Our rating of services stayed the same. We rated it them as requires improvement because:
We inspected six core services at this inspection. They were urgent and emergency services, surgery, medical care (including older people’s care), services for children and young people, outpatients and dental services.
We rated dental services as good overall and outstanding in the effective, caring and well-led domains. We rated outpatients and medical care as requires improvement. All other core services inspected at this visit were rated as good. When aggregating the overall rating for the hospital, we also took into consideration the services we did not inspect, which were maternity, end of life care, diagnostic services and critical care.
At this inspection we found that:
•There were effective governance procedures in place to underpin the provision of services. A leadership structure supported the delivery of services. Leaders demonstrated that they understood challenges as well as being able to celebrate the successes.
•The incident reporting culture was well embedded and staff were encouraged to report incidents and learn from them. Staff understood how to protect patients from abuse and the service worked well with other agencies to do so.
•There was extensive evidence of well-structured, multidisciplinary engagement.
•Staff at all levels were confident and positive about the working environment and culture which recognised their contribution. This was a significant improvement from our last inspection in 2016 and staff offered numerous examples of how the work culture had improved.
•We observed nursing, medical, healthcare assistant and allied health staff provide compassionate and considerate care to patients. Patients and their relatives described staff as kind and friendly. Patients we spoke with told us that they felt staff included them in their care and that consultants explained things clearly.
•Staff we spoke with were aware of their duties and responsibilities in relation to patients who lacked capacity. The trust provided training on the Mental Capacity Act and Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards as part of their wider safeguarding training.
•The environment and areas we visited were generally visibly clean and tidy and staff followed the trust’s infection control policy.
•The culture within children’s services had improved since the last inspection. There was a positive, open culture which valued staff and was based on shared values. The service took account of the individual needs of children and young people.
•The recording of information within patient records included good completion of risk assessments and pain scores. However, the service was in the process of transitioning from paper to electronic records and there were some inconsistencies and gaps in records due to the use of both paper and electronic notes.
However, we also found:
•Referral to treatment times were below their intended targets. Information regarding referral to treatment times was difficult to access or fully understand how the hospital was working to improve this.
•Access to services and patient flow continued to be a challenge for the emergency department. Patients were often waiting for long periods before staff moved them to an appropriate ward or department once a decision to admit and been made.
•We identified ligature risks on one ward that had not been identified in risk assessments.
•Medicines were not always stored securely and managed appropriately.
•Mandatory training levels for medical staff remained low especially for basic life support training and level 3 children safeguarding training.
•There was still a lack of signage and signposting to children’s wards, the neonatal unit and clinics. There were two public access lifts to the children’s hospital and parents commented that they were sometimes late for appointments because of the queue for the lift. Parents and visitors also commented that they were not confident of the lift system and had experienced the lift stall or break down.
•Patients and families said that the Wi-Fi access rarely worked and children found it difficult to do schoolwork or access social media to keep in touch with friends and family.