Wye Valley NHS Trust provides hospital care and community services to a population of slightly more than 180,000 people in Herefordshire. The trust also provides urgent and elective care to a population of more than 40,000 people in mid-Powys, Wales.
The trust’s catchment area is characterised by its rural nature and remoteness, with more than 80% of service users living five miles or more from Hereford city or a market town. The trust has 387 beds and provides a full range of district general hospital services.
We inspected the trust in June 2014 and gave an overall rating of ‘Inadequate’, with particular concerns about the provision of services in both urgent and emergency services and medical care services. The inspection led to the trust being placed in special measures by the Trust Development Authority in October 2014. The trust developed a patient care improvement plan in order to implement improvements. An improvement director was appointed by the Trust Development Authority and commenced work in February 2015 to assist the trust to progress.
We undertook an announced inspection of Hereford Hospital, Bromyard, Leominster and Ross Community Hospitals between 22 and 24 September 2015. We undertook unannounced inspections on 25 September 2015 at Leominster Community Hospital and 1 October 2015 at Hereford Hospital.
We held focus groups with a range of staff in the hospital, including nurses, junior doctors, consultants, midwives, student nurses, administrative and clerical staff, allied health professional, domestic staff and porters. We also spoke with staff individually.
There were some areas of improvement from the previous inspection particularly within community services and urgent and emergency service. However, there were areas where significant improvement was required.
Overall, we rated Wye Valley NHS Trust as inadequate, with two of the five key questions which we always rate being inadequate (safe and responsive). Improvements were needed to ensure that services were safe and responsive to patient’s needs. We found that effectiveness and well led required improvement.
Five of the eight core services at Hereford Hospital were rated inadequate for safety.
The outpatient and diagnostic services at Hereford Hospital were rated overall as inadequate. All other services at Hereford Hospital were rated as requires improvement.
All community services were rated as good, with the exception of community inpatient services and community end of life care which were rated as requires improvement.
Overall we have judged the services at the trust as good for caring. Patients were treated with dignity and respect and were provided with appropriate emotional support. We found caring in community adult services to be outstanding.
Our key findings were as follows:
- Staff were kind and caring and treated people with dignity and respect.
- Overall the hospital was clean, hygienic and well maintained.
- Equipment was not always appropriately checked and maintained.
- Recruitment was a significant risk for the trust.
- The trust had high vacancy levels across both nursing and medical staff. With some areas having vacancy levels in excess of 40% for nursing staff at the time of the inspection.
- Temporary staff usage was high and temporary staff did not always receive an effective induction.
- Staff did not always have the appropriate training.
- A recruitment programme was ongoing and changes had been made to speed up the recruitment process. Oversees recruitment had taken place.
- Patient’s pain was well managed and women in labour received a choice of pain relief. Patients at the end of life were given adequate pain relief and anticipatory prescribing was used to manage symptoms.
- Monitoring by the Care Quality Commission had identified mortality was above the expected range of 100 with a value of 114. The trust were implemented a series of actions to address this concern.
- The trust were not consistently meeting the national targets set regarding patients access to treatment and there was lack of oversight of the risk this presented to patients.
- The trust were not meeting the standard for patients admitted, referred or discharged from the emergency department within four hours.
- The trust did not have effective governance oversight of incident reporting and management, including categorisation of risk and harm. Incident management was not effective as to allow for the timely mitigation of the risks relating to the health, safety and welfare of service users.
- There was a lack of knowledge amongst trust staff with whom we spoke about when to make safeguarding referrals.
- Staff generally felt they were well supported at their ward or department level.
- Visibility of the executive directors had improved since the last inspection.
We saw several areas of outstanding practice including:
- The trust had established a young people’s ambassador group. This was run by a group of patients who had used the service or continued to use the service. The group met regularly and were consulted on changes on changes and developments, for example they had recently introduced a ‘Saturday club’ and had been involved in the ED Patient-Led Assessment of the Care Environment audit (PLACE) aiding the redesign of the children’s waiting are; and had been involved in interviewing new staff in community services for children and young people. We spoke with some representatives from the group who were very passionate about their role and welcomed the opportunity to make a difference.
- Compassionate care and emotional support provided by community adult service teams was excellent. Staff had a clear focus for providing best possible care and improving the well-being of patients they saw.
- Community services for children and young people had submitted a proposal for a group project incorporating local health visiting teams, children’s centres, the local community and various members of the multi-agency team. The aims of the project were to: provide support and information to families on how to achieve healthy lifestyles; promote and support and encourage sensible weight management; enhance families ability to cook health nutritious meals; increase families social networks and therefore their social capital, leading to increased self-esteem and self-confidence; enhance links within the community by incorporating volunteers from within the community to help within practicalities of running groups on a regular basis; encourage links to other services within the community that promote lifestyle change, such as local gyms and swimming pool.
