9 March 2022
During an inspection of Emergency and urgent care
South Western Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust works across the whole of the South West of England from Gloucestershire in the north to Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly in the south.
We carried out this short-notice announced inspection in March 2022. We had a focus on the urgent and emergency care pathway for patients across the integrated care system in Cornwall. As the ambulance trust serves the whole of the South West of England, not all information relates to Cornwall, but we have included specific data and evidence where we can. Some of the data also relates to the NHS trust in Plymouth as patients from the east of Cornwall are mostly conveyed to that hospital rather than the emergency department in Truro. Due to ongoing restrictions for safety during the pandemic, we did not accompany crews attending patients in the community, but met with them at Royal Cornwall Hospital, Treliske, Truro.
As this was a focused inspection, and we did not look at every question in our key lines of enquiry, we did not re-rate the service this time. Our reports published in March 2022 with a focus on Gloucestershire, but also the South Western Ambulance Service Emergency Operations Centres, can be found here: https://www.cqc.org.uk/provider/RYF
A summary of CQC findings on urgent and emergency care services in Cornwall
Urgent and emergency care services across England have been and continue to be under sustained pressure. In response, CQC is undertaking a series of coordinated inspections, monitoring calls and analysis of data to identify how services in a local area work together to ensure patients receive safe, effective and timely care. We have summarised our findings for Cornwall below:
Cornwall
The health and care system in this area is under extreme pressure and struggling to meet people’s needs in a safe and timely way. We have identified a high level of risk to people’s health when trying to access urgent and emergency care in Cornwall. Provision of urgent and emergency care in Cornwall is supported by services, stakeholders, commissioners and the local authority and stakeholders were aware of the challenges across Cornwall; however, performance has remained poor, and people are unable to access the right urgent and emergency care, in the right place, at the right time.
We found significant delays to people’s treatment across primary care, urgent care, 999 and acute services which put people at risk of harm. Staff reported feeling very tired due to the on-going pressures which were exacerbated by high levels of staff sickness and staff leaving health and social care. All sectors were struggling to recruit to vacant posts. We found a particularly high level of staff absence across social care resulting in long delays for people waiting to leave hospital to receive social care either in their own home or in a care setting.
GP practices reported concerns about the availability of urgent and emergency responses, often resulting in significant delays in 999 responses for patients who were seriously unwell and GPs needing to provide emergency treatment or extended care whilst waiting for an ambulance. GPs also reported a lack of capacity in mental health services which resulted in people’s needs not being appropriately met, as well as a shortage of District Nurses in Cornwall.
A lack of dental and mental health support also presented significant challenges to the NHS111 service who were actively managing their own performance but needed additional resources available in the community to avoid signposting people to acute services. The NHS111 service in Cornwall worked to deliver timely access to people in this area, whilst performance was below national targets it was better than other areas in England.
Urgent care services were available in the community, including urgent treatment centres and minor illness and injury units and these services were promoted across Cornwall. These services adapted where possible to the change in pressures across Cornwall. When services experienced staffing issues, some units would be closed. When a decision was made to close a minor injury unit (MIU) the trust diverted patients to the nearest alternative MIU and updated the systems directory of services to reflect this. However, this carried a potential risk of increased waiting times in other minor injury units and of more people attending emergency departments to access treatment. This had been highlighted on the trust’s risk register.
Due to the increased pressures in health and social care across Cornwall, we found some patients presented or were taken to urgent care services who were acutely unwell or who required dental or mental health care which wasn’t available elsewhere. Staff working in these services treated those patients to the best of their ability; however, patients were not always receiving the right care in the right place.
Delays in ambulance response times in Cornwall are extremely concerning and pose a high level of risk to patient safety. Ambulance handover delays at hospitals in the region were some of the highest recorded in England. This resulted in people being treated in the ambulances outside of the hospital, it also meant a significant reduction in the number of ambulances available to respond to 999 calls. These delays impacted on the safe care and treatment people received and posed a high risk to people awaiting a 999 response. At the time of our inspection, the ambulance service in Cornwall escalated safety concerns to NHS England and NHS Improvement.
Staff working in the ambulance service reported significant difficulties in accessing alternative pathways to Emergency Departments (ED). When trying to access acute assessment units, staff reported being bounced back and forth between services and resorting to ED as they were unable to get their patient accepted. Many other alternative pathways were only available in specific geographical areas and within specific times, making it challenging for front line ambulance crews to know what services they could access and when. In addition, ambulance staff were not always empowered to make referrals to alternative services. The complexity of these pathways often resulted in patients being conveyed to the ED.
Hospital wards were frequently being adapted to meet changes in demand and due to the impact of COVID-19. There was a significant number of people who were medically fit for discharge but remaining in the hospital impacting on the care delivered to other patients. The hospital had created additional space to accommodate patients who were fit for discharge but were awaiting care packages in the community; however, staff were stretched to care for these patients.
