Updated 19 January 2024
We carried out this unannounced inspection of Herefordshire and Worcestershire Health and Care NHS Trust, of the mental health and community health services provided by this trust because since our previous inspection Worcestershire Health and Care NHS Trust, had taken on responsibility for providing mental health service to Herefordshire from Gloucestershire Health and Care Foundation Trust in April 2020.
We carried out this inspection because 2 services that had previously been inspected had been rated inadequate overall. This included acute wards for adults of working age which had been rated as inadequate in July 2022, and community-based mental health services for adults of working age had been rated inadequate in January 2020. We also inspected 2 services which had not been inspected since 2018, both which were previously rated as good. We also carried out this inspection because of concerns we had received about sexual safety of patients at Hillcrest ward.
We also inspected the well-led key question for the trust overall.
At this inspection, we visited 3 mental health services and 1 community health service. We also inspected the well-led question at provider level for the trust overall.
The trust provides the following services:
- Acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units
- Long stay or rehabilitation mental health wards for working age adults
- Wards for older people with mental health problems
- Mental health crisis services and health-based places of safety
- Community-based mental health services for adults of working age
- Specialist community mental health services for children and young people
- Community-based mental health services for older people
- Community mental health services for people with a learning disability or autism
- Community health services for adults
- Community health services for children, young people and families
- Community Health inpatient services
- Community end of life care
- Community dental services.
We inspected all key lines of enquiry in all domains (safe, effective, caring, responsive and well-led) in the 4 services inspected. These services were:
- Acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units
- Community-based mental health services for adults of working age
- Mental health crisis services and health-based places of safety
- Community health services for adults
We also assessed if the organisation is well-led and looked at areas of governance, culture, leadership capability and improvement. Our inspection approach allows us to make a judgement on how the trust’s senior leadership leads the organisation, and the provider level well-led rating is separate from the ratings of the services we inspected.
In rating the trust overall, we took into account the current ratings of the 10 services which were not inspected this time and therefore bought forward the most recent ratings.
At this inspection, the key questions were rated overall, as requires improvement for safe, and effective, good for caring and responsive and requires improvement for well-led.
The trust-wide well led rating is not aggregated with all the service ratings. The trust-wide well led rating went down. We rated the overall trust-wide well-led as requires improvement.
At this inspection, we rated all 3 of the mental health services we inspected as requires improvement overall. This was an improvement in rating for 2 services since the last inspection. The rating for 1 of the mental health services inspected went down to requires improvement. The rating for the community health service we inspected went down and was rated requires improvement.
Our overall rating of services went down. We rated the trust as requires improvement because:
- We found environmental risks at 2 of the services inspected. In acute wards for adults of working age, where accommodation was mixed sex, staff did not sufficiently monitor and observe single sex spaces. This resulted in sexual safety incidents. Two services did not ensure ligature risk assessments were up to date and identified risks were not effectively mitigated.
- Two services we inspected had not ensured that patient risk assessments were completed, reviewed, or updated. Not all services had mitigated risks to patients in relation to sexual safety in acute wards for adults of working age. In mental health crisis services, the safety of young people when admitted to a health-based place of safety was not always well managed.
- Safety was not a sufficient priority in all services. Staff did not manage sexual safety incidents well. Not all services escalated or reported sexual safety incidents. In acute wards for adults of working age, staff did not take action that was reasonably practicable to report, respond to or mitigate sexual safety risks.
- The systems and processes used to manage risks in the trust were not effectively managed. There was a lack of collaborative oversight, escalation or challenge. The trust board was not always sighted on all risks that could affect the delivery of strategy and provision of high-quality care.
- Across the trust, not all environments in services we inspected had been well maintained, clean or were fit for purpose. In mental health crisis services, the health-based place of safety in Worcestershire did not meet the standards on the use of Section 136 of the Mental Health Act 1983 (England and Wales July 2011 Royal College of Psychiatry CR159) and the guiding principles of the Code of Practice.
- Staff compliance with mandatory training fell below expected standards in 3 of the 4 services we inspected. This included training in basic life support, fire safety training and Mental Health Act training. Systems and processes to monitor training compliance were not effective in these services.
