13 May 2019
During a routine inspection
Sabrina House is a residential care home that is registered to provide accommodation and personal care to 14 people. At the time of our inspection 14 people were receiving regulated activity at Sabrina House.
People’s experience of using this service:
People told us they felt safe living at Sabrina House. We saw systems and processes continued to be implemented to keep people safe. Although systems were implemented, we noted new arrangements for the safe management of medicines had been recently implemented at the home. We found good practice guidelines were not always followed. We have made a recommendation about this.
We were repeatedly told by health and social care professionals and relatives that care was provided in a person-centred way which enabled people to experience very positive outcomes. Staff were committed to and worked innovatively to promote health and well-being. They embraced good practice guidance and training to enable them to deliver person-centred support. The service had recently been presented with the Creative Inspiration Musical Care Home 2018 award at a Creative Health Conference in recognition of the work completed by staff to increase well-being through music.
Contact with community resources and support networks were encouraged and sustained. The service understood the importance of combatting isolation and encouraged people to develop and maintain relationships. The home was an active part of the community, having links with nearby schools and colleges. One child who had been involved in some work with people who lived at the home had described the experience as, “life-changing”.
People, relatives and health and social care professionals told us staff were kind and caring and often exceeded expectations. The service understood the importance of protecting people’s human rights; dignity, independence and privacy was always considered and promoted.
People’s received timely support to ensure their health care needs were met. We received repeated praise from relatives and health and social care professionals. They said people’s health had improved because of effective care being provided at the home.
People told us they were happy with the quality and choice of food provided at the home. They said they were consulted with and personal preferences were taken into consideration.
Consent was recorded in people’s care files and relevant deprivation of liberty applications had been submitted when people were being deprived of their liberty. People were supported to have maximum choice and control of their lives and staff supported them in the least restrictive way possible; the policies and systems in the service supported this practice.
Everyone we spoke with repeatedly told us the home was well-led. Our observations showed this was the case. The management team and staff had clear roles and responsibilities and were committed to ensuring the service was high performing. Regular audits of the service took place to ensure care was safe, effective and in line with regulation.
Managers and staff had a clear vision of what was required of a quality service and ensured this was maintained. Feedback was continuously gained from all parties to develop and improve the service.
Staff told us they were adequately supported by the management team and said training was good. They repeatedly said morale was good and all staff who worked at the home genuinely cared.
For more details, please see the full report which is on the CQC website at www.cqc.org.uk
Rating at last inspection:
At the last inspection the service was rated good (published 25 October 2016).
Why we inspected:
This was a planned inspection based on the previous rating.
Follow up:
The next scheduled inspection will be in keeping with the overall rating. We will continue to monitor information we receive from and about the service. We may inspect sooner if we receive concerning information about the service.