2 November 2023
During an inspection looking at part of the service
Pages 1 to 3 of this report relate to the hospital and the ratings of that location, from page 4 the ratings and information relate to maternity services based at Southmead Hospital.
We inspected the maternity service at Southmead Hospital as part of our national maternity inspection programme. The programme aims to give an up-to-date view of hospital maternity care across the country and help us understand what is working well to support learning and improvement at a local and national level.
Southmead Hospital provides maternity services to the population of Bristol, North Somerset and South Gloucester.
Maternity services include an early pregnancy unit, maternal and fetal medicine, antenatal clinic including sonography, day assessment unit and triage, antenatal ward (Quantock), central delivery suite including high dependency rooms, midwifery led birthing centre (Mendip Birth Centre), 3 maternity theatres, postnatal ward (Percy Phillips), transitional care ward (Mendip), an ultrasound department and community midwifery services. Between April 2022 and March 2023, 5,485 babies were born at Southmead Hospital.
We will publish a report of our overall findings when we have completed the national inspection programme.
We carried out a short notice announced focused inspection of the maternity service, looking only at the safe and well-led key questions.
Our rating of this hospital stayed the same. We rated it as good because:
- Our rating of good for maternity services did not change ratings for the hospital overall. We rated maternity services as good in safe and well-led.
How we carried out the inspection
We provided the service with 2 working days’ notice of our inspection.
We visited all areas of maternity services including antenatal and sonography department, day assessment unit and triage, antenatal ward (Quantock), central delivery suite, midwifery led birthing centre (Mendip Birth Centre), maternity theatres, postnatal ward (Percy Phillips Ward), obstetric high dependency area and the transitional postnatal care ward (Mendip Ward).
We spoke with 29 midwives, 3 support workers, 6 doctors, senior leaders, the maternity and neonatal voices partnership and 10 women and birthing people. We received 533 responses to our give feedback on care posters which were in place during the inspection.
We reviewed 9 patient care records, 6 observation and escalation charts and 4 medicines records.
Following our onsite inspection, we spoke with senior leaders within the service; we also looked at a wide range of documents including standard operating procedures, guidelines, meeting minutes, risk assessments, recent reported incidents as well as audits and action plans. We then used this information to form our judgements.
You can find further information about how we carry out our inspections on our website: https://www.cqc.org.uk/what-we-do/how-we-do-our-job/what-we-do-inspection.