The inspection took place on 15 and 17 August 2016 and was announced. This meant we gave the provider 48 hours’ notice of our intended visit to ensure someone would be available in the office to meet us.The service was registered with CQC on 21 December 2012 and was last inspected on 11 July 2014, at which time the service was compliant with all regulatory standards.
Home Instead Senior Care is a domiciliary care provider based in Uppermill, Oldham, providing personal care and support to people in their own homes in the Oldham and Saddleworth area. There were 110 people using the service at the time of our inspection.
The service had a registered manager in place. 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 the provider delivered outstanding levels of care that put the person’s needs at the forefront of care planning and decision making, and ensured extremely high levels of continuity and familiarity. People who used the service, relatives and healthcare professionals were unanimous in their descriptions of staff who went out of their way to ensure people were cared for well.
Staff were consistently described as compassionate, caring and having built positive relationships with the people they cared for and we found a range of evidence to support these opinions. People who used the service, relatives and staff felt having care calls of a minimum of one hour enabled these relationships to develop.
Staff were consistent in their extremely positive feedback about the levels of support they received from the registered manager and provider, both of whom were regularly on site. The registered manager displayed a sound understanding of the service and the needs of people who used the service, whilst the registered provider demonstrated both effective leadership of the service, as well as a passionate, innovative and varied approach to community engagement and involvement.
People who used the service, relatives and healthcare professionals we spoke with were consistent in their praise of the leadership of the service. The provider, registered manager and all staff we spoke with were consistent in their understanding of the principles of the service, as set out in the Statement of Purpose, and were passionate about caring for people.
The provider, registered manager and other staff developed and maintained a range of excellent community links to raise awareness of dementia, the risks to vulnerable adults, but also to celebrate and support people’s independence.
Recent responses from annual surveys demonstrated improvements against already extremely positive scores from the previous year. We found staff at all levels were aware of, and contributed to, a culture focussed on meeting people’s individual needs.
We saw that sufficient numbers of staff were on duty to meet the needs of people who used the service. Staff underwent a range of pre-employment checks to ensure they were suitable for the role.
We saw that no medicines errors had been made on the Medication Administration Records (MAR) we sampled and that the provider regularly checked staff competence to administer medicines.
We saw evidence that concerns regarding people’s safety had been appropriately managed and staff displayed a good knowledge of safeguarding principles. We found that risks were managed and reduced through pre-assessment and ongoing assessment of individual needs. People using the service felt safe and there was an out-of-hours phone line for people who used the service and staff in case of unforeseen circumstances.
We found evidence of consistent and prompt liaison with external healthcare professionals and other agencies in order to ensure people’s healthcare needs were met.
Induction training was comprehensive and in line with established national best practice, whilst ongoing refresher training and access to vocational qualifications was welcomed by all staff we spoke with. Training incorporated the latest National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines regarding care provided in people’s homes and Care Certificate standards. Training included safeguarding awareness, moving and handling, infection control, health and safety, first aid and handling medication.
Staff supervisions, appraisals and staff meetings all happened regularly. Staff told us they were well supported.
We saw that people were supported to contribute to their own care planning and review, whilst family members confirmed they were invited to take part in reviews and were regularly consulted and updated.
Where people’s needs changed, reviews were brought forward and care provision amended accordingly. People who used the service told us office staff were accommodating to changing needs.
Peoples' hobbies and interests were encouraged, with people supported to pursue their preferred activities as independently as practicable. The engagement officer had developed and was in the process of sharing a ‘What’s On’ guide, which gave people who used the service and the wider community information about local activities.
The provider had a complaints policy in place. People who used the service were made aware of the complaints procedure and told us they knew how to make a complaint and who to make it to, should the need arise.
An efficient auditing and quality assurance regime had been established and positive changes had been made to the management structure when an internal audit identified gaps.