West Hertfordshire Hospitals NHS Trust provides acute healthcare services to a core catchment population of approximately half a million people living in West Hertfordshire and the surrounding area. The trust also provides a range of more specialist services to a wider population, serving residents of North London, Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire and East Hertfordshire.
This was the third comprehensive inspection of the trust. The trust was rated as inadequate overall and was placed into special measures in September 2015. The last inspection took place in September 2016, where the trust and was rated requires improvement overall. It remained in special measures.
Part of the inspection was announced taking place from 30 August 2017 to 1 September 2017 during which time Watford General Hospital, St Alban’s City Hospital and Hemel Hempstead General Hospital were all inspected.
At Hemel Hempstead Hospital, we inspected and rated the core services of the urgent care centre, outpatients and diagnostic imaging. At the previous inspection in September 2016, the hospital was rated inadequate overall. However, since then the one service that had heavily contributed to this rating had been taken over by another trust and therefore was not inspected on this occasion.
At this latest inspection, we rated Hemel Hempstead General Hospital as requires improvement overall. We rated the urgent care centre (UCC) as requires improvement and outpatients and diagnostics services as good. For the five key questions that we inspect and rate, we rated safe, effective and well-led as requires improvement. Caring and responsive was rated as good overall. This was an improvement.
There were areas of practice where the trust needs to make improvements:
- We found risks that we had identified at previous inspections did not feature on the risk register both in the urgent care centre and outpatient and diagnostics services.
- Not all staff working in clinics that saw children had the appropriate level of safeguarding training. This was raised as an issue during the inspection in September 2016.
- There were no seven-day outpatient services provided at the time of inspection. Some ad-hoc Saturday clinics had been provided, but this had not taken place since March 2017. There were no plans to introduce evening or weekend clinics.
- Friends and Family test scores for outpatient services across the trust were worse than the England average from January to June 2017. This had improved in July 2017.
- Five out of 16 specialties were not meeting the England overall performance for patients being seen within 18 weeks of referral.
- We could not be assured that the service was fulfilling its mandatory duty to report cases of female genital mutilation (FGM) as all staff we spoke with were unaware of the trust policy on identifying and assessing the risk of FGM.
- Hand hygiene and environmental infection control audits were not carried out in the phlebotomy department.
However, there were areas of good practice:
- There had been several improvements in assessing and responding to patient risk. All patients were now assessed by a triage nurse, usually within 20 minutes of arrival. This compared well to our last inspection when patients were waiting up to two hours for an initial clinical assessment.
- We observed staff maintaining patients’ privacy, dignity and confidentiality. They demonstrated empathy towards patients who were in pain or distressed and were skilled in providing reassurance and comfort.
- Almost all patients (99%) were treated, discharged or transferred within four hours, with an average time to treatment of 27 minutes.
Importantly, the trust must:
- Ensure that systems and processes are in place to monitor and review key aspects of performance (for example patient waiting times) to identify areas for improvement.
- Ensure there are processes in place to monitor arrival time to initial clinical assessment for all patients.
- Develop an audit process in the UCC to monitor compliance to protocols/pathways in line with other areas of the unscheduled care division.
- Implement arrangements for identifying, recording and managing risks, issues and mitigating actions.
- Ensure that all staff caring for patients under 18 years of age complete safeguarding children level 3 training.
- Ensure staff in outpatient services are aware of the trust policy and fulfil the mandatory reporting duty for cases of female genital mutilation.
- Monitor compliance with hand hygiene and environmental infection control in the phlebotomy department.
- Ensure staff within the radiology department are up-to-date on fire and evacuation training.
- Ensure that all risks relating to outpatient services are identified, recorded and managed on the departmental risk register.
In addition the trust should:
- Consider the roles and responsibilities of the rotational leadership role with regards to defined responsibilities and consider devising a job description.
- Consider the UCC, as part of the unscheduled care division, featuring in the current strategy document.
- Consider decontaminating reusable naso-endoscopes in a washer-disinfector at the end of each clinic, to meet Department of Health Technical Memorandum (HTM) 01-06 best practice.
- Consider providing outpatient services at evenings and weekends.
- Ensure staff are up to date with Mental Capacity Act (MCA) 2005 and Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards (DOLS) training.
- To consider patients across all specialties are seen within 18 weeks of referral.
- Consider using electronic systems to flag patients with mobility issues, dementia or a learning disability so that arrangements can be made in advance to meet their needs.
- Consider using hearing loop systems across the department.
- Consider ways of improving communication between divisions within outpatient services.
- Consider how effective clinical leadership is at UCC in circumstances where the matron was also responsible for a neighbouring emergency department and a minor injuries unit that was several miles away.
Professor Edward Baker
Chief Inspector of Hospitals