4, 5, 10 & 13 July 2023
During an inspection of Acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units
We carried out this unannounced focused inspection because we had concerns about the safety and quality of the service, and wanted to see if the trust had made improvements following our last inspection.
The trust has 6 acute mental health wards for adults of working age and 2 psychiatric intensive care units (PICU) across 3 locations.
- Bowmere Hospital – Beech ward (22 beds), Juniper ward (24 beds), Willow ward (PICU, 7 beds)
- Clatterbridge Hospital Psychiatric Services – Brackendale ward (20 beds), Brooklands ward (PICU, 10 beds), Lakefield ward (20 beds), Riverwood ward (13 beds)
- Jocelyn Solly (Millbrook/Macclesfield DGH) – Mulberry ward (25 beds).
All 3 locations were visited by either inspectors or Mental Health Act reviewers. We visited 5 wards: Beech, Juniper and Willow wards at Bowmere Hospital, Brooklands ward at Clatterbridge Hospital, and Mulberry ward in Macclesfield. We reviewed information and documents about all 8 wards.
Our rating of services improved. We rated them as requires improvement because:
- The service did not always have enough nursing and medical staff, and not all staff were up to date with their mandatory training.
- Although staff had access to the information they needed to provide safe and effective care, records were not always fully completed, and the information was not always consistently recorded in the same place, which could make it difficult to monitor that it had been completed correctly.
- Patients were not always secluded in a suitable environment.
- Governance processes were in place, but they were not always effective.
However:
- Staff assessed and managed risks to patients and themselves and used restraint and seclusion only after attempts at de-escalation had failed. However, records of interventions were not always completed fully.
- Staff understood how to protect patients from abuse and the service worked with other agencies to do so. Staff had training on how to recognise and report abuse and they knew how to apply it.
- The service used systems and processes to safely prescribe, administer, record and store medicines. Staff regularly reviewed the effects of medications on each patient’s physical health. Patients had a physical health assessment on admission, but this was not always fully completed.
- The wards were generally safe, clean, equipped, furnished, maintained and fit for purpose.
- Staff recognised incidents and reported them appropriately. Managers investigated incidents and shared lessons learned with the whole team and the wider service.
- Leaders had the skills, knowledge and experience to perform their roles, had a good understanding of the services they managed, and were visible in the service and approachable for patients and staff.
- Staff knew and understood the provider’s vision and values and how they were applied in the work of their team. Most staff felt respected, supported and valued, particularly by their teams and local managers, and were able to raise their concerns.
- Staff engaged actively in local and national quality improvement activities.
At our last inspection on 8, 9, 14 and 15 November 2022 we issued the trust with warning notices and rated this core service as inadequate overall, and inadequate for safe and well-led. At this inspection we found that the trust had taken actions to address the concerns outlined in the warning notices. However, although we found that the trust had made progress against the warning notices we issued in November 2022, they had still not fully met the regulations.
How we carried out the inspection
Before the inspection visit we reviewed information that we held about the service.
During the inspection visit we:
- visited 3 of the 6 acute wards for working age adults and both PICUs, and looked at the ward environments and observed how staff were caring for patients
- spoke with 11 patients or their relatives
- spoke with staff on all the wards we visited
- spoke with senior managers covering all parts of the service
- reviewed 17 care records of patients, and other care related documents including observation and seclusion records
- looked in detail at the use of seclusion and enhanced observation
- attended 2 meetings
- looked at a range of policies, procedures and other documents relating to the running of the service.
You can find further information about how we carry out our inspections on our website: https://www.cqc.org.uk/what-we-do/how-we-do-our-job/what-we-do-inspection.
What people who use the service say
The patients we spoke with had mixed views about the service, but their feedback was broadly positive.
Patients were generally positive about staff, with most finding them available, approachable and respectful. Some patients said there were not enough staff and that one-to-one sessions did not always happen, but most said there was someone to talk with if they needed support. There were mixed views about access to activities – for patients on the acute wards these tended to take place off the ward, so they were more accessible for patients who did not need to be escorted off the ward.
Patients who needed physical healthcare generally had their needs met.
Patients had mixed views about how involved they were in their care, and how much information they had about medicines. Some patients felt very involved and informed, others less so.
Patients told us that the wards were usually clean.