West Hertfordshire NHS Trust provides acute healthcare services to a core catchment population of approximately half a million people living in West Hertfordshire and the surrounding area. The trust also provides a range of more specialist services to a wider population, serving residents of North London, Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire and East Hertfordshire.
West Hertfordshire NHS Trust provides services from 3 sites Watford Hospital, St Albans Hospital and Hemel Hempstead Hospital
We carried out this inspection as part of our comprehensive inspection programme. We undertook an announced inspection of Watford Hospital, St Albans Hospital and Hemel Hempstead Hospital between 14 and 17 April 2015.
We also undertook an unannounced inspection on 1 and 17 May at Watford General Hospital.
Overall, we rated West Hertfordshire Hospitals NHS Trust as inadequate with two of the five key questions which we always rate as being inadequate (safe and well led).
The main concerns were particularly at the Watford site where five of the 8 core services we inspected were rated as inadequate. Only one service was rated as good – the children’s and young people’s service. However, the concerns were not confined to the Watford site with a total of six of the 13 services inspected across the trust rated as inadequate.
Overall we have judged the services at the trust as requiring improvement for caring. In most areas patients were treated with dignity and respect and were provided with appropriate emotional support. We found caring in children’s and young people’s services to be outstanding. However caring required improvement in two areas - maternity and outpatient services where patients were not always treated with dignity and respect.
Improvements were needed to ensure that services were safe, effective, responsive to people’s needs and well-led.
Our key findings were as follows:
- Most staff we spoke to were friendly and welcoming.
- The majority of staff were caring, compassionate and kind.
- Some senior staff told us they did not feel empowered to make decisions.
- Safety was not a sufficient priority, staff did not always report incidents and there was lack of a safety culture.
- The trust lacked a systematic approach to the reporting and analysis of incidents. When concerns, incidents and patient complaints were raised, or things went wrong, the approach to reviewing, investigating and learning was slow and in some cases absent. There was little evidence of trust wide learning and limited actions to improve patients’ safety across the trust.
- There had been lack of response to external reports where actions had been recommended and not acted upon. During our inspection the trust took the decision to close one operating theatre due to issues relating to ventilation and the risk that that presented. It was acknowledged by the executive team that this had not been escalated appropriately or managed previously and that their governance processes had not been effective.
- There were inadequate plans in place to manage risks identified to prevent future incidents and opportunities to prevent or minimize harm were missed and feedback was not always provided on incidents reported.
- Staffing was a challenge. Recommended standards were not always complied with and there was an over reliance of agency and locum staff. In addition the trust’s system for ensuring all temporary staff had had a comprehensive induction was not effective.
- The staffing situation was impacting on how staff felt, Many of the staff we spoke with expressed low levels of satisfaction, high levels of stress and work overload. Some staff told us they did not always feel respected, valued, supported and appreciated.
- The quality and accuracy of some of the data provided by the trust was poor.
- Facilities overall were in a poor state of repair and in some cases caused a potential risk to staff and visitors.
- In most areas staff adhered to good infection control practices and cleaning standards were generally good however. The condition of the estate in some areas made effective cleaning of some areas a challenge.
- Equipment was not always maintained and the appropriate safety checks were not always completed. The Emergency department was consistently not meeting the national 4 hour waiting time target.
- The trust was failing to meet the national waiting time targets and had been for a considerable time. The Trust's new executive leadership team had now implemented an intensive programme of work to improve performance against referral to treatment targets.
- The Trust board were not a stable team and was relatively inexperienced with a number of the executive directors in their first executive post.
- Over the past year the Board had gone through a significant period of change. At the time of the inspection both the chief executive and the director of governance were interim appointments with the CEO having been in post just 3 months since January 2015. In addition the current Chairman of the Trust will be leaving the Trust at the end of his current term of office (October 2015).
The incoming interim Chief Executive demonstrated a good understanding of the challenges the trust faced, along with the commitment to address them. She took decisive action in some areas immediately following the inspection.
To address the areas of poor practice the trust needs to make significant improvements.
Importantly, the trust MUST:
• Ensure action is taken to ensure difficult airway management equipment is adequate and checked to ensure it is fit for purpose.
• Take action to ensure medical staff are suitably trained to manage the safe transfer of patients from critical care to other hospitals and services.
• Review the environment within the Emergency Department to meet patient demand effectively.
• Ensure that staffing levels within adult Emergency Department meet patient demand.
• Ensure there are prompt and effective triage systems in place within the Emergency Department undertaken by appropriate and competent staff.
