Updated 14 January 2025
During this assessment we only assessed one assessment service group (ASG), which was urgent and emergency care. Please see the report for our overall location summary.
Updated 14 January 2025
During this assessment we only assessed one assessment service group (ASG), which was urgent and emergency care. Please see the report for our overall location summary.
Updated 3 June 2024
Date of assessment: 17 Jun to 12 Aug 2024. University Hospital North Durham provides a range of NHS hospital services. This assessment looked at urgent and emergency care (UEC) services. We carried out this assessment due to concerns regarding specific patient safety incidents, triage and poor performance indicators, such as waiting times. The rating from UEC has been combined with ratings of the other services from the last inspections. See our previous reports to get a full picture of all other services at University Hospital North Durham. The rating of University Hospital North Durham remains good. In our assessment of UEC services, we found there was a good safety culture where events were investigated, and learning was embedded to promote good practice. Staff provided safe care and treatment, and the environment was safe and well maintained. When the department was busy, leaders adjusted staffing levels to meet the needs of their patients. Staff delivered good care and treatment following evidence-based practice and people had good outcomes. Staff were kind, caring and compassionate. The service was responsive to the needs of the local community and people could access care and treatment when they needed it. The department and staff were well-led by strong leaders who embodied the cultures and values of their workforce. There was improved governance and a proactive approach to risk management. The service had made improvements and is no longer in breach of regulations. The service now had processes to ensure clinicians were available with paediatric competencies to assess children who are streamed away from the emergency care setting and the department had worked to improve medical staffing and paediatric-competent nurse staffing.
Updated 1 March 2018
Our rating of this service improved. We rated it as good because:
However:
Updated 29 September 2015
Overall, services for children and young people were good at this hospital. Staff demonstrated awareness of how to report incidents using the trust’s reporting mechanisms and we saw these were reviewed and acted upon by the management team. We found risks were assessed and monitored, and control measures were put in place. We found all children’s clinical areas were kept clean and were regularly monitored for standards of cleanliness. Medicines were stored and administered correctly. Medical records were handled safely and protected.
Members of staff of all grades confirmed they received a range of mandatory training, although training records did not always accurately reflect training uptake. Medical staffing had some gaps but these were being managed and addressed.
The levels of nursing staff were adequate to meet the needs of children and young people.
Children’s services had made improvements to care and treatment where needs had been identified using programmes of assessment or in response to national guidelines.
Children, young people and parents told us they received compassionate care with good emotional support. Parents felt fully informed and involved in decisions relating to their child’s treatment and care.
The service was responsive to children’s and young people’s needs and was well led. The service had a clear vision and strategy. The service was led by a positive management team who worked together. The service had introduced innovative improvements with the aim of improving the delivery of care for children and families.
Updated 29 September 2015
Overall the services within critical care were good. However, some aspects of safety required improvement. The intensive care unit did not have an outreach team to identify and monitor deteriorating patients. The purpose of the service would be to assess the critically ill or deteriorating patient on wards and to stabilise them at ward level and so avoid the need to escalate to the unit. There was no clinical pharmacist input to the daily multidisciplinary ward rounds. This was not in line with the national Core Standards for Intensive Care Units 2013. The unit had just started to have its own mortality and morbidity meetings, which were still to be further embedded. Medical and nursing staffing levels were adequate, but there was no supernumerary sister or charge nurse to cover areas such as peak activity times, facilitating admissions and discharges or coordinating nurse staffing on the unit.
Patients received treatment and care according to national guidelines and the unit used an audit programme to check whether their practice was up to date and based on sound evidence. The unit was obtaining good-quality outcomes as shown by its Intensive Care National Audit and Research Centre (ICNARC) data. We found there was good multidisciplinary team working across the unit. However, the full multidisciplinary team did not attend the ward rounds.
Staff cared for patients in a compassionate manner with dignity and respect. Relatives we spoke with told us their loved ones had all their care needs met by dedicated staff. Relatives told us they were involved with their loved ones’ care and felt supported in making decisions as a family.
Bed occupancy rate within the unit was 92% which enabled it to plan admissions and accept emergencies. The unit experienced some delay in discharges, often due to the lack of available beds and due to delays in determining what the parent team was when patients were admitted via the A&E department; this also caused delays in discharges to a ward.
