17, 18 February 2014
During an inspection looking at part of the service
We found some progress had been made to act in accordance with legal requirements when people did not have the capacity to consent. However, staff training and development of the use of mental capacity assessments would ensure that appropriate people were consulted for significant decisions. Recruitment had taken place and new staff were being inducted to the service. Ongoing staff turnover and use of agency and bank staff meant that further work was needed to ensure that enough, sufficiently trained members if staff were in place to consistently support people.
The quality assurance of the service and processes to identify, assess and manage risks were not comprehensive. Effective steps had not been taken to ensure care was provided in an environment that was suitably designed, adequately maintained and decorated, clean or free from the risk of infection. People were not protected from the risks of unsafe or inappropriate care because people's care records contained contradictory information or insufficient information putting them at risk of inappropriate care or treatment.