10 October 2017
During a routine inspection
Allied Health Care Leeds is a domiciliary care agency that is registered to provide personal care and support to people in their own homes. The service provides assistance to a variety of groups of people, including those nearing the end of their lives, those with long term complex health issues, support for when family or carer required a respite break from their caring duties, together with general personal care support to people in their own homes.
The people who required support with complex health and end of life issues were supported by nurses employed by the service to assess their needs and provide clinical training to care workers. At the time of the inspection there were 192 people were receiving personal care from the service.
This comprehensive inspection took place on 9 and 12 October 2017 and was announced on the first day. This was because we needed to make sure someone would be available to support with the inspection.
The service was last inspected in August 2016 when we found the provider was not meeting the requirements relating to specific regulations. These included delivering person-centred care, obtaining appropriate consent and following the principles of the Mental Capacity Act 2005, providing safe care and treatment, safeguarding people from abuse, managing complaints and governance. The provider sent us an action plan which they updated weekly, telling us the improvements they had made and what they still needed to make. At this comprehensive inspection we found satisfactory improvements had been made in all areas and the service was no longer in breach of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated activities) regulations.
There was a registered manager who had been in post for five months at the time of our inspection. A registered manager is a person who has registered with the Care Quality Commission (CQC) 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.
People’s needs were being appropriately reviewed and we saw their care plans included information to enable care staff to deliver support in a person centred way and in accordance with people’s preferences and wishes. Details in people’s care plans were included about their medical conditions to help care staff support their needs with involvement from appropriate healthcare professionals when this was required. There was evidence a range of training had been provided to care staff to enable them to support people’s complex needs and enable them to maintain a healthy diet.
People’s consent had been gained and recorded appropriately and the service was working in line with the principles of the Mental Capacity Act 2005. People who used the service told us care staff involved them in decisions concerning about their support to ensure they were in agreement with how this was delivered.
People’s needs had been assessed to ensure care staff knew how to deliver people’s care and support in a safe way. We saw reviews of people’s care and support had been undertaken and that their care records and risk assessments had been developed, including provision of relevant information to enable care staff to deliver people’s support in a safe and managed way. We found care staff had signed people’s medicines administration records accurately to demonstrate these had been administered to people as prescribed. We saw evidence people’s medication records were being audited to enable potential errors to be highlighted, together with medicines management training for care staff and checks of their skills to ensure they were competent to safely carry out their roles.
Safeguarding incidents and accidents were being effectively monitored by the registered manager, together with action taken to investigate these when required, in order to minimise them from reoccurring. We found care staff had been safely recruited to ensure they did not pose a risk people who used the service. We saw evidence of on-going recruitment of staff to ensure the needs of the business were appropriately met.
People’s complaints were acknowledged, responded and investigated in a timely manner. We saw evidence people’s complaints were being monitored by senior management to ensure areas of concern were addressed and action taken to make improvements where this was possible.
We saw internal governance systems had been developed since our last inspection and saw evidence these were monitored to ensure actions were undertaken when required. This included reviews of people’s care and support, responding appropriately to people’s concerns and safeguarding issues and the development of staff support arrangements. We were told improvements had been introduced by the registered manager to simplify the office functions to ensure staff were clear of their roles and responsibilities, however we found these had not yet been fully implemented.