Staff felt well supported within an open, positive culture. The governance processes still needed time to become embedded, with medical and nursing leadership within the unit needing further development.
Updated 3 December 2019
•The service controlled infection risk well. Staff kept themselves, equipment and the premises clean. They used control measures to prevent the spread of infection.
•The service had enough staff with the right qualifications, skills, training and experience to keep people safe from avoidable harm and to provide the right care and treatment.
•The service provided care and treatment based on national guidance and evidence of its effectiveness.
•The service made sure staff were competent for their roles. Managers appraised staff’s work performance and held supervision meetings with them to provide support and monitor the effectiveness of the service.
•The service had effective systems for identifying risks, planning to eliminate or reduce them, and coping with both the expected and unexpected.
•Staff cared for patients with compassion. Feedback from patients confirmed that staff treated them well and with kindness.
•The service had systems and processes in place to ensure that the needs of local people were considered when planning the service delivery.
•Managers at all levels in the trust had the right skills and abilities to run a service providing high-quality sustainable care.
•The service had a vision for what it wanted to achieve and workable plans to turn it into action developed with involvement from staff, patients, and key groups representing the local community.
However:
•Syringe driver safety checks were not completed in accordance with trust policy (‘Policy for the administration of subcutaneous medication’). We were not assured training in the specific syringe devices used throughout the trust was followed up or monitored at ward level.
•The service did not consistently use systems and processes to safely prescribe, administer, record and store medicines. Pain care plans were not completed in all patient records.
•The results of the first round of the ‘National Audit of Care at the End of Life’ (2019) showed the trust scored lower when compared nationally for documented assessments of nutrition between recognition and time of death and hydration.
•Pain assessments were inconsistently documented for palliative and end of life care patients across wards visited. We saw documentation specific to pain assessments were used on some wards and on others we saw no evidence of pain assessment.
Updated 18 April 2024
Updated 29 September 2015
Overall the care and treatment received by patients in the University Hospital of North Durham outpatient and imaging departments was safe, effective, caring, responsive and well led. Patients were very happy with the care they received and found it to be caring and compassionate. Staff were supported and worked within nationally agreed guidance to ensure that patients received the most appropriate care and treatment for their conditions. Patients were protected from the risk of harm because there were policies in place to make sure that any additional support needs were met. Staff were aware of these policies and how to follow them.
The departments took part in the NHS Friends and Family Test and another satisfaction scheme called ‘I want great care’. There were comment boxes in waiting areas.
On the whole, the services offered were delivered in an innovative way to respond to patient needs and ensure that the departments worked effectively and efficiently.
Updated 3 December 2019
Our rating of this service improved. We rated it as good because:
•The service provided mandatory training for staff and managers ensured staff completed this training. This ensured that the service had enough staff with the right qualifications, skills, training and experience to keep people safe from avoidable harm and to provide the right care and treatment.
•Staff maintained appropriate records of care and treatment both electronically and on paper.
•The service had suitable premises and equipment and looked after them well. Staff kept themselves, equipment and premises clean. They used control measures to prevent the spread of infection.
•The service provided care and treatment based on national guidance and evidence of its effectiveness such as that issued by National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE). Managers checked to make sure staff followed guidance.
•Staff cared for patients with compassion. Feedback from patients confirmed that staff treated them well and with kindness. We observed staff interacting with patients in a professional manner during the inspection.
•Staff involved patients and those close to them in decisions about their care and treatment. This ensured that patients were able to make informed decisions about their care. The trust planned and provided services in a way that met the needs of local people.
•Managers at all levels in the trust had the right skills and abilities to run a service providing high-quality sustainable care. They were visible and approachable for patients and staff.
•The trust engaged well with patients, staff, the public and local organisations to plan and manage appropriate services and collaborated with partner organisations effectively.
•The trust was committed to improving services by learning from when things went well and when they went wrong, promoting training, research and innovation.
However,
•For nursing staff eligible for infection prevention and control training, only 52% had completed this training against the trust’s completion target rate of 85%.
•Medical staff had not met the trust’s target completion rates for six of the mandatory training courses.
•Nursing and medical staff had not met the trust’s target completion rate for safeguarding children level 2.
•The management of obtaining patient consent for the storage of patient records at the patients’ bedside was not robust.
Community & mental health inspection reports for University Hospital North Durham can be found at County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust. Each report covers findings for one service across multiple locations