- Some services did not receive regular supervision or appraisals. In 2 services the service did not provide data on supervision compliance, and in a third service, compliance was as low as 20%. One service inspected had appraisal compliance at 66%. Systems and processes to monitor supervision and appraisal compliance were not effective in these services.
- Psychology waiting times prevented patients receiving interventions in a timely manner in community-based mental health services for adults of working age in Worcestershire. The number of patients on the waiting list had steadily increased each month, from 57 in March 2022 to 161 in February 2023.
- We had concerns about staffing in 2 services. In Neighbourhood mental health teams, the service did not have enough staff and some teams had patients who were waiting to be allocated to a caseworker. Vacancy rates were between 17% and 61% across both Herefordshire and Worcestershire. In the Worcestershire health-based place of safety, there were not always appropriate staff available to assess a young person outside working hours. This meant young people had to then stay overnight.
- In services we inspected, some systems and processes did not effectively provide managers with oversight or assurance of how services were delivered. Managers did not always have systems to be able to assess, monitor and review the quality of the service. For example, locking of doors, reporting of incidents, adherence to trust policies and procedures training and supervision and appraisal compliance.
- Whilst members of the board had the skills, knowledge and experience required, we were not assured that they worked in a cohesive and collaborative way to address areas of risk or concern. Leaders at all levels were not always visible.
- Systems of accountability for some areas of governance were not always clear, and not all senior leaders discharged their responsibility of active challenge to decisions and actions robustly. Learning from incidents, and previous inspections had not been shared across the trust or acted on swiftly enough to bring about improved, safe care.
- There was evidence of a closed culture within the trust with minimal actions at board level and in services to address equality, diversity and inclusion issues felt by staff. There was a lack of urgency to implement culture change initiatives across the organisation.
- We found a lack of evidence to support patient involvement in service development, redesign, and improvement. Whilst the trust published this was in place, there were few examples to show where this occurred.
However:
- The trust had a clear vision with values which were understood by all staff. All staff spoken with during our inspection knew the trust values and were able to relate them to their work within the team. Staff knew and understood the provider’s vision and how it applied to the work of their team.
- Three services had decreasing rates of bank and agency nurses and support workers. Managers limited their use of bank and agency staff and requested staff familiar with the service. They made sure all bank and agency staff had a full induction and understood the service before starting their shift.
- In 2 services we inspected, staff completed and updated risk assessments for each patient and removed or minimised risks. Staff identified and quickly acted upon patients at risk of deterioration.
- We were assured that trust safeguarding systems and processes were well managed and risks were mitigated. Staff in the trust were up to date with safeguarding training and knew how to recognise abuse and when to report it.
- Across services, medicines management was managed well. Physical healthcare was managed effectively, and staff encouraged patients to live healthier lives.
- We saw how staff from different disciplines worked together as a team to benefit patients. They supported each other to make sure patients had no gaps in their care. They had effective working relationships with other relevant teams within the organisation and with relevant services outside the organisation.
- Staff treated patients with compassion and kindness. They understood the individual needs of patients and supported patients to understand and manage their care, treatment or condition.
- The trust had been impacted by a national cyber security issue which had affected access to the patient recording system. Action taken around the failure of the electronic care record system appeared both positive and proactive. Whilst difficult and time consuming, this was well managed. Staff had been unable to update patient records on this system for several months. Staff told us they could still access the system to view historical records but could not add updates. The trust had developed an interim patient recording system. Staff told us that they had access to both systems and that managers had kept them updated about the system issues.
- Staff knew their responsibilities under the Mental Health Act and Mental Capacity Act. The trust had effective and embedded systems and processes for management of duties under the Mental Health Act.
- The trust was well positioned within the ICB to influence the health and social care system. We have heard how key Board members advocate and action the agenda with stakeholders. Service managers engaged actively with other local health and social care providers to ensure that an integrated health and care system was commissioned and provided to meet the needs of the local population.
- The trust had a clear focus and agenda within the research team with a positive plan to become self-sufficient. Quality improvement was actively encouraged from small local ideas to larger, more complex service improvements. The trust had an agenda to continue to develop their quality improvement approach.
- The trust had led on new integrated models of care to improve how people accessed and came into contact with services across Herefordshire and Worcestershire.
