30 April 2019 to 4 June 2019
During an inspection of Wards for older people with mental health problems
Our overall rating of the service stayed the same. The rating for safe improved from requires improvement to good and the rating for caring improved from good to outstanding.
We rated it as good because:
- The service provided safe care. Staff assessed and managed risk well. They minimised the use of restrictive practices and followed good practice with respect to safeguarding.
- Staff developed holistic, recovery-oriented care plans informed by a comprehensive assessment. They provided a range of treatments suitable to the needs of the patients and in line with national guidance on best practice. Staff engaged in clinical audit to evaluate the quality of care they provided.
- The teams included or had access to the full range of specialists required to meet the needs of patients on the wards. Managers ensured that staff received training and appraisal. The staff worked well together as a multidisciplinary team and with those outside the ward who would have a role in providing aftercare.
- Staff understood and discharged their roles and responsibilities under the Mental Health Act 1983.
- Staff treated patients with compassion and kindness, respected their privacy and dignity, and understood the individual needs of patients. They actively involved patients, families and carers in care decisions.
- Herm and St Brelades wards had been awarded the Gold Standard Framework accreditation due to their excellence in end of life care. These wards were the first older people mental health wards in the country to be awarded this. The service met high standards of patient and carer involvement, meeting the wishes of the patients and providing peace of mind to carers and patients.
- The service met all the needs of patients, including those under protected characteristics. Staff treated complaints and concerns seriously and investigated appropriately. Lessons were learned and shared across the teams.
- The service was well-led and the governance processes ensured that service procedures ran smoothly. Leaders were visible on the wards and knew the patients well. Leaders were innovative, and where challenges presented themselves leaders were resilient and able to make positive changes.
However:
- The garden at Herm and St Brelades had presented a hazard, so staff did not allow patients to use it. They had made requests to have the garden maintained but this had not been completed at the time of the inspection. We raised this with the trust leadership team who took immediate action to prioritise this. The lounge at Herm ward was not dementia friendly and patients did not always have their own bedrooms on Alumhurst ward, and there was limited private space for patients. The trust was aware of these issues and looking to eradicate shared sleeping arrangements and improve access to private space in the longer term.
- The service did not always have enough nurses and doctors available. There were problems with the recruitment of registered nurses, particularly on night shifts, and doctors were not always immediately available out of hours.
- Staff did not always manage medicines robustly. There were some missing checks of controlled drugs and emergency medications and gaps in the auditing process of medications on some wards. The trust did however provide assurance that systems were being improved and new electronic prescribing would rectify these issues.
- Female patient accommodation on Alumhurst ward was composed of shared accommodation. Bedrooms and shared accommodation did have lockable storage facilities for clothing and possessions and the provider had taken action to mitigate the adverse effects of privacy or safety. Capital funding had been secured with a plan in place to remove all shared accommodation.