11 May to 24 June 2021
During a routine inspection
The leadership of the trust had significantly improved since our last inspection in 2018 but this was not yet enough to make an impact on the rating. Staff including the trust chair, who we interviewed at the last inspection, were overall very positive about the changes in leadership. Members of the board articulated they felt much more enabled, supported, listened to and empowered to undertake their roles than previously.
The leadership team led by the new CEO and chair had identified that the trust needed to develop their own plans to improve the people of Rotherham’s experience of services and this was a message we heard consistently throughout our inspection.
The trust had recognised that there was a need, because of the changes within the healthcare system, the impact of COVID-19 and the changes in the trust itself over recent years, to update and refresh the vision and strategy and hoped to take this to board in September 2021. The CEO articulated a clear vision of what the trust wanted to achieve. A new strategy was being developed with input from the wider system and local staff about how this was going to be achieved.
It was recognised by the board there had been challenges regarding the trust's organisational culture over the last few years. To address this, targeted and focused work had been undertaken with the board and executive team, including input from facilitators to identify issues to establish open and honest strong working relationships.
The trust had made good progress in strengthening its operational financial management and governance arrangements but there was further work needed to understand the scale of any underlying deficit supported by a credible analysis of the key drivers.
Whilst the improvements in leadership and culture were evident since our previous inspection, the trust recognised more work needed to be done to embed service improvements and for these changes to be reflected in positive patient outcomes.
When inspecting the core services at the trust we saw that some of the changes that had happened at a senior level in the organisation had not yet become embedded at ward/department level. There continued to be a slow progress in some areas against our previous inspection findings particularly in urgent and emergency care and medicine. All divisions had a triumvirate management team in place, however, not all posts were fully recruited to support this. Additional posts had only very recently been recruited to, such as quality improvement matrons and the deputy director of quality assurance.
The trust promoted equality and diversity in daily work and mainly provided opportunities for career development. However, the trust currently had no formal staff networks.
The aim of the trust was to work within the system and create partnerships with the local community as well as accessing NHS support to establish the trust as a supportive, diverse and inclusive employer for all the Rotherham community.
A significant level work had been done within the trust to improve the governance. Several initiatives had been put in place to improve governance at the trust. Including 'Safe and Sound', 'Perfect Ward' and the employment of quality improvement matrons.
The arrangements for some areas of governance were very new and at the time of the inspection it was not possible to fully evidence their effectiveness and the impact these changes would have. In some core services not all staff were clear about their roles and accountabilities and processes were not always completed in a timely manner. However, plans had been put in place to create the conditions and structures for effective governance in the trust.
Medicines optimisation within the trust required further development. The trust medicines optimisation strategy was out of date and had not been reviewed or renewed from April 2020. The trust did not have a pharmacy business plan, workforce plan or strategy specific to the pharmacy team. Medicines reconciliation rates within 24 hours consistently fell below the national average. There was no seven-day clinical pharmacy service. Multidisciplinary attendance at key medicines committees was not always in place with two out of the last four meetings not meeting quoracy.
Work was underway to embed the medicines safety officer role into trust governance processes. The controlled drug accountable officer role required further embedding and oversight to ensure that governance arrangements highlighted and took action on areas of concern found during the core service inspection. This was still an issue when we revisited during our well-led inspection.
We raised our concerns during our inspection and following the inspection, the trust provided an action plan which aimed to review medicines management, oversight, audit and governance processes within the trust.
Leaders and teams identified and escalated relevant risks and issues and identified actions to reduce their impact. They had plans to cope with unexpected events. However, systems to manage performance effectively were not always implemented.
In interviews with members of the Executive and Senior Leaders team people were all clear about the trust's risks and articulated a coherent consistent narrative. These included mortality, medical and nursing staffing and Child Adolescent Mental Health (CAMH) services.
However, the performance dashboard used in core services were at a high level and did not focus on the detail of quality or highlight specific concerns about patient care. Also, we were not assured in all core services that senior leaders had enough oversight of performance targets which could have a negative impact on patients' care and experience of services.
Information and data overall were well managed across the trust. New systems had been developed to improve patient outcomes such as 'Perfect Ward', these were introduced in a phased way and learning taken at each stage to improve the system. However, we did see instances on wards and departments where patient information was not stored securely.
Leaders and staff actively and openly engaged with patients', staff, the public and local organisations to plan and manage services. They collaborated with partner organisations and operated a system approach to help improve services for patients'.
The trust provided evidence of continued engagement with patient groups despite the pandemic and acted on their feedback.
The trust were committed to continually learning and improving services. Quality improvement methods had been introduced and staff understood the skills needed to use them, but these improvements were not fully embedded in all areas at the time of the inspection.