11-13 and 26 June 2019
During a routine inspection
We rated St Andrew’s Healthcare Nottinghamshire as requires improvement because:
- Managers did not ensure safe and clean environments. The ward layouts did not allow staff to observe all parts of the ward. We identified blind spots on all wards. There were no mirrors fitted to mitigate these. The extra care area and annexe on Thoresby ward were visibly dirty, we raised this with the provider and the occupied annexe was clean when we checked the following day. Staff were not labelling all opened food items in fridges, we found unlabelled items in fridges on all wards. However, managers had completed new ligature assessments, ensured all staff were aware of ligature risks and implemented new infection control procedures.
- Staff did not always manage seclusion appropriately. Staff were keeping some patients in seclusion for longer than required. We reviewed 20 seclusion records and found three instances of this. However, this was for hours rather than days as found previously. The practice of patients voting on whether to end another patient’s seclusion had ended. Doctors and nurses were not completing reviews as required in 15% of records, multi-disciplinary reviews had not taken place as required in 18% of records and staff had not completed seclusion care plans as required in 9% of records. This was an improvement since the last inspection.
- Staff did not always manage patient risks. On Thoresby ward, one patient’s information sheet did not highlight a serious risk issue. Staff did not always follow policies and procedures for use of observation.
- Staff had not always recorded and investigated incidents appropriately. We found examples of staff not recording incidents in both the patients notes and on the incident database. We found examples where staff described incidents of physical aggression between patients as ‘playfighting’.
- Managers told us that Thoresby ward was providing a new model of therapy based on a personality disorder service, adapted for patients with mild or borderline learning disabilities. At the time of our visit this model was not embedded as staff required training in order to deliver the therapies.
- Staff had not ensured hard copies of positive behavioural support plans were up to date on Rufford ward and staff on Newstead and Thoresby ward did not know where the hard copies of the positive behavioural plans were kept.
However:
- Staff treated patients with compassion and kindness. They respected patients’ privacy and dignity. They understood the individual needs of patients and supported patients to understand and manage their care, treatment or condition. Patients told us that the service had improved since our last inspection. We reviewed 20 seclusion records and found no examples of staff not responding to patients requests or of inappropriate and disrespectful language in patients’ records. The provider had updated their search policy and staff conducted pat down searches of patients in private. We did not observe any punitive or disrespectful treatment of patients.
- The provider had made significant progress in addressing the issues we found at the previous inspection. The provider made management changes, implemented new governance systems, improved their auditing processes and acted to address poor staff conduct. The provider stopped Thoresby ward operating as a therapeutic community. Staff use of restraint and seclusion had decreased. Staff felt respected, supported and valued. Staff were very positive about their experience of working at the service and told us they were well supported.
- A patient was holding ‘masterclasses’ for staff and patients to help them understand the needs of patients with autism. Staff supported the patient to design the content of the programme. The ward teams included or had access to the full range of specialists required to meet the needs of patients on the wards. Managers ensured that these staff received training, supervision and appraisal. The ward teams had effective working relationships with other relevant teams within the organisation and outside the organisation and engaged with them early in the patient’s admission to plan discharge.
- The service supported several patients to use their leave for special events and outings. These included one patient being supported to go on home leave to his family in Northern Ireland twice in recent months, another patient was supported to go to a concert in London and staff supported two other patients to attend football matches, including one at Wembley.