13 January 2020
During a routine inspection
Heatherside House Care Centre is in a secluded location which is geographically isolated. The service was a large home, bigger than most domestic style properties. It is registered for the support of up to 25 people. There were 18 people living at the service at the time of the inspection. Other people also used the service for respite care. This is larger than current best practice guidance.
The service had not been developed and designed in line with the principles and values that underpin Registering the Right Support and other best practice guidance. The outcomes for people did not fully reflect the principles and values of Registering the Right Support for the following reasons: People did not live in a service where a culture of enablement, independence, choice and inclusion enabled them to maximise their human rights and empowered them to be valued stakeholders in the service they lived in. People did not experience person centred care which was tailored to their individual needs.
People’s experience of using this service:
Information to support people with their behaviour or mood was not always available, comprising enough detail or followed by staff.
Information recorded by staff was not routinely used to learn lessons and improve the support people received and the outcomes they experienced.
Recruitment checks had been completed on new staff members. New staff had completed an induction however, staff’s induction records had not been completed fully.
People’s needs had not all been assessed. Support was not always delivered in line with best practice.
People enjoyed the food but were not routinely involved in shopping for food. People’s preferences for meals were sought each week but often people made no choice. The reasons for this were not reviewed to improve people’s ability to contribute. People were not always provided with communication tools to help express their views.
The registered manager had not ensured the service was meeting the requirements of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 (MCA). Conditions on people’s DoLS authorisations had not been met. Staff were recording people’s consent more frequently, but people had not consented to some aspects of their care.
No assessment of the environment had been completed to identify adaptations that would enable the service to better meet people’s needs or align the service more closely with the principles of registering the right support.
Staff were mostly up to date with their training but had not received training in areas relevant to the people they supported, such as learning disability or autism.
People’s health needs were supported by staff and people received their medicines as prescribed. People were not enabled to have as much control as possible over their medicines.
People were not always treated or described in a dignified way by staff.
People were not always involved in creating or reviewing their care plans. People’s care plans did not describe how people could be empowered to develop skills in the home or community or increase their independence. Staff were not routinely encouraging people to do this following an agreed plan of action.
There were not always enough staff available for people to receive person centred care. People spent most of their time in the service and there was a lack of opportunities that had been tailored to people’s individual interests and preferences, for people to engage with. Records showed people spent a lot of time in their room, sleeping, wandering or watching TV. Staff did not routinely support people to broaden their experiences to make informed choices about how they spent their time. People still did not have access to education or work opportunities, or support to develop skills within the service or community. The registered manager did not review how people spent their time, to ensure improvements and development opportunities were identified and acted upon.
The registered manager had not understood the principles of person-centred support or ensured they were embedded within the delivery of the service. The culture in the service did not reflect an aspiration to maximise people’s human rights.
Learning available from previous inspection reports, the local authority quality improvement team and a consultant engaged by the service, had not all been implemented to improve the service.
The provider and registered manager had increased their monitoring of the service, but this had not resulted in sustained improvements to the outcomes people experienced. Audits of records had not identified areas for improvement found during the inspection. Records were not routinely reviewed to identify areas for improvement. We found many of the concerns raised at previous inspections still remained.
The registered manager had not engaged with any organisations, guidance or development opportunity that focused on best practice within learning disability services, to increase their knowledge and the outcomes people experienced.
We made recommendations about medicines, risk assessments and the complaints procedure.
Enforcement:
We have identified breaches in relation to how people with behaviour that challenges were supported, how information was used to aid learning, staffing levels and staff development. We also identified breaches in relation to how people’s views were sought, understood and met, how people’s needs were met under the Mental Capacity Act 2005 (MCA) and the governance arrangements of the provider.
Rating at last inspection: Inadequate 23 May 2019
At a comprehensive inspection in March 2017, we found ongoing breaches of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014. This included breaches of Regulation 12 (Safe care and treatment), 17 (Good governance), 18 (Staffing) and 19 (Fit and proper persons employed). We asked the provider to complete an action plan to show what they would do and by when, to make improvements. We also served a warning notice on the provider and on the registered manager which required improvements to be made, so that the service met the requirements of Regulation 17 within six months.
In December 2017, we undertook a focussed inspection to check whether the service had addressed the concerns in the warning notices. At this inspection we only looked at the Well-led domain. We found that the requirements of the warning notice had not been met and there was still a breach of Regulation 17.
Following the focussed inspection, we met with the provider to discuss how they were going to meet the requirements of the warning notice and improve the service to ensure that they were good in all domains.
At our inspection in November 2018, we found the quality assurance and governance arrangements for the home were still not sufficient to ensure people received safe, effective care. We found breaches of regulation 11 (Consent), 12 (Safe care and treatment), 17 (Good governance) and 18 (Staffing). Following this inspection, the provider submitted an action plan stating how they would make the required improvements. The service was placed in ‘special measures’.
At our last inspection (May 2019) we found the provider had not made enough improvements. They had not ensured people were safe and felt safe. Consent had not always been sought from people about their care. The provider had not ensured all people’s needs were assessed or met or that people were involved in decisions about their care or how it was provided. The provider had not ensured people felt comfortable with the staff supporting them. They had not made reasonable adjustments to enable people’s needs to be met. People had not been empowered to make choices and have as much control as possible. The lack of choice and control over their daily lives meant people were not living lives as any ordinary citizen would. The provider had not ensured people’s information needs were identified, recorded or met in line with national guidance. The lack of robust quality assurance meant people were still at risk of receiving poor quality care. We found continued breaches of regulations 11 (Consent), 12 (safe care and treatment), 17 (Good governance) and a breach of regulation 9 (Person Centred Care). Following this inspection, the service stayed in special measures and we took action to remove the location from the provider’s registration.
Services in special measures will be kept under review and, if we have not taken immediate action to propose to cancel the provider’s registration of the service, will be inspected again within six months. The expectation is that providers found to have been providing inadequate care should have made significant improvements within this timeframe.
If not enough improvement is made within this timeframe so that there is still a rating of inadequate for any key question or overall, we will take action in line with our enforcement procedures to begin the process of preventing the provider from operating this service. This will lead to cancelling their registration or to varying the terms of their registration within six months if they do not improve.
Following this inspection, the service will remain in special measures.
Please see the action we have taken at the end of the report.
We will continue to monitor intelligence we receive about the service until we return to visit as per our re-inspection programme. If any concerning information is received, we may inspect sooner.
Why we inspected: This was a planned inspection based on the previous rating.
The full details can be found on our website at www.cqc.org.uk