14 May to 13 June 2019
During a routine inspection
Our rating of the trust improved. We rated it as good because:
- Effective, caring, responsive and well led were good.
- Safe was rated as requires improvement overall.
- Services 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. Managers regularly reviewed and adjusted staffing levels and skill mix, and gave bank, agency and locum staff a full induction.
- The trust managed patient safety incidents well. Staff recognised incidents and reported them. Managers investigated incidents and shared lessons learned. When things went wrong, staff apologised and gave patients honest information and suitable support in line with the duty of candour.
- The trust provided care and treatment based on national guidance and evidence of its effectiveness. The trust had a programme of internal audits and participated in national audits and research projects. Trust policies and clinical guidelines reflected national guidance from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence and other national bodies.
- There was effective multidisciplinary working to improve patient care.
- Staff cared for patients with compassion. Feedback from patients confirmed that staff treated them well and with kindness.
- The trust planned and provided services in a way that met the needs of local people. They worked collaboratively with commissioners, local authorities and other partner organisations.
- The service treated concerns and complaints seriously. Complaints were investigated, the trust was candid with complainants and they learned lessons from their complaint investigation findings.
- The trust had an effective system for identifying strategic risks or planning to eliminate or reduce those risks. Robust arrangements were in place for identifying, recording and managing risks, issues and mitigating actions. The trust board had sight of the most significant risks.
- Managers across the trust promoted a positive culture that supported and valued staff, creating a sense of common purpose based on shared values. The workforce strategy reinforced the trust’s values with the core message ‘Our Family, Caring for Yours’. The development of the trust’s values involved focus groups with over 300 staff involved. Staff developed the values and they were aligned to the core knowledge and skills framework, national leadership standards and codes of professional conduct.
However:
- The urgent and emergency care service did not mirror the general findings of the hospitals services. The leadership of the service did not have sufficient oversight of the quality and safety of the service provided.
- While the trust had controlled infection risk well and there had been a significant improvement in practice, we observed poor practice in relation to the use of personal protective equipment and that several staff were not ‘bare below the elbow’ in the emergency department.
- In urgent and emergency care, patients did not always receive treatment within agreed time frames and national targets.
- In urgent and emergency care, staff treated patients with compassion and kindness. However, because of the constraints of the physical environment, it was not always possible for staff to respect patients’ privacy and dignity and maintain their confidentiality.
- The average length of stay for non-elective surgery at the trust was worse than the England average and showed little improvement since our last inspection.
- There was poor compliance to safeguarding adults training for nursing and medical staff.
- There was no Mental Capacity Act specific training at the time of the reporting period. The trust advised that a new course was introduced on 1 April 2019.