Delays in discharge from acute medical care impacted on patient flow across urgent and emergency care pathways. This also resulted in delays in handovers from ambulance crews, prolonged waits and overcrowding in the Emergency Department due to the lack of bed capacity. We found that care and treatment was not always provided in the ED in a timely way due to overcrowding, staffing issues and additional pressure on those working in the department. These delays in care and treatment put people at risk of harm.
In response to COVID-19, community assessment and treatment units (CATUs) had been established in Cornwall. These wards were designed to support patient flow, avoid admission into acute hospitals and provide timely diagnostic tests and assessments. However, these wards were full and unable to admit patients and experienced delayed discharges due to a lack of onward care provision in the community.
Community nursing teams had been recently established to support admissions avoidance and improved discharge. This work spanned across health and social care; however, at the time of our inspections it was in its infancy so we could not assess the impact.
The reasons for delayed discharge are complex and we found that discharge processes should be improved to prevent delays where possible. However, we recognise that patient flow across the Urgent and Emergency Care pathway in Cornwall is significantly impacted on by a shortage of staffed capacity in social care services. Staff shortages in social care across Cornwall, especially for nursing staff, are some of the highest seen in England. This staffing crisis is resulting in a shortage of domiciliary care packages and care home capacity meaning many people cannot be safely discharged from hospital. A care hotel has been established in Cornwall providing very short-term care for people with very low levels of care needs; this is working well for those who meet the criteria for staying in the hotel, however this is a relatively small number of people.
Without significant improvement in patient flow and better collaborative working between health and social care, it is unlikely that patient safety and performance across urgent and emergency care will improve. Whilst we have seen some pilots and community services adapted to meet changes in demand, additional focus on health promotion and preventative healthcare is needed to support people to manage their own health needs. People trying to access urgent and emergency care in Cornwall experience significant challenges and delays and do not always receive timely, appropriate care to meet their needs and people are at increased risk of harm.
Summary of South Western Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust
On this inspection centred on Cornwall, we reviewed emergency and urgent care services. For this core service we looked at elements of the safety, effectiveness, caring, responsiveness and leadership of the staff and teams responding to 999 calls, and those supporting the emergency departments on site.
This inspection was not rated. We continue to monitor all South Western Ambulance services and will inspect further in the course of our programme of inspections.
For emergency and urgent care, we found:
- The service was under immense pressure from a lack of bed-capacity in the acute hospitals and the community with patients waiting in ambulances at emergency departments (which were also full). The service was staffed and resourced safely to meet people’s needs in most areas for commissioned and planned levels of demand. Staffing levels had been increased to deal with some of the predicted increase in demand for ambulances, but not to cope with the lack of bed capacity experienced. However, additional recruitment of staff continued across the service.
- Delays in the handover of patients at emergency departments meant the service was unable to reach all patients who needed an ambulance in a timely way, in line with national targets. There was evidence to show the trust had taken internal action to manage the increasing demand on urgent and emergency care capacity. However, incidents of patients waiting long periods of time for an ambulance were increasing and occurred on most days. This was having a significant impact on the morale of staff across the service and on patients waiting.
- There were risks for patients as a result of ambulance handover delays in emergency departments. There were known and unknown risks of harm to patients who were held in an ambulance or waiting in the community and an ambulance was not available or excessively delayed. This led to harm for some patients.
- The NHS contractual response times for ambulances to attend patients were not being met and some were exceptionally long and increasing. This was because ambulances were waiting at emergency departments because of capacity pressures in hospitals and other parts of the health and social care system.
However:
- Despite the pressure and challenges, staff were kind, compassionate and supportive to patients, some of whom had complex needs. One patient said of the staff: “they’ve been wonderful” and another said, “I just can’t fault them.”
- There had been some excellent multidisciplinary working and mutual aid to and from the service. Volunteers and first responders continued to play a vital role.
How we carried out the inspection
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.
For our emergency and urgent care inspection, we met with staff operating in the county of Cornwall. We spoke with trust’s county commander and the deputy county commander for Cornwall. We talked with paramedics, emergency care assistants and other members of staff on duty at the emergency department at Royal Cornwall Hospital, Truro. We spoke with 10 paramedics, emergency care assistants and other support personnel, and the hospital ambulance liaison officer (known as a HALO).
We spoke with six patients while on site at the emergency department. Some were still in ambulances and others had arrived by ambulance and been taken into the emergency department. Although we observed care delivered by ambulance staff for a number of patients, some of these were not well enough to talk with us. Due to rules of safety in the COVID-19 pandemic, and in light of the pressures of demand on the ambulance service, we did not ride out with crews or observe them on the scene with patients.