1 March to 17 April 2023
During a routine inspection
Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust provides a full range of general hospital services and some aspects of specialist complex care to around 590,000 people living in the south of West Kent and the north of East Sussex. The trust has a team of over 5000 full and part-time staff. The trust provides specialist cancer services to around 1.8 million people across Kent and East Sussex via the Kent Oncology Centre, which is sited at Maidstone Hospital, and at Kent and Canterbury Hospital in Canterbury. They also provide outpatient clinics across a wide range of locations in Kent and East Sussex.
Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust is part of the Kent and Medway wide Integrated Care System. This partnership has been formulated to bring health and social care together across Kent with the aim of providing the best possible care for their population in the most appropriate place.
We carried out an unannounced inspection of the end of life services provided by this trust
as part of our continual checks on the safety and quality of healthcare services. This service is provided by one team across both acute sites.
We also inspected the well-led key question for the trust overall.
We did not inspect any other core services, we are continuing to monitor the progress of improvements to all services.
Our rating of services stayed the same. We rated them as requires improvement because:
- We rated end of life care services as requires improvement.
- We rated the trust well-led as good.
- In rating the trust, we took into account the current ratings of the services not inspected this time.
- The trust overall rating for caring and well-led was good, and safe, effective, responsive was requires improvement.
- Not all staff had completed their safeguarding training. Patients’ personalised needs and preferences were not always recorded in a timely way, particularly when there was a delay in recognising a patient was approaching the end of their life. Some services were not available seven days a week.
- There was a reliance on limited information in some areas to measure the responsiveness, effectiveness and quality of a service. Risks were not always identified and recorded for all services.
- The impact of the delivery of the equality and diversity and inclusion strategy was reported to be variable with middle managers reported to not be fully engaged.
However:
- There was enough staff to care for patients and keep them safe. Staff had training in most key skills, understood how to protect patients from abuse, and managed safety well. Infection risks were well controlled. Staff assessed risks to patients, acted on them and kept good care records. They managed medicines well. Safety incidents were well managed and lessons learned from them.
- Staff provided good care and treatment, gave patients enough to eat and drink, and gave them pain relief when they needed it. Managers made sure staff were competent. Staff worked well together for the benefit of patients, advised them on how to lead healthier lives, supported them to make decisions about their care, and had access to good information.
- Staff treated patients with compassion and kindness, respected their privacy and dignity, took account of their individual needs, and helped them understand their conditions. They provided emotional support to patients, families and carers.
- Services were planned care to meet the needs of local people, took account of patients’ individual needs, and made it easy for people to give feedback.
- Leaders ran the trust well using reliable information systems and supported leaders to develop their skills. The trust’s vision and values were well understood, and people were clear their role in making the trust strategy work. Staff felt respected, supported and valued. The trust engaged well with patients and the community to plan and manage services and all staff were committed to improving services continually.
How we carried out the inspection
During the inspection we visited wards and departments across both Tunbridge Wells Hospital and Maidstone Hospital where end of life care was provided. This included wards, mortuary, bereavement office and the chaplaincy to assess how EOLC was delivered. We spoke with staff including palliative care leads, medical and nursing staff, patient liaison officers, porters, mortuary staff, and hospital chaplains. We reviewed the medical records of 11 patients who were receiving EOLC and observed care provided by medical and nursing staff on the wards. We spoke with family members whose relative was receiving EOLC and we also spoke with 4 patients.
We spoke with members of the trust board and executive team along with senior leaders, and those with key roles such as risk and quality leads. We reviewed meeting minutes, strategy documents, governance documents, performance reports and other documents provided by the trust. We also reviewed the information we hold about the organisation.
You can find further information about how we carry out our inspections on our website: www.cqc.org.uk/what-we-do/how-we-do-our-job/what-we-do-inspection.