Chief Inspector of Hospitals publishes report on the quality of care provided by St Andrew’s Healthcare rating the service as ‘Requires Improvement’

11 Feb 2015 02:56 PM

England's Chief Inspector of Hospitals, Professor Sir Mike Richards, has published his first report on the quality of care provided by St Andrew’s Healthcare.

St Andrew’s Healthcare is one England’s largest charities providing specialist mental health care and facilities for children, young adults, women, men and older people. The charity also provides private therapy services for GP referred patients. It has eight registered locations serving mental health and learning disability needs, including four hospital sites in Northampton, Birmingham, Nottingham and Essex.

Under its new inspection model, CQC has given individual ratings to each of the core services. CQC rated St Andrew’s Healthcare as Requires Improvement overall, following its inspection on 9 September 2014. CQC’s inspection team informed the service of its concerns immediately after the inspection so that it could take steps to improve.

The team included CQC inspectors and a variety of specialists: behaviour nurse therapists, a consultant eating disorders psychiatrist, consultant forensic psychiatrists, a consultant learning disability psychiatrist, a consultant psychologist, a learning disability consultant psychologist, experts by experience, family carer experts, a forensic psychologist, a hospital manager, learning disability nurses, Mental Health Act reviewers, mental health nurses, pharmacists, a quality manager, social workers and a student nurse.

The service was rated as Good with regard to whether services were effective, caring and responsive and Requires Improvement with regard to whether services were safe and well-led.

Full reports for the service have been published on CQC’s website yesterday at the following link: www.cqc.org.uk/provider/1-102643363.

The service has been told that it must take action to improve in the following areas:

Across the service, the inspection team found areas of good practice. These included:

Dr Paul Lelliott, CQC’s Deputy Chief Inspector of Hospitals (lead for mental health), said:

“Overall we rated St Andrew’s Healthcare as Requires Improvement.

“Many of the children and young people admitted to St Andrew’s Healthcare have severe mental health problems and have a history of behaviour that has put themselves or others at risk. Despite that, we were surprised at the number of occasions when staff had resorted to physical restraint. The staff at St Andrew’s Healthcare must ensure that when restraint is used it is by the safest means to minimise the possibility of harm to the patient.

“St Andrew’s Healthcare has had difficulty recruiting nursing staff and many posts were vacant. It has been relying heavily on the on the use of agency and bank nurses “The service has given us assurances that it is making the necessary improvements and we have already witnessed some of these in action.

“People deserve to be treated in services which are safe, caring, effective, well-led, and responsive to their needs and this is what we look at when we carry out our inspections. We will continue to monitor this service closely and this will include further inspections.”

The report which CQC published yesterday is based on a combination of its inspection findings, information from CQC’s Intelligent Monitoring system, and information provided by patients, the public and other organisations. CQC inspectors will return to the service in due course to check that the required improvements have been made.

For media enquiries contact Helen Gildersleeve, regional engagement officer on 0191 233 3379 or CQC’s press office on 0207 4489401.

For general enquiries, call 03000 61 61 61.

Notes to editors

The Chief Inspector of Hospitals, Professor Sir Mike Richards, is leading significantly larger inspection teams than before, headed up by clinical and other experts including trained members of the public. By the end of 2015, CQC will have inspected all acute NHS Trusts in the country with its new inspection model. Whenever CQC inspects it will always ask the following five questions of every service: Is it safe? Is it effective? Is it caring? Is it responsive to people’s needs? Is it well-led?

The Care Quality Commission has already presented its findings to a local Quality Summit, including NHS commissioners, providers, regulators and other public bodies. The purpose of the Quality Summit is to develop a plan of action and recommendations based on the inspection team’s findings.

About the Care Quality Commission

The Care Quality Commission (CQC) is the independent regulator of health and social care in England.

We make sure health and social care services provide people with safe, effective, compassionate, high-quality care and we encourage care services to improve.

We monitor, inspect and regulate services to make sure they meet fundamental standards of quality and safety and we publish what we find to help people choose care.