13 June 2017
During a routine inspection
Nestor Primecare Services Limited is the registered provider for Primecare Primary Care – Northampton (Primecare). Primecare provides community end of life care for adults over and under 65 years in Northamptonshire. The service is commissioned by Nene and Corby Clinical Commissioning Groups to provide dedicated care and support to patients, who are registered with a Northamptonshire GP and are thought to be in the last eight weeks of life and wish to die in their own home or in a care home.
We carried out an announced inspection of Primecare on 13 June 2017. During our inspection, we visited all clinical areas in the service. We spoke with the relatives of six patients, and six members of staff. We observed care and treatment and looked at 10 patient care records and we reviewed the service’s performance data.
To get to the heart of patients’ experiences of care and treatment, we ask the same five questions of all services: are they safe, effective, caring, responsive to people's needs, and well-led? Where we have a legal duty to do so we rate services’ performance against each key question as outstanding, good, requires improvement or inadequate.
Throughout the inspection, we took account of what people told us and how the provider understood and complied with the Mental Capacity Act 2005.
Services we do not rate
We regulate independent community end of life care services but we do not currently have a legal duty to rate them. We highlight good practice and issues that service providers need to improve and take regulatory action as necessary.
We found the following areas of good practice:
- The service monitored and provided harm free care. There was a formal system in place to monitor and track incidents, investigations, and actions taken for sharing of learning.
- There were arrangements in place to safeguard adults and children from abuse that met relevant regulation and local requirements.
- Information about the outcomes of people’s care and treatment were routinely collected and monitored and outcomes were generally positive and used to drive improvements.
- The service had sufficient staff, of an appropriate skill mix, to enable the effective delivery of care and treatment.
- Services were planned and delivered to meet the needs of local people. The service was flexible and enabled patient choice and continuity of care.
- Patients had timely access to initial assessment and urgent treatment.
- The service had a clear vision and set of values based on the quality of patient care. There was an effective and realistic strategy, which prioritised quality care.
- There was an effective governance framework to support the delivery of the strategy and high quality care.
- There was evidence of strong national and local leadership, with accessible and responsive managers.
We saw several areas of excellent practice including:
- We observed a strong, person-centred culture. Staff treated patients with compassion, kindness, dignity, and respect.
- Staff understood and respected patients’ personal, cultural, social, and religious needs, and these were taken into account and were reflected in how their care was delivered.
- Relatives we spoke with were consistently positive about the care their loved ones had
- Staff were committed to providing compassionate care not only to patients but also to their families.