Bishops Gate is a care home providing residential care for up to eight adults with learning disabilities. In particular they provide residential care for people with Prader-Willi Syndrome (PWS). Whilst independent with many areas of their daily lives, people living at Bishops Gate require a high level of support to enable them to manage risk and remain safe.There were five people living at the home at the time of our inspection. One person was currently staying with family for two weeks and another went to stay with family for a holiday during the inspection.
Bishops Gate was inspected in December 2015. A number of breaches were identified and it was rated as inadequate. The Care Quality Commission (CQC) took enforcement action and the service was placed into special measures. CQC issued two Warning Notices after the inspection in respect of safe care and treatment and good governance. We also found further breaches in relation to the numbers and skills of staff to meet people’s needs and a lack of support systems in place for staff.
We asked the provider to make improvements to ensure peoples risks were identified and responded to. Improvements were needed to medicines, staffing levels, training and support for staff, nutrition, person centred care and documentation, consent, dignity, maintenance and equipment checks, assessing the quality of the care and support provided, auditing and quality assurance systems at the service. The provider sent us an action plan stating they would be addressed by July 2016.
This inspection took place on 15 and 16 August 2016 and was a full comprehensive inspection to check the provider had made suitable improvements to ensure they had met regulatory requirements. We found that appropriate actions had been taken and issues had been addressed and the service no longer required to be in special measures.
Bishops Gate did not have a registered manager in post. A registered manager is a person who has registered with the Care Quality Commission (CQC) 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.
An acting manager had been appointed and had worked at the service since the previous inspection. The acting manager told us they were in the process of registering with CQC and we saw evidence to confirm this. They were supported by a deputy manager to ensure a consistent management oversight at the home at all times.
Medicine procedures had been greatly improved. Daily checks had been introduced to ensure people received medicines safely. Further changes to the storage would be implemented once the refurbishment was completed. People were able to be involved in choosing where they received their medicines and were kept informed of any changes. Further changes to medicine procedures and how they are stored and given were in progress as refurbishment to the building was not yet fully completed. These would be reviewed at the next inspection to allow the changes time to become fully implemented and embedded into practice.
Care provision and documentation had been reviewed with a new format for care planning in place. This was person centred and involved people and their Next of Kin (NoK) in the planning and review of their care. Risk assessments were completed for identified risks, this included fire risk assessments and night staffing levels to ensure peoples safety could be maintained at all times. Risk assessments were reviewed regularly and updated when changes occurred. Care documentation had been updated to ensure it was clear, relevant and person centred to reflect peoples differing support needs.
A varied activity programme was available for people. People had access to activities they enjoyed and were supported by staff to attend. People were encouraged and supported to remain as independent as possible, for example arranging their activities and organising how they wished to spend their day. Staff were available to support people when needed.
Recruitment processes were in place to ensure appropriate checks took place before people began work at the home; some areas were being formulated and needed time to be reviewed as part of the on-going improvements to the home.
Staff had a good understanding of safeguarding and were able to tell us how they would report a safeguarding concern. Information was in place to support staff when dealing with behaviours that challenge.
Accidents and incident processes had been improved. People and staff involved were offered a debrief and discussions took place to show learning and on-going improvements taken forward.
People’s dignity and privacy were supported, people had keys to their own rooms and their personal space was respected.
Staff knew people well and displayed kindness and compassion when supporting people and when responding to behaviours that may challenge.
Inductions were in place for any new staff recruited. Staff told us they felt supported and received regular training, support and supervision. Staff felt that the consistent approach by the acting manager had improved communication and staff morale as they felt part of a team and could see the improvements which had taken place and the positive impact this had on the home and the people living there.
Systems and processes were in place to improve the quality of care. This included audits and checks carried out by the acting and deputy manager, and regular checks by the provider to ensure improvements took place and continued. Some improvements were still in progress including overall refurbishment of the building. This had been done slowly and sensitively to ensure that the impact on people was minimised as much as possible. There had been some delays which had been unavoidable; however the works were nearing completion. People had been involved in choosing new furniture and decoration and bedrooms had the addition of ensuite facilities and improvements to communal areas and hallways had improved the level of privacy for people.
A complaints policy was in place. When formal complaints were received correspondence and meetings were recorded and complaints responded to by the acting manager or provider.
There was no registered manager at the time of inspection. An acting manager had been in post since the last inspection and was in the process of registering with CQC. The acting manager or provider had completed notifications to CQC and the local authority for notifiable events when required.
Many improvements had taken place since the last inspection and the warning notices and breaches of regulations had been met. At the next inspection we will check to make sure the improvements are embedded and sustained. This is because there are currently five of a possible eight people at the home and we will need to see that as people are admitted the improvements continue, which is why the rating is requires improvement despite no breaches having been identified.