7, 8, 9 and 10 February 2023
During an inspection of Acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units
East London NHS Foundation Trust provides a range of mental and physical healthcare services for adults and children in East London, mainly in the London Boroughs of Newham, City and Hackney, and Tower Hamlets. The trust also provides mental and physical healthcare services for adults and children in Luton and Bedfordshire. Across these regions the trust provides inpatient services delivering 24-hour care and treatment for patients who are experiencing an acute mental health episode which cannot be managed in the community due to the degree of risk.
This inspection was of acute mental health wards for adults of working age. We carried out an unannounced focused inspection of 4 acute wards for adults of working age across the trust as we were aware of a number of self-harm related deaths and serious incidents for patients who were detained under the Mental Health Act (MHA). Between January 2019 and January 2023 there were 6 deaths and 2 serious incidents for MHA detained patients from self-harm. For each serious incident the trust investigation processes identified a series of care and delivery recommendations and actions to improve care and treatment. We wanted to see how the trust implemented these improvements to care and treatment to ensure patient safety and minimising the repetition of poor practice. We also wanted to review if learning from serious incidents and specific recommendations and actions had been fully completed and embedded across the services.
We inspected the following 4 wards, Gardner Ward in City and Hackney, Roman Ward in Tower Hamlets, Willow Ward in Bedford and Coral Ward in Luton.
The core service is registered to provide the following regulated activities: treatment of disorder disease or injury; diagnostic and screening procedures; and assessment or medical treatment of person admitted under the Mental Health Act (MHA) and nursing care.
The acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units for Luton and Bedfordshire were last inspected in 2019 and for Tower Hamlets, Newham and City and Hackney in 2016. The overall rating for the core service was outstanding. Safe was rated as good, effective was rated as good, caring was rated as outstanding, responsive was rated as outstanding and well-led was rated as outstanding. The trust also had a well-led inspection in 2021 where it was rated as outstanding overall. At the well-led inspection in 2021 safe was rated as good, effective as good, caring as outstanding, responsive as good and well-led as outstanding.
This was a focused inspection. We looked at aspects of the safe and well-led domains. We did not rerate the overall service as a result of this inspection. The previous rating of outstanding remains which was the rating at the last comprehensive inspection in 2016.
We limited the rating for safe at this inspection to Requires Improvement as we found a breach of regulation. The well led domain was not rated at this inspection. We did not inspect the whole acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care service.
We found:
- This was a focused inspection. We looked at aspects of the safe and well led domains. We did not rerate the overall service as a result of this inspection. The rating of this overall core service remained outstanding.
- Ward environments were safe and clean. The wards had enough nurses and doctors. Escalation processes for staff when they were short staffed or needed additional staff had improved.
- Service improvements had taken place as a result of learning from serious incidents. Wards applied identified recommendations and completed actions in a timely manner. On all wards the observation, ligature risk mitigation and patient search processes had improved.
- In response to a number of incidents where observation procedures were not followed and practice fell below expected standards the trust rolled out a trust wide quality improvement project to understand the challenges in this area. This led to individual teams across the services working on a range of project areas around observations exploring local solutions.
- Most staff were well informed about incidents. Staff knew about previous serious incidents going back several years. The trust developed a suite of online training covering suicide prevention, ligatures, observations, and patient searches to support staff in learning lessons from previous incidents.
- Senior staff investigated incidents thoroughly. Patients and their families were involved in these investigations. The trust worked closely with family members and offered family members to option to feed into the service improvement and development processes. This had a powerful impact in understanding and how the application of operational processes played a vital role in patient safety.
However:
- This inspection identified a breach in Regulation 12, safe care and treatment. The trust did not always meet its targets for compliance with mandatory training.
- This inspection also identified a breach in Regulation 18, staffing. Managers did not support all staff through regular, constructive clinical supervision of their work. The services’ supervision completion rates did not always meet the trust’s supervision target.
- The trust did not always conduct and record the environmental checks to ensure the safety of ward environments to a consistently high standard.
- The trust did not always ensure that serious incident action plans were updated to reflect further changes in the actions needed to carry out the changes successfully.
- The trust did not always ensure that actions from serious incident reports were fully discussed between staff responsible for delivering those actions and the senior managers and central serious incident team to ensure actions were correctly interpreted.