• Ensure that all patient records are accurate and demonstrate a full chronology of the care provided.
• Ensure that medicines are always stored in accordance with trust policy.
• Ensure there is an effective clinical audit plan in place for all services.
• Ensure that major incidents arrangements are suitable to ensure patients, staff and the public are adequately protected and that patients are cared for appropriately should there be a major incident.
• Ensure there are effective arrangements in place for the management of risk at all levels within the organisation.
• Ensure that there is a robust incident and accident reporting system in place and that lessons learnt from investigations of reports are shared with staff to improve patient safety and experience.
• Ensure all incidents are investigated in a timely manner and necessary actions taken.
• Ensure that governance and risk management systems reflect current risks and that all staff are aware of these systems and risks.
• Ensure that all facilities are in safe state of repair.
• Ensure that staff delivering information to bereaved people receive training in communication and bereavement.
• Review the cancellation of outpatient appointments and take the necessary steps to ensure that issues identified are addressed and cancellations are kept to a minimum.
• Review waiting times in outpatients’ clinics and take the necessary steps to ensure that issues identified are addressed.
• Ensure that patients’ records including confidential computerised patient records are stored appropriately in accordance with legislation at all times.
• Ensure that all equipment has safety and service checks in accordance with policy and manufacturer’ instructions and that the identified frequency is adhered to in respect of emergency equipment requiring daily checks.
• Ensure all areas are fit for purpose and present no safety risks to patients or staff.
• Review the elective surgery cancellation rates and review the elective surgery service demand.
• Review the provision of the continuous piped oxygen.
• Ensure that service risk registers are current and fully reflective of all risks and that all staff are aware of the trust process for managing risks.
• Take action to review any risk to patients who have had surgery in Theatre 4 at St Albans Hospital.
• Ensure that all patients’ records are kept up to date and appropriately maintained to ensure that patients receive appropriate and timely treatment.
• Ensure that all records are accurate and reflective of patients’ assessed needs.
• Ensure staff are able to attend and carry out mandatory training, to care for and treat patients effectively, particularly regarding annual resuscitation training.
• Ensure that at all times, there are sufficient numbers of suitably qualified, skilled and experienced staff to ensure people who use the service are safe and their health and welfare needs are met.
• Ensure that where a person lacks capacity to make an informed decision or give consent, staff must act in accordance with the requirements of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 and associated Code of Practice.
• Ensure that all appropriate premises are secure.
• Ensure security systems within the maternity unit are maintained at all times to ensure the safety of babies.
• Ensure that all staff are effectively supported with formal supervision and appraisals systems.
• Ensure that all facilities are in safe state of repair.
We saw several areas of outstanding practice including:
- The trust has delivered a significant reduction in mortality over the past two years, with Hospital Standardised Mortality Ratio (HSMR) dropping from 111.62 (significantly higher than expected) in March 2013 to 88.0 in March 2015 (significantly lower than expected). Equally, the Summary Hospital-level Mortality Indicator (SHMI) reduced from 107.4 (as expected) to 90.20 (lower than expected) and crude mortality reduced from 1.8% to 1.54% over the same period. Fracture neck of femur mortality rates have reduced from 12% to 7% over this period.
- Starfish ward staff had supported a parent whose child was frequently admitted to the ward to obtain funding to set up a carers’ support team. The team was subject to the same governance and recruitment checks as the ward’s staff. The carers’ support team offered sitting services, information and signposting, and befriending for parents whose children were in-patients on Starfish ward.
- The care delivered within the Children’s Emergency Department
- The trust had introduced a pilot pre-operative reminder telephone call service. The patient was called three days prior to their surgery for reminders and checks. Staff said if the service proved successful then it would become permanent.
- For world sepsis day, the sepsis team launched a ‘sing-along’ video called ‘Stamp Out Sepsis’ (SOS), sung in time to a well-known song. This was an innovative method that aimed to raise awareness of sepsis and encouraged staff to remember six actions that could improve patient outcome.
- The dementia care team had implemented a delirium recovery programme which aimed to reduce length of stay, readmissions, antipsychotic prescribing and promoted cognitive and physical functioning by cognitive enablement and health and wellbeing for patients. This allowed patients the opportunity to return home with up to three weeks of 24 hour live in care. The outcomes clearly demonstrated that the majority of patients with delirium went home with the programme in place when usual care would have predicted placement from hospital directly. Most patients recovered to a sufficient level to stay at home.
On the basis of this inspection, I have recommended that the trust be placed into special measures.
Professor Sir Mike Richards
Chief Inspector of Hospitals