Please note that the overall rating for the trust remains requires improvement; the follow up inspection ratings have been taken into account and this has resulted in no change to the overall hospital rating.
We undertook this inspection 28 and 29 July 2015 as a focused follow-up to an inspection we completed in June 2014. At that inspection the core services of Critical Care, which was a High Dependency Unit (HDU) at this trust and Outpatients Department (OPD) both had an Inadequate rating in one domain. This was within Safe for HDU and Responsive for OPD. Both services were rated as Requires Improvement overall. The trust received a follow-up inspection of those services to provide assurance that improvements had been made. Although diagnostics and imaging forms part of the OPD inspection the main issues had been in OPD, therefore the focus of this report was there. The inspection took place at this trust’s one site which has the same name as the trust.
At the end of 2014 there were some issues relating to staff and medications, which the trust shared with us at the time. This resulted in some changes in staffing in governance and a wholesale review and change of processes regarding controlled medication. For this reason a pharmacist inspector joined the inspection team. We wanted to review the governance and the controlled medication processes. We received some whistle-blower allegations prior and during the inspection which we also had an opportunity to review within the remit of this inspection.
A further visit was arranged to view documents relating to Duty of Candour (Regulation 20). During that visit on the 05 August we visited OPD, X-ray waiting area, and the previously private ward.
At this inspection the two core services were rated as Required Improvement. However, we did see improvements in both core services. We noted that the trust responded to our concerns raised at the previous inspection, but we found that other issues impacted on their ability to meet the regulations. This has been reflected in the ratings.
Within HDU all the ratings remained the same as the previous inspection. Although the issues identified were different this time they had a significant impact across a number of domains.
Within OPD the result for safe remained the same. The responsive domain had improved from inadequate to requires improvement. This demonstrated that the trust had worked hard to improve the services for people and where the rating is requires improvement there is still some improvement work to be done. We have recognised within the reports that the trust has identified work streams to address the on-going improvement work. As part of the improvement work within OPD the trust had upgraded the patient administration system, to ensure it was compatible with the planned management information system due winter 2015.
Our key findings were as follows:
- Staffing of HDU with regards to children was not suitable. We found that children were being cared for within the unit but not always by a paediatric trained member of staff, nor were the facilities suitable for children.
- Within both core services we found that infection control practices were well embedded, and staff followed trust policy and procedures.
- We found that although the trust and its staff worked to the essence of the regulations of the Duty of Candour, in being open and transparent when things went wrong, they did not meet all of the requirements of that regulation.
- Multi-disciplinary working was effective in improving patient experience within the hospital.
- 100% of staff in both core services had received their appraisals, which was higher than the hospital’s overall rate.
We saw several areas of outstanding practice including:
- The unit manager had ensured that staff were both aware and understood the values of the trust. A post box had been put on the unit to enable staff to identify what the values meant to them in their work on HDU. Staff views on the values displayed on a noticeboard and had also been discussed during staff meetings.
- Within Outpatients we observed that some clinicians were dictating letters to GP’s and other services onto an electronic system for same day delivery, in the presence of the patient before the patient left the clinic.
However, there were also areas of poor practice where the trust needs to make improvements.
- Safeguarding training compliance rate needed to be improved in OPD, for both adults and children only reaching the trust target for awareness training.
- Privacy and dignity was compromised with the unacceptable arrangements regarding the toilet and washing facilities available for patients in HDU. There was only one toilet available for patients (adults and children, staff and visitors).
- The trust needed to ensure it could upload the information in the Intensive Care National Audit & Research Centre, so it could be benchmarked against other similar trusts.
- Within OPD management reports needed to be available to monitor clinic wait times and cancellations. There needed to be an agreed process which all staff followed in the event of a clinic being cancelled.
We were very concerned about care of children in the HDU, therefore have followed our processes to ensure that the trust takes appropriate action to improve the situation we found at inspection. Our specific concerns relate to:
- Medical and nursing cover must be improved on HDU when children are accommodated.
- Children must be cared for in an appropriate environment when requiring HDU care.
Importantly, the trust must:
- The trust must improve local leaders’ understanding of the processes involved in exercising the duty of candour, in particular what they should expect beyond ward level and at a practical level, including record keeping.
- The trust must ensure sufficient staff are trained in safeguarding adults and children in OPD.
- The trust must improve the flow through the OPD so patients are not kept waiting for appointments.
- The trust must embed management arrangements within the OPD to ensure a firmer grip on the process of clinic booking and patient flow to improve waiting times for patients.
Professor Sir Mike Richards
Chief Inspector of Hospitals