This inspection took place on 6 and 8 January 2015. This was an announced inspection. This means we gave the provider 24 hours’ notice because we needed to be sure that someone would be in at the office. We last inspected Priory Court on 17 Dec 2013 and found the service was meeting all the regulations we inspected against.
Housing & Care 21- Priory Court provides personal care for people living at Priory Court. At the time of the inspection there were 42 people receiving care at Priory Court. Priory Court is a housing scheme with an onsite team of care staff. The care people receive at Priory Court is regulated by the Care Quality Commission the accommodation is not. The staff were also providing support to two people who lived in a Housing and Care 21 sheltered housing scheme close by to Priory Court.
At the time of the inspection the manager who was registered with the Care Quality Commission was not employed at Priory Court and their registration had not been cancelled. A registered manager from a different Housing and Care 21 service was in the process of adding Priory Court to their registration. They were overseeing the management of Priory Court with the support of two senior care staff.
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.
People told us they felt safe living at Priory Court and they were cared for by sufficient staff who had the right skills and knowledge to support them. Staff were knowledgeable about safeguarding and knew how to report any concerns.
Staff recruitment procedures were appropriate. Applicants were able to spend a day at Priory Court where they met and talked with people using the service and got to know what their role would involve. References and Disclosure and Barring Service checks were completed before people were offered employment.
Medicines were managed safely and people were included in decision making about which pharmacy to use for their prescriptions. Staff had received medicines training and their competency in handling medicines was assessed and observed by senior staff members.
Staff received regular supervision but some said they did not feel fully supported at the minute. Care staff at Priory Court told us that there was limited communication and support with regards to management changes. They had not had team meetings since September 2014 and felt isolated from decisions that were being made. This was having an impact on staff morale and staff felt there was a lack of leadership and transparency.
Mental capacity was understood and we saw that decisions made in people’s best interest were recorded. People and their families or representatives were involved in these meetings.
People were supported with eating and drinking where needed. Most people living at Priory Court chose to use the independent restaurant that was on site for their meals.
Everyone we spoke with told us that the staff were very caring and respected people’s rights and decisions. People were encouraged to make decisions about their care and treatment and had signed their care records and gave permission for staff to speak to their doctors.
Care records were individual and contained information on people’s likes and dislikes, their family history and what was important to them. This meant documentation gave staff an understanding of the person as well as their care needs.
People told us they knew how to complain. Records were kept of any formal complaints received including whether the person was satisfied with the outcome of the investigation.
Day to day audits were in place but a full quality assurance audit of the service had not been completed since 2013. Many of the actions identified on the improvement plan had a completed by date assigned to them but there was no evidence that they had been signed off as complete by a senior manager as specified on the plan. This meant opportunities for improvements may have been missed.
You can see what action we told the provider to take at the back of the full version of the report.