6 and 7 November 2023
During a routine inspection
Bedfordshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (BHFT) formed as a new entity in April 2020 as a result of a merger of Luton and Dunstable Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and Bedford Hospitals NHS Trust. Both sites provide maternity services.
Bedford Hospital maternity unit comprises of a joint consultant led and midwife led birthing unit, a joint antenatal ward and postnatal ward, and community services. Outpatient services are also provided in antenatal clinics, a day assessment unit and a triage unit.
From January to December 2023 there were 2629 babies born at the hospital.
We last inspected maternity services at Bedford Hospital on 2-3 August and 20-21 September 2022. We previously only inspected safe, responsive and well led domains. We rated both safe and well-led domains as requires improvement, the responsive domain was not rated. The main concerns we found were around safeguarding and mandatory training completion figures and infection prevention and control.
We carried out this unannounced focused inspection of the maternity services following emerging concerns regarding safety, culture, and governance. Between August and September 2023, we received 3 concerns raised by whistleblowers.
During this inspection we visited all areas of the maternity unit, spoke with 32 members of staff both during and following our inspection. This included consultants, registrars, junior doctors, anaesthetists, midwives, student midwives, specialist midwives, matrons, and members of the senior leadership team. We observed procedures, handovers, safety huddles, reviewed policies and looked at 9 maternity care records.
We rated maternity as inadequate because:
- The service did not always have enough staff to care for women and keep them safe.
- The service provided mandatory training in key skills to all staff but did not always ensure that medical staff had completed it.
- The design, maintenance and use of facilities, premises and equipment did not always adhere to safety standards. Some equipment safety checks were out of date and daily checks were not always completed.
- Staff did not always assess risks to women. They did not always store medicines securely. The service did not always manage safety incidents well.
- Staff did not always feel respected, supported and valued. The service did not manage cultural issues raised by staff effectively.
- Serious incidents were not always reviewed in a timely manner and lessons were not always learned and embedded from serious incidents and external investigation when there were poor outcomes for women and birthing people, to reduce reoccurrence.
- There was a lack of operational oversight and management of risk. Governance systems and processes to assess, monitor and manage risks within maternity services were not robust.
However:
- Staff treated women with compassion and kindness, respected their privacy and dignity, took account of their individual needs, and helped them understand their conditions. They provided emotional support to women, families and carers.
- Staff provided good care and treatment and gave women enough to eat and drink. Staff worked well together for the benefit of women, advised them on how to lead healthier lives, supported them to make decisions about their care, and had access to good information. Key services were available seven days a week.
- The service planned care to meet the needs of local people, took account of women’s individual needs, and made it easy for people to give feedback. People could access the service when they needed it.
As we only inspected maternity services at Bedford hospital, we did not rate the hospital overall.