9 - 10 August 2023
During an inspection of Acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units
We carried out this unannounced focused inspection because we received information giving us concerns about the safety and quality of the service. This included receiving feedback from patients, local agencies, and the trusts own reporting of incidents. Incidents reported included an injury sustained to a patient during a restraint and a completed suicide on one of the inpatient wards. The trust had reported both as serious incidents and investigations were ongoing.
We inspected a sample of wards across this core service. This consisted of visiting 2 of the 6 acute inpatient wards and both psychiatric intensive care units (PICU) to assess the safety of care provided, as well as looking at the leadership and governance processes in place to support the quality of care.
Due to the focussed nature of this inspection, we did not examine every key line of enquiry under each key question, we focused upon areas highlighted to us as concerns. At this inspection, we found:
- Some weekly risk reviews were not comprehensive and did not capture incidents in detail.
- Information regarding risk, relating to care planning and daily clinical entries were not always joined up, with some staff having difficulties navigating to specific information.
- Three of the four wards did not have the most up to date ligature risk reduction plans visible for staff.
- Marina ward was in need of some redecoration despite the ward being decorated in February 2023, due to damage to the environment caused by incidents.
- Five patients told us they had not been involved in discharge planning.
However:
- Most patients we spoke with were positive about their care and treatment and felt safe.
- Each ward had comprehensive ligature risk reduction plans in place which staff were aware of, with actions to minimise risk.
- Each ward had accessible resuscitation equipment, emergency medicines and ligature cutters which staff checked regularly.
- Staff were aware of individual patient risks and reviewed these regularly.
- Staff managed incidents by using de-escalation skills, with physical interventions being a last resort.
- Senior staff investigated incidents in line with trust policy and shared lessons learnt across the core service and the trust.
- Staff and patients told us there was usually enough staff, despite the service having numerous vacancies.
How we carried out this inspection
- Undertook a tour of each of the four wards visited.
- Spoke with 11 staff members – including ward managers, team leaders, staff nurses and healthcare assistants.
- Checked the emergency equipment on each of the four wards.
- Reviewed the ligature reduction assessments on each ward.
- Spoke with 21 patients who were using the service.
- Reviewed a sample of observation records.
- Observed a handover between shifts.
- Reviewed 22 patient records.
- Received feedback from 3 carers of people who were using the service.
You can find further information about how we carry out our inspections on our website: https://www.cqc.org.uk/what-we-do/how-we-do-our-job/what-we-do-inspection.
What people who use the service say
We spoke with 21 patients who were using the service at the time of inspection. Thirteen patients on the acute inpatient wards and 8 patients receiving care in the PICU wards.
We also received feedback from 3 carers of people who were using the service.
Of the 21 patients we spoke with, 17 mostly felt safe on the wards. Four patients told us they did not feel safe, due to other patients on the wards and some of the incidents that occurred.
Fifteen patients we spoke with spoke very positively about the staff. Describing them as kind and supportive.
Most patients said that there was enough staff on duty. Out of the 21 patients we spoke with, 3 reported there not being enough staff, with 1 patient telling us staff had postponed their leave on occasions due to this.
Six patients told us that staff did not use restraint that often, and when they did, felt it was proportionate to the situation. Most patients told us that staff managed incidents well.
One patient was very unhappy with their care and treatment and had put a formal complaint in to the trust. This complaint included feeling unsafe on occasions, and alluded to some staff sleeping when they were supposed to be observing staff. This was fed back to the trust who discussed this with the patient and agreed their concerns would be fully investigated.
We received feedback from 3 carers of people who were using the service. All three carers told us the care provided was safe.