This inspection was a focussed, unannounced inspection of the acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units (PICUs) provided by Midlands Partnership NHS Foundation Trust (MPFT). The inspection was focussed to specific areas of the safe and well led key questions.
At our last inspection we rated the acute wards for adults of a working age and psychiatric intensive care units as inadequate.
As this was a focussed inspection, we have not rated the service.
We carried out this inspection to look at those parts of the service included within the Section 29A warning notice issues following our inspection in November 2022.
The trust provides acute inpatient wards for adults of working age and PICUs at two locations, St George’s Hospital in Stafford and The Redwoods Centre in Shrewsbury.
The wards are:
St George's Hospital, Brocton Ward, 20 beds: mixed sex.
St George's Hospital, Chebsey Ward, 19 beds: mixed sex.
St George’s Hospital, Milford Ward, 18 beds: mixed sex.
St George's Hospital, Norbury PICU, 11 beds: male only.
The Redwoods Centre, Birch Ward, 16 beds: mixed sex.
The Redwoods Centre, Laurel Ward, 16 beds: mixed sex.
The Redwoods Centre, Pine Ward, 16 beds: mixed sex.
We previously inspected the trust’s acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units (PICUs) in November 2022. The November 2022 inspection followed notifications about serious incidents that involved patients from the trust’s acute wards for adults of working age during September and October 2022. This included three incidents where patients had taken their own lives during a period of leave from the ward they were admitted to, and four incidents of fire setting that had occurred at The Redwoods Centre. CQC had separately received communication from Shropshire Fire and Rescue Service in relation to their inspection triggered by the fire setting incidents, and by British Transport Police and Staffordshire Police in relation to the deaths of service users whilst on leave.
Due to the seriousness of the concerns following our site visits, in November 2022 we used our powers under Section 29A of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 to issue a Warning Notice to the trust. CQC uses Section 29A Warning Notices with NHS Foundation Trusts when it appears that the quality of the health care provided by the trust requires “significant improvement”. The notice required the trust to make significant improvement to the areas identified by 16 January 2023. In response to the Warning Notice the trust submitted an action plan to address the areas of concern we identified within the timeframe required.
The purpose of this inspection was to see how much of the action plan the trust had met. Also, to see if the trust had met the requirements of the Warning Notice previously issued.
At this inspection we found the trust had met the requirements of the Warning Notice issued in November 2022. However, we found additional concerns during our site visit, which we have informed the trust of.
At this inspection we did not inspect all areas of the safe and well led key questions because the services had not had time to make the improvements necessary to meet the requirements as set out in the action plan the trust sent us after the last inspection. However, we continue to monitor progress of improvements to services against the action plan and timeframes indicated and will re-inspect them as appropriate.
We did not rate this service at this inspection. The previous rating of inadequate remains. We found:
The trust’s ligature risk assessments identified all areas of potential risk including staff areas and detailed actions to reduce the harm from those risks within all the wards we visited.
The trust was working in partnership with Shropshire Fire and Rescue Service (SFRS) and had a robust action plan to address actions SFRS had identified in the fire safety risk assessments.
Managers ensured that all staff working on the wards we visited now had regular supervision. These discussions included staff being able to request additional training as required.
Managers ensured that all temporary staff had a ward specific induction and agency nurses now had access to the trust’s electronic recording system.
The trust was able to demonstrate that staff working on the wards we visited always assessed patients’ mental state at the point of taking leave and recorded these discussions and decisions in patients’ records.
The trust was able to demonstrate how staff working on the wards we visited managed patients’ personal property including items deemed to be a risk.
However:
While staff now managed and had systems in place for patients’ personal items of potential risk well. They did not log items of potential risk on the ward that were not specific to a person, for example communal ward lighters.
Staff did not always respond to, or report incidents of potential risk in a timely way. Staff did not mitigate against the risk of further incidents occurring. Staff did not always hand over incident information at ward handover meetings.
Managers did not always use effective audit processes to ensure that all incidents were reported.
Managers did not ensure that effective learning had taken place following incidents of potential harm and that appropriate processes were in place from lessons learnt.
How we carried out the inspection
During our inspection on 27 and 28 June 2023, we visited all of the acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units (PICUs) at St Georges Hospital and The Redwoods Centre.
During the inspection we:
observed how staff cared for patients;
spoke with 20 patients who were using the services;
spoke with 24 staff including; ward managers, nurses, healthcare support workers, engagement coordinator and a quality lead;
looked at the quality of the 7 ward environments and checked to see that improvements and new systems were in place;
reviewed 21 patient records;
reviewed 23 incident records;
reviewed a range of policies, procedures and other documents relating to the running of the services.
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
During the inspection we spoke with 20 patients; Ten at The Redwoods Centre and 10 at St. George’s Hospital. We found patients’ feedback was positive across both sites. All patients knew what the restricted items were on the wards and all patients felt safe on the wards. No patients had any sexual safety concerns even when they were on mixed sex wards. All patients told us they could access all areas of the wards they needed to but staff areas such as toilets and meeting rooms were locked.
Three patients at St George’s Hospital told us the logging in and out of the restricted items was not always completed.
At St George’s Hospital 2 patients told us they did not know why certain items were restricted. All patients told us they felt safe, but 5 patients felt their sleep was often disturbed by staff shining lights through their door at night-time when completing therapeutic observations.