HF Trust – Wiltshire DCA is a domiciliary care service providing personal care and support to people. Supported living services enable people to live in their own home and live their lives as independently as possible. The service is run by HF Trust Limited which is a national charity providing services for people with a learning disability. Not everyone using HF Trust – Wiltshire DCA receives a regulated activity; CQC only inspects the service being received by people provided with ‘personal care’; help with tasks related to personal hygiene and eating. Where they do we also take into account any wider social care provided. At this time the service was supporting 11 people under the regulated activity and 13 people in total.This inspection took place on 6 August 2018 and was unannounced. The inspection was prompted in part by an inspection of the provider’s residential service on the same site, which has recently been rated as Inadequate. This service shared the same management team, some of the same staff and the same processes and systems. For this reason, we made the decision to inspect this service earlier than we had originally planned. Although short notice is normally given to services providing a domiciliary care service for people, in light of the concerns it was decided it would be unannounced.
At the last inspection in May 2016 the service was rated as Good. At this inspection we found four breaches of the regulations in relation to Consent, Safe care and treatment, Good governance and Staffing. We have served two Warning Notices on the provider in relation to Regulations 12 Safe care and treatment and 17 Good governance. The service is required to achieve compliance within a set timescale or further action will be taken. We have also made a recommendation around opportunities for staff supervision.
The service has been rated as Requires Improvement with the safe domain rated as Inadequate. We will be asking the service for a report of actions of how they will make the necessary improvements and the service will be re-inspected to check this has been done.
At the time of this inspection there was no registered manager in place. A manager at the service had applied to be the registered manager, however the decision was taken by The Care Quality Commission to refuse the application and management of this service. 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.
We found have the provider and management team at this service failed to meet the requirements of the regulations placing people at risk of receiving inappropriate and unsafe care. Quality monitoring at the service was not robust. There was no effective monitoring or checks made by management and senior management in order to take timely action when shortfalls occurred. The director has implemented some immediate changes to address these concerns but time was needed for the planned actions to be completed before we could judge whether the provider’s actions had been effective in making the required improvements.
You can see what action we told the provider to take at the back of the full version of the report. Full information about CQC's regulatory response to any concerns found during inspections is added to reports after any representations and appeals have been concluded.
People using the service their and relatives confirmed that people did not always receive their allocated care hours due to staffing shortages. The manager and staff confirmed this was true. This had a negative impact on people’s wellbeing with inconsistent support and times when planned activities had to be cancelled.
The manager failed to appropriately report to external agencies when people did not receive their commissioned support hours to ensure that prompt action would be taken to protect people from harm and neglect. This was raised with the manager and senior management at the time of this inspection.
The recording of incidents and accidents, subsequent investigations, actions taken and measures to minimise risks had not been safely managed. We found that not all incidents had been logged or reported to the manager. This meant there was a lack of oversight of what incidents had occurred and the appropriate action and support had not been provided in a timely manner to support people.
Risk assessments did not always contain enough detail to ensure the risks were mitigated or referred to other guidance that staff could read.
Medicines were not always managed safely. We found gaps in medicines administration records (MAR’s) where staff had not signed that they had administered the medicines. One staff member told us this was a recording issue and that people had received their medicines as prescribed.
The service was not working within the principles of the Mental Capacity Act (2005). We found mental capacity assessments and best interest decisions were not consistently completed where people lacked capacity to make specific decisions. We found some examples of restrictive practice, where there was no record of the discussion on how this decision was made or what other options had been considered.
People and their relatives told us they were happy with the care they received, as long as it was the regular staff members supporting them. We saw in one person’s feedback about the service, that they did not feel comfortable with agency staff. One person said some agency staff shouted and weren’t always kind.
There was limited documented evidence available that staff had received regular supervisions and staff gave mixed responses about their opportunity for supervisions. We have made a recommendation that the provider reviews the opportunities available to provide staff with adequate supervision and progression support.
We observed staff respecting people’s personal space and ensuring doors were closed when providing care and knocking on doors and waiting for permission before entering. Staff showed concern for people’s wellbeing and responded to their needs quickly.
Care plans had information about people’s likes and dislikes and how they liked to spend their day. However, the terminology in care plans was at times paternalistic (limits people’s freedom to achieve their own level of independence) and inappropriate when referring to adults. Care plans were not dated when there was a change in the care plan. This meant staff may not be aware of the most current actions. A lack of dates on care plans meant it was unknown when things had been put in place or when peoples’ needs had changed.