Updated 28 February 2024
Elizabeth House is an acute inpatient mental health hospital, offering assessment and treatment for adult men and women who are experiencing an acute episode of mental illness and require hospital admission. Patients may be informal or detained under the Mental Health Act (1983).
The hospital can accommodate up to 30 patients over 3 wards, set over 3 floors:
- King Ward offers 15 acute beds for males
- Castle ward offers 10 beds for females
- Swithland ward offers 5 beds, which can accommodate either males or females, dependent upon the greater need through referrals received.
The service was registered with the Care Quality Commission in February 2023 and opened to admissions in March 2023. The service had not previously been inspected.
The hospital is registered to provide the following Regulated Activities:
- Treatment of disease, disorder or injury
- Assessment or medical treatment for persons detained under the Mental Health Act 1983
There is a registered manager in place.
What people who use the service say
We spoke with 7 patients who were using the service and received feedback from a carer of a patient using the service.
Six of the 7 patients felt safe at the hospital. One patient reported being unsettled by some other patients being noisy on occasions.
All patients told us staff were polite and kind and treated them well.
All patients said they had privacy and staff always knocked on their bedroom doors before entering.
One patient said they felt it was more like a hotel and would like to learn more coping strategies so they could manage their mental health.
All patients reported there was a variety of activities. Examples given included smoothie making; listening to music; various quiz’s; board games and walks.
Three of the 7 patients we spoke with had been involved in their care planning.
All patients said that staff managed aggressive incidents well, taking time to speak with patients who were upset.
One patient told us that their relative could not visit due to the distance, and they did not know if a video call could be facilitated and was unsure how to do this.
The carer we received feedback from said that the staff were very polite and welcoming. They said the hospital was clean and the housekeeping staff were friendly. They did share some concerns. They felt there was a lack of activities with patients having to manage their own time and feeling bored. They reported there was a lack of communication of progress. They also reported that despite the multi-disciplinary team agreeing to extended visiting times due to travel, this had not been accommodated, resulting in visits being ‘cut short’.