04 July 2023, 5 July 2023, 6 July 2023,11 July 2023,12 July 2023,13 July 2023, 3 October 2023, 4 October 2023, 5 October 2023
During a routine inspection
Lancashire and South Cumbria NHS Foundation Trust provides a wide range of specialist mental and physical health services to a population within Lancashire and South Cumbria. The trust has 25 registered locations which provide inpatient and community care. The trust has approximately 949 inpatient beds across 57 wards and serves a population of around 1.8 million people.
The trust employs approximately 7,000 members of staff and had an annual operating income of over £500 million for 2022-23.
The trust provides the following core services:
- Acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units (PICU's)
- Long stay/rehabilitation mental health wards for working age adults
- Forensic inpatient / secure wards
- Wards for older people with mental health problems
- Community-based mental health services for adults of working age
- Mental health crisis services and health based places of safety
- Specialist community mental health services for children and young people
- Community-based mental health services for older people
- Community mental health services for people with a learning disability or autism
- Community Dental Services
- Child and Adolescent Mental Health wards
- Community Health Inpatient services
- Community Health Services for adults
- Community Health Services for Children and Young people
- Community End of life Care
We carried out unannounced inspections of wards for working age adults and psychiatric intensive care units and 2 short notice (24 hour) inspections of the community based mental health services for adults of working age and the crisis and health based places of safety core service provided by this trust.
We also inspected the well-led key question for the trust overall.
- We inspected 18 wards for working age adults and psychiatric intensive care units across all 7 inpatient sites and 5 locations of the community based mental health services for adults of working age. We visited these services because we had concerns about the pathway of care including waiting times to access community based mental health teams, risk management of community based mental health patients and access to working age adults and intensive care unit inpatient beds.
- We inspected the crisis and health-based places of safety. During this inspection we visited 5 home-based treatment teams, 2 mental health liaison teams, 2 mental health urgent assessment centres, 2 health-based places of safety, 2 Initial response services and 1 street triage team. We inspected this core service because at our last inspection in 2020 we rated the service as inadequate overall and needed to ensure the quality of care had improved.
- We did not inspect long stay rehabilitation mental health wards for working age adults or wards for older people with mental ill health which are also rated requires improvement, because we have not been in receipt of information of concern since our last inspection of these services.
- We did not inspect community health services for adults because we have not been in receipt of information of concern since our last inspection of these services.
We are monitoring the progress of improvements to these services and will re-inspect them as appropriate. All other core services provided by the trust were rated good at the time of our inspection.
Overall, we rated safe and effective as requires improvement and caring, responsive and well-led as good.
Our rating of trust improved. We rated it as good because:
- We previously rated 10 of the trust’s core services as good overall and 5 as requires improvement. We previously rated 14 of the core services as good in the caring key question with one service rated as outstanding. We previously rated 14 of the core services as good in the responsive key question. Although we found some areas for improvement in leadership and management within some of the services we inspected, we were sufficiently assured of the trust’s overall leadership, management and culture following our trust-wide well-led inspection.
- The Crisis service and health-based places of safety had significantly improved since our last inspection in 2020 where we had rated the service inadequate. Following transformation of this core service the crisis service had improved to good.
- Leaders were experienced, visible and approachable. Leaders had implemented improvements since our last inspection. The trust had implemented a transformation programme which was planned across the adult mental health acute care pathway.
- Executives and non-executives were passionate about the trust’s delivery of safe, high-quality care, they were aware of the trust’s challenges and risks. An improvement plan which included an increase to bed capacity had already begun and a model of care to increase community support was in progress.
- The trust had a clear vision and strategy, understood by all staff and driven by the executive team. We were able to see progression towards the trust’s achievement of its strategic goals. Staff demonstrated the trust’s values in the care they provided.
- The trust had a strong freedom to speak up process which staff spoke about positively. Staff equality networks had been successful implemented and supported staff through development initiatives. A ‘flex’ system had been introduced to enable individuals to work flexibly, this supported staff retention and showed value of the workforce.
- The trust had made improvements to its information management systems this included the implementation of DIALOG+ to support patient-centeredness, care planning and goal-based outcomes. A significant financial investment had been ringfenced to implement a patient record system within community health services, this also supported partnership working with other stakeholders such as GP’s.
- The trust had implemented a recognised Quality Improvement methodology with a clear and embedded approach to quality improvement which involved staff at all levels, we were able to see examples of where quality improvement approaches had been used to make improvement at both services and trust-wide level. Quality improvement was part of the mandatory training programme.
- System wide work with partner organisations was evident with a shared health and care approach. This included work to support both the workforce and the care and treatment of those accessing services.
- The trust commissioned an external well led review in 2022 and have implemented an action plan to drive improvement.
However:
- Since our last well led inspection in 2019 the trust had reviewed and implemented new clinical models and had developed transformation programmes to support this. This was still in the implementation stage and was not yet fully operational.
- At this inspection we rated 2 of the 3 core services we inspected requires improvement overall and one of the core services as good overall this was an improvement from inadequate at our last inspection. In rating the trust, we considered the current ratings of the 12 core services we did not inspect this time.
