7 and 13 June 2023
During an inspection of Child and adolescent mental health wards
Chalkhill delivers a Tier 4 Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS). Chalkhill is run by Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust and is a 16-bedded mixed gender inpatient unit where young people are admitted if they require assessment and treatment for acute mental health needs. Chalkhill is a sole Mental Health facility in the grounds of a general acute hospital, exclusively for 12–17-year-old young people. They offer assessment and treatment of a wide range of mental health difficulties and needs, as well as support for eating disorders and disordered eating.
Chalkhill was last inspected in December 2016 and was rated as Good overall with Outstanding in Caring.
We carried out this unannounced focused inspection because we received information of concern regarding the safety and wellbeing of the young people, high levels of incidents leading to harm, staff training and competence, low staffing numbers, ineffective observations of young people and poor leadership and support. Before the inspection the trust along with the commissioners of the service had identified some safety concerns and had an action plan in place to address. However, the action plan had not been fully implemented and some of these areas remained a concern during this inspection.
We inspected safe and well-led. Following this inspection, the ratings for safe and well-led went down from good to requires improvement. This meant that the overall rating for the service also went down from good to requires improvement.
Following this inspection, we served the trust with a Warning Notice, because we found that significant improvement was needed to ensure that there was effective oversight of processes and practices, staff competence and support and risk assessing the health, safety and welfare of young people. The Warning Notice required the provider to make improvements to meet the legal requirements set out in the Health and Social Care Act by 11 August 2023. In response to the warning notice, an updated action plan was provided, which set out the actions they had taken to immediately address the safety concerns and the actions they planned to take to mitigate remaining risks.
Prior to the inspection, the trust had capped the occupancy levels at 12 beds. This was to ensure a safe patient to staff ratio during the recruitment of clinical staff. Following our inspection and feedback, the trust paused any new admissions and worked to safely discharge some of the young people where appropriate. Post inspection, the trust continued to provide us with information about the detailed actions being taken that allowed us to monitor the service. The trust had regular engagement with us as part of that monitoring process.
Our rating of services went down. We rated them as requires improvement. Our key findings were:
- The ward was not always safe, clean or well-maintained. Staff did not always assess and manage risk well. The environmental security checks and the documentation used to support this did not always capture risks or enable appropriate mitigation to be put in place. Repairs to the ward were not carried out in a timely manner which added to the clinical pressures on the service.
- Staff were not always able to keep young people safe from avoidable harm. There were high levels of repeated incidents which caused harm and potential harm to young people where injury was sustained. Staff did not always identify and report all incidents or near misses of incidents. Incidents were not always reviewed and investigated by competent staff. Incidents were not consistently monitored, and action was not always taken to remedy the situation, to prevent further occurrences and to make sure improvements were made as a result.
- Staff did not always manage risk well. Although staff completed daily environmental checks of the service environment, they did not always identify, remove or reduce risks that were evident on the ward.
- Staff did not always assess and manage risks to young people and themselves. Risk assessments did not always identify or address all a young person’s needs.
- Staff did not always develop care plans that appropriately reflected young people’s assessed needs. Care plans were not always personalised, holistic and recovery oriented. Staff did not always use the information in the care plans when delivering care to young people.
- There was not enough staff deployed with the skills, expertise and experience to meet the needs of the young people. There was a reliance on agency and bank staff, especially at night. There was no assessment of staff competence and some of the staff did not know how to safely support the young people. Staff told us they were not receiving regular supervision and did not feel supported by the service management to carry out their role.
- Staff from the different disciplines did not always work together effectively and this resulted in gaps in the young people’s care.
- There were indicators of a closed culture at the service. The trust did not ensure practice at the service was open and transparent. Staff and young people told us they did not always feel safe or supported to raise concerns. Staff reported exceptionally low morale.
- Staff did not always follow the trust’s policy and procedures on the use of enhanced support when observing young people assessed as being at higher risk of harm to themselves and others.
- Blanket restrictions were evident on the ward which restricted the young people’s movement around the service.
- Feedback from young people and relatives and carers was negative. Young people did not always feel safe on the ward.
- The governance processes did not always operate effectively. Risks were not always managed well, with oversight, monitoring and learning from incidents being poor. The trust processes for reporting and reviewing incidents was not effective. Despite the trust already having an action plan in place, the trust did not have adequate assurance mechanisms in place. They had not identified that young people were not always receiving safe care and had not acted to make improvements in a timely manner.
However:
- All staff spoke positively and, in a kind, caring and respectful manner about the young people. Our observations of interactions between most staff and young people also reflected this.
- The mandatory training programme was comprehensive and met the needs of young people and staff.
- Staff completed risk assessments for each patient on admission, using a recognised tool.
- Young people eligible to take leave were able to take this with the support from staff.
- There had been successful discharges where young people had been supported to move on from the service.
- There had been recent positive changes to the management of the service.
- The service had access to a range of specialists including nurses, occupational therapists, physical health nurses, psychologists and social worker.
What people who use the service say
Young people told us they did not always feel safe on the ward. They told us staff were varied in their approach, and whilst there were certain staff they described positively, they also spoke about staff who they felt did not know them well and did not listen or help them when needed.
What carers and relatives of people who use the service say:
Relatives told us they did not feel their young person was safe or well looked after at all times at the service. They told us about communication concerns, specifically when incidents and investigations happened and not being informed or kept updated. They felt they had to always phone and request information repeatedly as key workers were not always keeping them up to date with their young persons care and their lives whilst they were at the service. They felt there was a lot of agency staff who did not know the young people and their needs well. One relative did say they were invited to multidisciplinary team meetings to discuss their young person’s care and they felt the service was welcoming when they attended.