12 to 14 September 2023
During an inspection looking at part of the service
Mid Yorkshire Teaching NHS Trust provides care for over half a million people every year, in their homes, in the community and across three hospital sites at Pontefract, Dewsbury and Pinderfields. In addition, the trust provides two specialist regional services: burns and spinal injuries. The trust is made up of a team of 9,200 staff.
The Pinderfields Hospital building was opened in 2011; is the largest of the trust’s three hospitals and is the main site for patients requiring acute care. A range of inpatient, outpatient, diagnostic and maternity services are provided. The hospital provides both urgent and emergency care as well as services such as elective surgery. Pinderfields is the busiest hospital within the trust. In any one year there may be over 127,000 attendances to the A&E and over 58,000 emergency admissions.
Dewsbury and District Hospital provides services, usually for patients living in the North Kirklees district. The hospital provides urgent and emergency care, diagnostics, elective care, midwife services and care of the elderly services. The hospital treats over 340,000 patients every year.
The trust works in partnership with two local authorities, two integrated care system (ICSs) commissioners and a wide range of other providers, including voluntary and private sector organisations. It also works as a member of the West Yorkshire and Harrogate Partnership, which is the Integrated Care System within which the Trust resides.
We carried out an unnanounced focussed inspection of medicine (including older peoples services) and urgent and emeregency care at Pinderfields Hospital and Dewsbury and District Hospital. Our inspection was a follow up on concerns about the quality and safety of urgent and emergency care and medical services raised during the last inspection in April 2022. At this inspection we found the core service overall ratings of emergency care and medicine remained the same, requires improvement. However, at Pinderfields Hospital the domains of effective and well led in urgent and emergency care had improved to good. The domain of responsive had improved in medical services to good. At Dewsbury and District Hospital the rating of the well led domain for urgent and emergency care improved to good. We also saw other improvements since our last inspection although the overall and domain rating did not change.
The team that carried out the inspection of urgent and emergency care services comprised of an inspector, assistant inspector and 2 specialist advisors with expert clinincal knowledge in the areas inspected.
The team that carried out the inspection of the medicine service comprised of 2 inspectors and 2 specialist advisors plus an inspector who carried out a short observational framework on one of the medical wards.
An inspection manager oversaw the inspection of both services.
You can find further information about how we carry out our inspections on our website: www.cqc.org.uk/what-we-do/ how-we-do-our-job/what-we-do-inspection.