14 February 2023, 15 February 2023, 16 February 2023
During an inspection of Acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units
Black Country Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust was formerly called Black Country Partnership NHS Foundation Trust. It changed its name in April 2020 when it acquired the mental health services previously run by Dudley and Walsall Mental Health Partnership NHS Trust, which is now Dudley Integrated Health and Care NHS Trust.
Since the merger we have completed one inspection in November 2021. This consisted of how well led the trust was and three mental health services: acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units, mental health crisis services and health-based places of safety and wards for older people with mental health problems. We rated the trust overall and all three mental health services as good. In rating the trust in November 2021, we took into account previous ratings for services not inspected.
Following the inspection in November 2021 we told the trust that it must take action to bring services into line with two legal requirements. This action related to this core service was:
Wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units
The trust must ensure that all ligatures in the acute wards are removed or mitigated effectively to protect patients from self-harm. (Regulation 12) (1)(d)
We told the trust action it should take to improve:
Wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive units: The trust should ensure that all patients are involved in their treatment and care and receive a copy of their care plan.
The trust should consider updating the seclusion room at Macarthur Centre to make the environment more comfortable for patients in seclusion.
At this inspection we inspected one core service: Acute wards for adults of working age and psychiatric intensive care units. We inspected this service following reports of safeguarding incidents to the local authority and police which were being investigated at time of inspection.
In November 2021 we rated this core service as Good overall, requires improvement for safe and Good for effective, caring, responsive and well led.
What people who use the service say
Patients said staff were good and had supported them.
Patients told us they could make drinks and snacks when they wanted to although the kitchen on Ambleside ward was locked. Patients said that when they complained about the lack of variety of food this had improved.
Some patients did not have a copy of their care plan and one patient didn’t know they should have one. Other patients said they were not involved in their care plan. Some patients told us they did not have one to one time with their named nurse.
Patients on Dale ward at Penn hospital and patients at Bushey Fields hospital said there were a lot of activities going on. However, on other wards patients said they were bored and there was nothing to do. Patients at Hallam Street hospital said they did not often get to the resource centre for activities so did not have a chance to meet patients from other wards.
Patients told us that staff were kind, caring and interested in them, they said staff knocked on their door before entering and treated them with respect.
One patient’s relative said staff keep them updated on their family member. Another said that staff treated them and their relative with respect.
We rated this service as requires improvement at this inspection because:
The environment had not fully been adapted to ensure patients safety. However, the trust had undertaken significant work to assess ligature risks, undertake incident surveillance and provided funding to the wards where environmental risk was highest. Staff reduced the risks of blind spots by observing patients closely.
Patients said they did not always have one to one time with nurses, and leave was often cancelled. Doctors could not always attend the ward at night but were available by telephone. However, the wards had enough nurses and doctors to ensure patents were safe.
Staff did not always manage medicines safely and did not show they followed guidance from pharmacists.
The trust had not trained all staff in immediate life support.
Staff did not always develop holistic, recovery-oriented care plans informed by a comprehensive assessment.
Staff were not always able to provide a range of treatments suitable to the needs of the patients in line with national guidance about best practice. This was because there were vacancies for occupational therapists and psychologists on some wards. The ward teams did not always include or have access to the full range of specialists required to meet the needs of patients.
On Friar ward the staff did not always work well together as a multidisciplinary team or with community teams and external providers who would have a role in providing aftercare. Staff across the wards were not aware of the role of the newly formed Complex Care team within the trust.
The service did not always have a bed available locally to a person who would benefit from admission and patients were not always discharged promptly once their condition warranted this.
The governance processes did not always ensure that ward procedures ran smoothly.
However:
Staff assessed and managed risk well and minimised the use of restrictive practices.
The ward environments were clean.
Staff followed good practice with respect to safeguarding.
The trust had reduced the staff turnover rates across the wards.
Managers ensured that staff received supervision and appraisal.
Staff treated patients with compassion and kindness, respected their privacy and dignity, and understood the individual needs of patients. They actively involved patients and families and carers in care decisions.
Staff engaged in clinical audit to evaluate the quality of care they provided.
Staff understood and discharged their roles and responsibilities under the Mental Health Act 1983 and the Mental Capacity Act 2005.