21 and 22 June 2022
During a routine inspection
We inspected North East London Foundation Trust as part of our continual checks on the safety and quality of healthcare services. We also inspected the well-led key question for the trust overall.
We carried out short notice announced inspections of acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units and mental health crisis services and health-based places of safety. We also carried out a short notice announced focused inspection of specialist community mental health services for children and young people in Kent.
We chose these three core services to see if there had been improvements since our last inspection in June 2019.
The trust provides the following mental health services, which we did not inspect this time:
- Child and adolescent mental health wards
- Forensic inpatient/secure wards (low secure)
- Wards for older people with mental health problems
- Wards for people with a learning disability or autism
- Community-based mental health services for adults of working age
- Community-based mental health services for older adults
- Community-based mental health services for people with a learning disability or autism
The trust also provides the following community health services, which we did not inspect at this time:
- Community end of life care
- Community health services for adults
- Community health services for children, young people and families
- Community inpatient services
- Urgent Care
Our overall rating of the trust improved. We rated the trust as good overall because:
Our rating of well led improved; we rated the trust as good. Our rating of effective, caring and responsive stayed the same; we rated the trust as good. Our rating for safe also stayed the same; we rated the trust as requires improvement.
Our ratings for the acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units and mental health crisis services and health-based places of safety core services core services improved, we rated both as good overall. We did not re-rate specialist community mental health services for children and young people following our focused inspection in Kent. In rating the trust, we took into account the current ratings of the mental health and community health services which were not inspected this time.
The core service inspections and well-led review took place at a challenging time for the trust. In terms of the leadership there was an interim chair and chief executive in place. The trust was managing the recovery from the pandemic and learning to live with COVID-19.
Despite these challenges we found the trust had made significant progress since the last inspection:
- The culture of the organisation was much improved. Throughout our inspection we heard from staff who spoke positively about the changes which had taken place and the move away from a culture of blame. The previous interim chief executive was described as a ‘breath of fresh air’ who led this cultural shift. The current leadership including the interim chair and chief executive had continued to embed this approach. The trust was working to promote a ‘just and compassionate culture’. There was a recognition that there was still much more to do but the progress was evident.
- Staff felt more confident to ‘speak up’. The speaking up arrangements were working well. Themes were being appropriately reported through to the board so improvements could be made. Whilst many of the services delivered by the trust were under extreme pressure, staff from different professions felt able to escalate concerns about patient safety.
- The senior executive leadership team was working together in a cohesive manner. There had been some significant changes in the team including a new executive chief nursing officer, new executive director of people and culture and promoted executive director of finance). The executive team were benefitting from ongoing external facilitation to support team building. All the members of the senior leadership team described healthy and productive working arrangements. This had also led to improved working with the non-executive directors and the effective operation of the board.
- The representation of allied health professionals in the senior leadership team had improved. The executive chief nursing officer was also the executive director for allied health professionals and psychological professionals. We heard from a range of professionals throughout the inspection who felt this arrangement was working well.
- The governance arrangements had been strengthened since the last inspection. The people & culture and finance & investment sub committees of the board had been developed. There had been a review of all the trust committees with the aim of ensuring these were operating effectively. There was a recognition that there was still more to do and that the number of internally facing committees could be further slimmed down to avoid duplication and reduce the amount of time operational staff spent in meetings.
- Staff working for the trust put people who used services at the forefront and were committed to providing the best service possible. There was tremendous enthusiasm, commitment and pride in the work of the trust.
- The trust had really ‘stepped up’ during the pandemic delivering services to meet the needs of local communities including vaccination services, step-down beds to support acute hospital discharges, the development of the Nightingale Hospital site and long-covid clinics. The trust had also worked effectively to ensure the appropriate guidance, equipment and new ways of working were implemented in order to keep patients and staff as safe as possible. The ongoing digital transformation and use of mobile equipment had supported ongoing flexible working arrangements which were well received by staff.
- The trust had delivered high levels of engagement and was learning from what went well in order to deliver ongoing effective communication. Throughout the inspection we heard about the visibility and accessibility of senior leaders and the board.
- The trust has continued its commitment to promoting equality, diversity and inclusion. The board was more diverse. The networks had strengthened and actively contributed to decisions about the strategic direction of the trust. The leadership programme for Black, Asian and minority ethnic staff was supporting good career progression.
