07/05/2019 and 08/05/2019
During an inspection looking at part of the service
We carried out an announced focused inspection of healthcare services provided by Bridgewater Community Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust at HMP Wymott on the 7 and 8 May 2019.
The purpose of this focused inspection was to determine if the healthcare services provided by the trust were meeting the legal requirements of the Requirement Notices that we issued in July 2018 and to find out if patients were receiving safe care and treatment. At this inspection we found the provider was meeting the regulations.
We do not currently rate services provided in prisons.
At this inspection we found:
- Healthcare staff were appropriately trained, for example, in safeguarding and intermediate life support.
- The availability of chaperones was promoted in healthcare and patients could request a chaperone to be present during examinations.
- The arrangements for managing medicines kept people safe.
- There were more formalised arrangements to share with staff the learning from adverse events.
- Prisoners received an assessment of their immediate and ongoing healthcare needs at the point of reception into the prison.
- Healthcare staff worked together and with other health and social care professionals effectively to deliver care and treatment.
- Prisoners’ attendance at healthcare appointments continued to be monitored regularly and analysed.
- Healthcare staff told us since the appointment of the director for health and justice and the acting head of healthcare, they felt better supported and listened to.
- Communication and information sharing with the prison had improved since the appointment of a healthcare governor.
- Managers had put in place a process for supervision, but more time was needed to assess the full impact of the changes.
- Healthcare managers closely monitored mandatory training and the uptake by staff had improved.
- Healthcare managers had effective oversight of key areas of service provision, including the continuation of medicine supplies to patients.
- Healthcare staff held a monthly service user forum. Patients reported good communication from healthcare managers about service developments and improvements.
- The introduction of bi-monthly health and justice bulletins was an effective means to sharing information about key developments in the service and plans for the service.
The areas where the provider should make improvements are:
- Inform patients as soon as practicable of the outcome of and results of clinical investigations.
- Ensure that all clinical areas, in which primary healthcare nursing staff provide treatments and medicines, meet infection prevention standards and do not compromise patient safety.
- Continue to monitor dental waiting times, including managing and mitigating the risk to patients.