Bushey Fields Hospital
Core service provided: Three acute admission wards; Two older people's wards; One Health Based Place of Safety
Male/female/mixed: male/female/mixed
Capacity: 99
Dorothy Pattison Hospital
Core service provided: Two acute admission wards; One Longstay/forensic/Secure services ward; One Health Based Place of Safety
Male/female/mixed: male/female/mixed
Capacity: 52
Bloxwich Hospital
Core service provided: Two older people's wards
Male/female/mixed: mixed
Capacity: 40
The trust has three main hospital sites: Bushey Fields Hospital in Dudley, Dorothy Pattison Hospital in Walsall and Bloxwich Hospital in Walsall. There are 191 beds; of which five are extra care area beds for people who require intensive nursing because their mental health problems have caused them to become agitated. The overall level of bed occupancy is lower than the national average (81% compared to the England average of 85%).
The trust also has staff based in about 28 locations across the two boroughs who provide care to people who live in their own homes.
The trust provides core mental health services and additional services such as Substance Misuse and Military Veterans services.
At the time of the inspection, the Board was leading work to change the way in which the trust’s services are organised. These changes had unsettled some staff; some staff that we talked to reported feeling unsupported by the trust and did not feel confident that if they raised concerns that they would be listened to and treated fairly. During the course of the inspection, we received some whistleblowing information from a number of staff across different disciplines and locations. Some staff reported to us that they felt ‘fearful and frightened of the culture within the organisation’ and were reluctant to raise concerns in fear of reprisal. Some staff reported this as ‘bullying’. However other staff reported that they felt very engaged.
The Non-Executive Directors (NED’s) were able to describe to us the information flows and how they challenged what they did not understand. The NED’s had a very robust understanding of all of the issues that the trust was facing and how they were to be tackled but always with an eye on quality.We concluded that the non-executive directors were a strong group who understood their role and exercised their duties effectively.
The trust had a robust approach to learning from incidents and ensured this was embedded in practice across all levels.
Although the trust ensured that all staff undertook mandatory training, it did not always meet the need for specific specialist training. For example, those working in older people’s services had not been trained in dementia care and we concluded that this had an impact on the quality of care received by people using this service.
The trust worked well with other local stakeholders, such as the local authorities and the clinical commissioning groups and we saw evidence of good multi-disciplinary team working; particularly between adult inpatient and community services.
With a few exceptions, we found that the trust’s staff were caring and had a good approach to patient care, and interacted positively and compassionately with people. We also saw examples of the trust’s staff providing good physical healthcare.
Clinical staff recorded risk assessments for all patients but were not so good at developing management plans in line with the assessments.
During our inspection we observed that some patients, on wards for both younger and older adults, were being secluded (nursed in isolation from other patients) without the safeguards and checks set out in the Mental Health Act Code of Practice being followed.
Before our inspection, the trust had identified problems with provision for older people and we agreed that this was the case for both inpatient and community services. Temporary nurses work many shifts on the older people’s wards at Bushey Fields hospital due to unfilled staff vacancies. We observed restrictive practices on both Malvern and Holyrood wards and we concluded that patients’ dignity and privacy were not always respected on Holyrood ward. The latter was due to a combination of an unsafe ward environment and staff practices. We also concluded that there was no clear vision for the future of community mental health services for older people in Dudley and Walsall.
The quality of mental health care provided to children and adolescents was good but was only available during office hours. Young people with a mental health problem could not access specialist help out of hours and there was no intensive home care provision to support children and young people in a crisis. Children and young people were waiting a long time to receive the right service after initially being referred.
We found that application of the Mental Health Act across the services was good. People were lawfully detained and had their rights read to them at the appropriate times. People’s access to independent mental health advocacy (IMHA) varied across the trust as it was not clear that a referral to IMHA had been made when people lacked capacity.