and responsibilities. They had the skills, knowledge and experience required to support people with their care and support needs.
Individual staff supervision was less frequent and meetings were not always recorded. The registered manager and business manager were looking at the provider’s supervision policy so the type of support staff received was more varied and always recorded.
People who used the service and their relatives knew how to raise a concern or to make a complaint. The complaints procedure was available and people said they were encouraged to raise concerns. Where people had expressed concerns appropriate action had been taken.
The service used a variety of methods to assess and monitor the quality of the service. These included satisfaction surveys, spot checks and care reviews. We found the majority of people were satisfied with the service they received.