- The trust did not always have enough suitably trained staff to deliver safe care in all services. This was due to high vacancy rates, high but improving sickness rates and significant reliance on temporary staff in some services. However, there were clear plans with evidence of delivery in increasing the number of Care Hours Per Patient Day in inpatient wards and increasing the establishment and recruitment to this new establishment in Community Mental Health Teams and Home Based Treatment Teams.
- There was low compliance with supervision and annual appraisals although this was improving. Overall, the trust had a supervision compliance rate of 76% including staff on long term sick and new starters and an overall appraisal compliance rate of 80%. There was a clear and structured approach to supporting staff through a newly-introduced Appraisal Cascade approach, which ensured that individual objectives aligned to trust objectives. At the time of the inspection, the roll out of Appraisals since April had reached 80.2% against a target of 80%.
- People continued to wait too long to access some services. Waiting times for Community based mental health services for adults of working age had improved since the last inspection however there was not enough nursing and multidisciplinary staff in some teams, and this impacted on service delivery such as waiting for a care coordinator. Current bed capacity within the trust meant there were high risk individuals who had been deemed appropriate for admission but were unable to access an inpatient bed. There were also significant waiting times in specialist community mental health services for children and young people including access for neurodevelopmental assessments. The trust was working with the integrated care board to improve access to services.
- The capacity in acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units was lower than the demand, which had led to higher than expected out of area placements and an increase in demand for community based mental health services for adults of working age. This may have impacted upon the experience of those in community services.
How we carried out the inspection
Before the inspection visit, we reviewed information we held about the trust. During the inspection visit, the inspection team:
- visited all 18 of the trust’s acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units across all 7 inpatient sites.
- visited 5 out of 13 community based mental health teams for adults of working age.
- visited 5 home-based treatment teams, 2 mental health liaison teams, 2 mental health urgent assessment centres, 2 health-based places of safety, 2 initial response services and 1 street triage team.
- spoke with 118 members of staff.
- spoke with 52 people using the trust’s services.
- spoke with 23 carers or relatives of people using the trust’s services.
- reviewed 143 care records including medicines administration charts.
- observed several meetings including multi-disciplinary team meetings, safety huddles, multi-service calls and a multi-agency call and handover of care meetings.
- conducted 10 observations of direct practice.
- observed 1 sub-committee of the board as well as 1 board meeting.
- held 10 focus groups with staff and governors.
- spoke with 30 members of the trust’s leadership team including members of the board, the chair, and the chief executive.
- sought feedback from a range of stakeholders including health watch and the integrated care board.
- reviewed the trust’s process for fit and proper persons employed.
You can find further information about how we carry out our inspections on our website: www.cqc.org.uk/what-we-do/how-we-do-our-job/what-we-do-inspection.
What people who use the service say
Community- based mental health services for adults of working age
Patients we spoke with told us staff had warm and friendly attitudes towards them and most patients said staff were responsive.
Patients felt they were well informed in relation to their diagnosis, treatment, and care plans. Patients we spoke to confirmed they felt involved in their care.
Patients said they felt they trusted staff and they had a good rapport with their care coordinators. Patients described staff as lovely, polite, helpful, and well organised.
Feedback from friends and family was overall very positive. There were a small number of negative comments relating to poor communication and waiting too long to access the service.
We also spoke specifically to patients who had experienced being on the unallocated waiting list. Most patients said they were not contacted regularly by the service; telephone calls were not returned and they did not have care plans or crisis plans to refer to.
Mental health crisis services and health-based places of safety
We spoke with 11 patients who used the service. Patient feedback was generally positive. Patients viewed staff as kind, caring and considerate. Patients told us that the service was generally responsive and had helped them when they needed it.
Acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units (PICU's)
Most described staff positively and said they were caring and supportive and treated them with dignity, kindness, and respect. They described being able to speak to staff about any issues that were troubling them and being afforded privacy to do this.
Patients told us they were offered a copy of their care plans and given information about their care and treatment.
Patients said there were generally enough staff around, but they were always very busy, with three patients saying there were not enough staff. One patient told us their leave had been cancelled and one patient told us that activities were cancelled due to a lack of staff.
Most patients were happy with the activities, food, and ward environment.
Trust wide
Integrated Care Board
Feedback from the integrated care board (ICB) noted a significant change to the trust leadership and culture. The integrated care board felt the trust had developed into a transparent and honest organisation which had developed positive relationships with the ICB team and key stakeholders including local authorities, police, voluntary sector, ambulance and acute colleagues. The ICB felt they were promptly informed of any emerging risk and that relationships were good.
The ICB was aware of the shortfall in inpatient bed numbers but felt that following the opening of the new wards based at the Whalley site the shortfall would be considerably reduced. The ICB confirmed their support for a move away from an acute delivery system model to a community system.
Health Watch
During our well led inspection we held a focus group with representatives from Healthwatch they told us that feedback was a main driver at the trust and they were Inviting positive and negative feedback. They described been invited to quality visits on the inpatient units and feeling listened to when providing feedback.
They felt the change was on the back of the new leadership team.
We heard some concerns regarding the crisis line and some patients experience of using this.