- The trust was fully embracing its work with external partners in systems and place. The trust was located across five integrated care systems. It also worked closely with provider collaboratives. The non-executive directors were aligned to geographical areas. The trust had appointed to new roles to increase capacity for this work including an executive director of partnerships. Operational staff working in the directorates were participating in a range of meetings, taking leadership roles where appropriate. This work was challenging as systems were at different stages in their development and so they were having to identify where their contribution would deliver the most.
- We saw increasing use of data in accessible formats to inform day to day care and management decisions. Staff displayed a range of ability in using this data and the trust knew that for some further support was needed to develop their confidence.
- We also found significant improvements in the mental health acute and crisis core service inspections. Many more patients in a mental health crisis received the right care at the right time. The trust had designed and implemented an innovative, bespoke integrated crisis assessment hub which was available to a wide range of people, including self-referrals or those signposted by emergency services. Premises were specially designed and staffed by a dedicated staff team. People in crisis could access timely support at the hub to assess their needs. Work had taken place to improve the standards of care and treatment on the acute inpatient mental health wards.
There were some areas where there was more work to do, but the trust was fully sighted on this and had plans in place. These areas included:
- Clinical leadership at a directorate level needed to embed further. The trust had established a triumvirate leadership structure with operations, nursing and medical input for each directorate. Other allied health professionals were also being aligned to this leadership team. The medical staff had two sessions (one day) available each week but a number said they were having difficulties covering their clinical work so they could focus on their leadership responsibilities. Other consultants said that whilst they were kept informed of changes, they were not always actively involved in decision making even where this directly impacted their area of work.
- Co-production work was developing with an involvement register linking up people with lived experience to paid and voluntary opportunities to support the work of the trust. The introduction of an advisor with lived experience to the board meetings was working well. In addition, people with lived experience or carers were participating in a number of key committees across the trust. There were also people with lived experience regularly participating as members of recruitment panels. The trust recognised that the COVID-19 pandemic had delayed the rollout of people participation committees in each geographical area. These groups were scheduled for implementation later in 2022.
- Quality improvement had slowed down during the pandemic with members of the team redeployed to frontline services. Large numbers of staff had been trained and a new QI lead was coming into post in September 2022. During our core service inspections, staff across the trust only occasionally referred to quality improvement and so further work was needed to embed this approach.
- Recruitment was an ongoing challenge, but a range of initiatives were in place including oversees recruitment, working with universities to attract professional graduates and extending apprentices. However, there were still pockets where recruitment was a particular challenge. One of these areas was medical staff recruitment for CAMHS in Kent. The trust recognised the need to improve medical staff recruitment but there was more to do.
How we carried out the inspection
During our inspection of the three core services, the inspection teams:
- reviewed records held by the CQC relating to each service
- visited seven wards at Sunflowers Court. We looked at the quality of the ward environment, management of the clinic rooms, and observed how staff were caring for patients
- spoke with seven ward managers and three matrons covering the wards we visited
- spoke with two assistant directors in the acute and rehabilitation directorate and one director for Kent community CAMHS
- visited four team hubs, in the Dartford, Canterbury, Maidstone and Medway localities; we looked at the quality of the environment for patients and staff, and management of the clinic rooms
- spoke with seven community CAMHS team managers
- visited three home treatment teams, the integrated crisis assessment hub and health-based place of safety and observed the environment and how staff were caring for patients
- spoke with the home treatment teams, the integrated crisis assessment hub and health-based place of safety managers
- spoke with 81 patients and carers
- reviewed 37 comment cards young people and carers
- spoke with 84 staff members, including, doctors, nurses, healthcare assistants, occupational therapists, psychologists, pharmacists, a physical health consultant, a ward administrator and a home treatment team liaison worker
- completed a review of medication management on four wards, three community CAMHS teams and the home treatment team clinic room
- observed a range of meetings and activities including safety huddles, ward round reviews, multidisciplinary handover meetings, occupational therapy groups, team meetings, handovers, an anxiety and depression session and community meetings
- reviewed 130 patient care and treatment records
- looked at a range of policies, procedures and other documents relating to the running of each service.
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.
What people who use the service say
In the services we inspected, feedback from patients and carers was overwhelmingly positive. On the acute and PICU wards, patients told us that staff were empathetic, went out of their way, and kept on trying. In community CAMHS services we heard that staff were quick to respond in a crisis and that young people responded positively to the interventions delivered. Patients told us that home treatment teams involved them in their care and supported them through periods of crisis.
There were however some areas for improvement identified by people who used the service. On the acute and PICU wards, some patients would like to be able to access one-to-ones with their named nurse more regularly. In community CAMHS, young people and their carers felt they waited too long to access some services. In the home treatment teams, patients would like to see the same staff during their time with the team.