• Mental Health
  • Independent mental health service

Nightingale Hospital

Overall: Good read more about inspection ratings

11-19 Lisson Grove, Marylebone, London, NW1 6SH (020) 7535 7700

Provided and run by:
Florence Nightingale Hospitals Limited

Report from 7 November 2024 assessment

Ratings - Specialist eating disorder services

  • Overall

    Good

  • Safe

    Good

  • Effective

    Good

  • Caring

    Good

  • Responsive

    Good

  • Well-led

    Good

Our view of the service

Nightingale Hospital is an independent hospital that provides mental health care and treatment for people who may or may not be detained under the Mental Health Act 1983. The hospital offers general psychiatry, eating disorders, obsessive compulsive disorder and addiction treatment for adults as both inpatients and outpatients. The service provides 3 acute wards for adults of working age, an obsessive compulsive disorder ward, a substance misuse and detoxification ward, and a specialist eating disorder service for adults. The eating disorder ward is located in a separate 9-bedded 3-storey building. Bendall Mews eating disorder unit provides eating disorder services for individuals aged 18 and above. Treatment can be accessed as part of an outpatient, day patient or inpatient programme. We carried out our on-site assessment of the service on 17 April and 13 June 2024 to check on compliance with requirements from the previous inspection in June 2022 and in response to feedback about the service received by CQC. At the previous inspection the eating disorder service was rated Requires Improvement in all key questions except Responsive which was rated Good, leading to an overall rating of Requires Improvement. Overall, we found significant improvements at the service. Patients felt safe in the service, and most relatives of people using the service were positive about staff care and treatment. The environment was clean, and well maintained. Patients said that staff were readily available and generally supported them with kindness. However, they raised concerns about the number and skills of bank or agency staff that worked with them. The ward manager was working to address these concerns. Patients were involved in producing their care plans and completed their own daily risk assessments alongside staff members. There had been an improvement in the governance systems and processes within the hospital following an unsettled period on the ward.