How we carried out the inspection
During the inspection, our inspection teams carried out the following activities across 5 wards and 7 community-based mental health service and community health services and 2 health-based places of safety:
- spoke with 65 patients and 18 family members or carers of patients
- accompanied staff on 2 visits to patients in the community
- viewed clinic rooms and reviewed 70 medication charts
- spoke with 134 members of staff including senior leaders and managers, consultants, doctors, registered nurses, healthcare assistants, ward clerks, independent mental health advocates, occupational therapists, and physiotherapists
- reviewed staff rosters
- reviewed 63 sets of patient care records
- undertook 14 incident reviews where we looked at information relating to incidents across all 5 wards we visited
- observed shift handover meetings, a ward round, a reflective practice group and an occupational therapy patient session
- reviewed CCTV footage and the digital images log
- observed a Mental Capacity Act training session
- attended 14 community visits to observe care and treatment
- reviewed a range of policies, procedures and other documents related to the running of the service.
During our well-led inspection, we spoke with senior leaders of the organisation and reviewed a range of policies, procedures, and other governance documents relating to the running of the trust.
What people who use the service say
Community-based mental health services for adults of working age
We spoke with 15 patients who were pleased overall with the service they had received. Most patients told us that staff were kind, respectful and polite and had involved them in decisions about their care and treatment. Patients told us that staff gave them information and advice about medicines and healthy lifestyles. However, 5 patients told us that they had not been given a copy of their care plan.
We spoke with 3 carers, who told us that staff were responsive and caring. However, 2 carers told us they had not been as involved as they would have liked and that they had not been given information on how to access a carers assessment.
Mental health crisis services and health-based places of safety
We spoke with 11 patients and 3 carers. Feedback from patients, family and carers was positive. They described staff as kind and supportive. They told us staff communicated well with them and they received effective and high-quality care and treatment.
Staff made sure patients understood their care and treatment. Patients said staff supported them with their immediate mental health crisis and their recovery by referring them to longer term interventions such as psychological therapies.
Staff involved patients in decisions about the service. Patients could give feedback on the service and their treatment and staff supported them to do this.
Patients told us they felt listened to and staff responded quickly to their views and wishes. Patients were particularly positive about being able to talk directly to consultants and with staff day and night. Patients described the service as life changing.
Acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units
We spoke with 15 patients and 4 carers. Overall, the 15 patients that we spoke with were positive about the service and complimentary of the staff. We received some comments relating to agency staff. Some patients felt that they did not engage with them as well as substantive staff and felt that they were more difficult to work with.
We spoke with 4 patients on Mortimer ward. They told us temporary staff were kind and caring and responsive to their needs. Patients were complementary about the meals provided and said there was lots of choice. Patients told us they heard the loud building work noises during the week due to ongoing building work but had become used to the level of noise and frequency.
One patient said regular staff were very good and they felt comfortable to speak with them. They enjoyed planned walks to Churchill gardens with the occupational therapist and said walking helped them to feel better. They liked regular sessions with the Art therapist on Fridays. Another patient said they enjoyed chatting with staff and felt safe to a certain degree. There were regular staff at night who met their needs.
However, patients did not always feel safe in relation to sexual safety. One patient told us male and female patients usually walked around single sex spaces. Another patient told us about a sexual safety incident they reported to the police as they did not feel staff had taken their concerns seriously.
Community health services for adults
We spoke with 27 patients and 8 carers in this service. Feedback from patients, family and carers was overwhelmingly positive. They described staff as caring, friendly, and supportive. They told us they felt involved in their care and reported good communication from staff. Patients all felt they received effective and high-quality care and treatment.
Patients told us they felt staff listened to them and were responsive to their views and wishes. They said staff gave them advice on their care and treatment in an accessible and clear manner. This included explaining the nature, purpose, and side effects of medicines.
Patients spoke positively about occupational therapy. They said they were provided with appropriate specialist equipment and that staff made sure they were explained how to use it.
Patients, carers and family said they observed good communication with teams within the wider trust and also external teams. For example, they felt that staff regularly liaised with GP practices and were jointly aware of care and treatment decisions.
Despite some staffing issues, particularly within the therapy teams, patients, carers and family mostly fed back that appointments were rarely cancelled or delayed.
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.