BPAS Merseyside is operated by British Pregnancy Advisory Service (BPAS). BPAS is a national charity and around 97% of patients are funded by the NHS. The Merseyside clinic has six screening rooms, three consulting rooms and one treatment room. It operates surgical lists from Wednesday to Saturday. There are three satellite clinics at St Helens, Warrington and Wigan.
The service provides termination of pregnancy services for women from Merseyside and surrounding areas as well as patients from Ireland. The service also provides vasectomy services.
We inspected this service using our focussed inspection methodology. We carried out an unannounced inspection on 8 and 9 May 2019.
To get to the heart of patients’ experiences of care and treatment, we ask the same five questions of all services: are they safe, effective, caring, responsive to people's needs, and well-led? Where we have a legal duty to do so we rate services’ performance against each key question as outstanding, good, requires improvement or inadequate.
Throughout the inspection, we took account of what people told us and how the provider understood and complied with the Mental Capacity Act 2005.
The main service provided by this clinic was termination of pregnancy services.
Services we rate
We did not previously rate this service. We rated it as Requires improvement overall.
We found areas of practice that require improvement:
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At our previous inspection in 2016 we were not assured that medicines were regularly reviewed and replaced as required. During this inspection, we found the service did not consistently follow best practice when prescribing, giving, recording and storing medicines. We found out of date medicines in the clinic rooms and on the emergency drugs trolley and the controlled drug register was not always accurately completed. Staff did not monitor the ambient room temperature where medicines were stored.
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At our previous inspection we found local governance arrangements did not ensure the identification, mitigation and monitoring of risks or the improvement of quality and patient outcomes. Although the service had introduced new systems following this inspection the systems used to monitor performance and risk were not robust. There was now a local risk register in place. However, the local risk register did not have control measures and review dates for all risks identified.
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We found areas where audits indicated high levels of compliance with policy and procedure, however we saw examples of poor practice or policies not being adhered to by staff. For example, staff did not fully complete all risk assessments prior to care and treatment and staff did not consistently adhere to the infection prevention and control measures specified by the service.
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The service did not meet the requirements of the duty of candour regulation. Duty of candour is a regulatory duty that relates to openness and transparency and requires providers of health and social care services to notify patients (or other relevant persons) of certain ‘notifiable safety incidents’ and provide reasonable support to that person. The service did not always include an apology in the written notification to the patient and only sent a written notification when the patient had given permission, as stipulated within BPAS policy.
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Patients could not always access the service when they wished. The waiting time for initial consultation was not in line with national guidance and 24% of patients waited longer than 10 days from decision to proceed to termination of pregnancy.
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Managers were not empowered to make changes to improve services at a local level. Policy was set by BPAS nationally and staff told us this could not be changed or developed locally. The governance structure and audit schedule were set out nationally and managers did not adapt this to local needs or issues. The results of the staff survey could not be broken down into each clinic, so managers did not have an oversight of issues raise by staff specific to their service.
However,
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The service had clear systems in place to identify and report safeguarding concerns. Staff had received appropriate safeguarding training and knew how to apply this. Staff were supported by a national safeguarding lead.
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The service had suitable premises and equipment and looked after them well. The clinic had undergone a recent refurbishment, and this was evident in a warm and welcoming environment. All areas of the clinic were visibly clean and clutter free. The clinic was wheelchair accessible with accessible toilets and a lift to all floors.
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The service had enough staff with the right qualifications, skills, training and experience to keep people safe from avoidable harm and to provide the right care and treatment. Managers acted to recruit to vacancies and used agency staff as necessary. Staff received mandatory training and an annual appraisal and compliance rates were high for both.
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We saw staff had a caring and compassionate approach to all patients. Feedback from patients was positive about how staff treated them. Staff demonstrated a non-judgemental attitude that was commented on and appreciated by patients.
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Managers promoted a positive culture that supported and valued staff. Staff spoke highly of managers and leaders stating they had ‘amazing’ support from managers. The position of management offices next to the reception desk provided visible leadership support at the front door and meant a senior member of staff was on hand quickly in the event of an issue or complaint.
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The service had recognised that governance processes needed strengthening following our last inspection. There was a corporate governance committee structure in place. The clinic followed the BPAS planned programme of auditing and monitoring and reported audit outcomes appropriately through the governance structure.
Following this inspection, we told the provider that it must take some actions to comply with the regulations and that it should make other improvements, even though a regulation had not been breached, to help the service improve. We also issued the provider with two requirement notices that affected BPAS Merseyside. Details are at the end of the report.
Nigel Acheson
Deputy Chief Inspector of Hospitals