- Health visitors in Leominster supported children in need at Christmas with a Christmas hampers project by utilising local community charities and food bank services to donate food hampers for families in need.
- Health visitors at Ross Community Hospital had an allotment project to improve community engagement and encourage healthy eating. HVS had worked with a local charity to access allotments, for use by local communities to grow their own produce and share with families who had food and nutritional needs.
- A member of the Leominster SNS team had won a prize from a national professional journal for producing a domestic abuse peer support programme.
- The development of ‘Fresh Eyes Peer Review’, for complaints, which is an excellent example of a non-threatening, transparent, open and supportive initiative in organisational learning.
- The education team had effective plans in place and appropriate clinical direction. The team had been well embedded for some years and that the team was a beacon of good practice within the trust.
However, there were also areas of poor practice where the trust needs to make improvements.
Importantly, the trust must:
- Ensure that where a person lacks capacity to make an informed decision or given consent, staff must act in accordance with the requirements of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 and associated code of practice.
- The trust must ensure safeguarding referrals are made as appropriate.
- The trust must ensure all staff have the appropriate level of safeguarding training.
- The trust must ensure all staff have received their required mandatory training to ensure they are competent to fulfil their role.
- The trust must ensure all staff are supported effectively via appropriate clinical and operational staff supervisions systems.
- The trust must ensure staff receive and appraisal to meet the appraisal target of 90% compliance.
- The trust must ensure there are enough suitably qualified staff on duty within all services, in accordance with the agreed numbers set by the trust and taking into account national recommendations.
- The trust must ensure there are the appropriate number of qualified paediatric staff in the ED to meet standards set by the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health 2012 or the Royal College of Nursing.
- The trust must ensure consultant cover meets with the Royal College of Emergency Medicine’s (RCEMs) emergency medicine consultants workforce recommendations to provide consultant presence in the ED 16 hours a day, 7 days a week as a minimum.
- The trust must ensure processes in place are adhered to for the induction of all agency staff.
- The trust must ensure ligature points are identified and associated risks are mitigated to protect patients from harm.
- The trust must ensure risk registers reflect the risks within the trust.
- The trust must ensure all incidents are reported, including those associated with medicines.
- The trust must ensure effective and timely governance oversight of incident reporting management, including categorisation of risk and harm, particularly in maternity services.
- The trust must review the governance structure for all services at the hospital to have systems in place to report, monitor and investigate incidents and to share learning from incidents.
- The trust must ensure that all trust policies and standard operating procedures are up to date and that they are consistently followed by staff.
- The trust must ensure all medicines are prescribed and stored in accordance with trust procedures.
- The trust must ensure patient records are stored appropriately to protect confidential data.
- The trust must ensure patient records are accurate, complete and fit for purpose, including Do Not Attempt Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation forms and prescription charts.
- The trust must ensure risk assessments are completed in a timely manner and used effectively to prevent avoidable harm, such as the development of pressure ulcers within ED and pain assessments for children.
- The trust must ensure that mortality reviews are effective with the impact of reducing the overall Summary Hospital-level Mortality Indicator (SHMI) for the service.
- The trust must ensure there are robust systems are in place to collect, monitor and meet national referral to treatment times within surgery and outpatient services.
- The trust must ensure there are systems in place to monitor, manage and mitigate the risk to patients on surgical and outpatient waiting lists.
- The trust must ensure staff check the “site” of the operation to ensure this is appropriately marked, prior to the operation; and ensure that the “site” of the operation is documented on the 5 Steps to Safer Surgery checklist.
- The trust must ensure all incidents of pressure damage are fully investigated, particularly within ITU.
- The trust must ensure there is a policy available to ensure safe and consistent practice for parents to administer medicines to their children.
- The trust must ensure there is a system in place to recognise, assess and manage risks associated with the temperature of mortuary fridges.
- The trust must ensure clinicians have access to all essential patient information, such as patients’ medical notes, to make informed judgements on the planned care and treatment of patients.
- The trust must ensure outpatients patients are followed up within the time period recommended by clinicians.
- The trust must ensure that the categorisation of incidents is completed accurately and full investigations are carried out as appropriate, including the identification of themes to ensure relevant actions are implemented.
- The trust must ensure that governance systems in place are effective. This includes ensuring practices are consistent, in line with hospital policies, and documents are approved through the clinical governance structure.
Following the inspection we issued Hereford Hospital with a warning notice under section 29a of the Health and Social Care Act 2008. On the basis of this inspection, we are recommending the trust remains in special measures.
Professor Sir Mike Richards
Chief Inspector of Hospitals