We inspected this service on 7 September 2015. This inspection was unannounced. At our previous inspection on 3 January 2014 we found that the service was meeting the regulations that we inspected.
34-35 Huddleston Close is a care home registered to provide care, support and accommodation for up to four adults with a learning disability. The service is provided by MENCAP. There are three bedrooms in the main house, and upstairs is a self-contained flat where one person lives with support from the staff team. At the time we visited, there were three people living in the service.
The service had a registered manager, who had been in post since May 2014. A registered manager is a person who has registered with the Care Quality Commission to manage the service. Like registered providers, they are ‘registered persons’. Registered persons have legal responsibility for meeting the requirements in the Health and Social Care Act 2008 and associated Regulations about how the service is run.
The premises were safe, with regular health and safety checks including fire drills carried out. The service had detailed risk assessments in place to manage risks for the people who lived there, and where people were deprived of their liberty for their own safety, the service had taken appropriate steps to inform the local authority and to reduce these restrictions wherever possible.
We found detailed care plans were in place, and reviewed regularly in order to ensure that people received the right support as their needs changed. The service had procedures in place to ensure that incidents and near-misses were recorded and reviewed, and in response to these had made changes in order to reduce the risks to people who lived there.
Two of the people who lived at the service were unable to communicate verbally, and we saw that the service was using communication tools such as pictures in order to enable people to make choices about their daily lives. Staffing levels ensured that people were able to be supported to carry out activities of their own choice by being supported individually in line with their assessed needs. People’s rights were respected and staff were friendly and respectful.
The registered manager was based on site, and people we spoke to told us he encouraged a culture which was open and inclusive. Staff training was regularly reviewed and made available to staff, and there were systems in place to ensure that essential training was attended regularly by staff. The registered manager encouraged feedback from staff about what they had learnt and how the service could be improved as a result of this training.
The service was meeting the requirements of the Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards (DoLS). The Care Quality Commission (CQC) is required by law to monitor the operation of the Mental Capacity Act (2005) (MCA) and DoLS, and to report upon our findings. DoLS are in place to protect people where they do not have the capacity to make decisions and where it is regarded as necessary to restrict their freedom in some way, to protect themselves or others. Staff understood when a DoLS application should be made and how to submit one.