About the service: Allonsfield House is a residential care home providing personal care for up to 42 people. At the time of the inspection there were 35 people living in the home. People’s experience of using this service:
Recommendations had been given to the provider by the Local Safeguarding Authority to implement following an alert of abuse being upheld by their team. The recommendations were developed to ensure people were kept safe and the same concerns were not repeated. The provider had not taken steps to ensure all the recommendations were implemented and the risks to people were reduced.
Risks to people’s health and wellbeing were not always identified and appropriately assessed to ensure care planning was effective to meet people’s needs.
The provider did not have suitable arrangements in place to ensure the effective management and implementation of required actions around fire safety, staff training in this area and appropriate assessment for fire evacuation.
Systems were not suitably developed to ensure lessons could be systematically learnt from areas of concern, including information to be taken to keep people safe from accidents and incidents and any complaints received.
Systems for the governance and oversight of service provision were being redeveloped and some gaps in auditing and monitoring of the service were evident. There was not an accurate picture of the quality of the support delivered to people.
There had been a high turnover of staff and agency staff were being used to cover the rota. Checks to agency staffs suitability to work with vulnerable people were limited.
An action plan had been developed specifically for the service but it did not include key improvements required following recent incidents.
The provider had an electronic system for managing and recording medicine administration and we found this worked well for keeping practice safe.
We reviewed rotas and found they were consistently covered with either permanent or agency staff. On the day of the inspection people’s needs were met in a timely way.
There had been steady improvement in the ethos and values base at the home since the new registered manager came to post with staff and people in the home sharing positive relationships.
The provider had been developing more positive relationships with local professionals including the local pharmacy and district nursing teams.
Rating at last inspection: The last inspection report which was published 15 December 2018 found the service to be requires improvement overall and required improvement in the effective, responsive and well led key questions. Following this focused inspection, the overall rating had deteriorated to inadequate.
Why we inspected: We completed this inspection following concerns in relation to support provided to people. Specifically, how and when external specialist support was requested. How the provider ensured the support provided by the specialist team was included within the risk assessments and risk management plans for the person and how the implementation of advice was both followed and monitored. A person had died and this is subject to an ongoing investigation. At this inspection we reviewed the areas which were required to improve, to reduce associated risks moving forward. As a result, we undertook a focused inspection to review the Key Questions of Safe and Well-led only.
Prior to our inspection we reviewed the information we held about the service. No areas of concern were identified in the other key questions. We therefore did not inspect them. Ratings from previous comprehensive inspections for those key questions were used in calculating the overall rating at this inspection.
The overall rating for the service has changed from requires improvement to inadequate. This is based on the findings at this inspection.
Enforcement: We formally asked the provider for specific information in relation to the action they had taken to address concerns. We found the provider in breach of three regulations. Regulation 12, safe care and treatment, Regulation 13, safeguarding people from abuse, Regulation 17, good governance.
Follow up: Full information about CQC’s regulatory response to the more serious concerns found during inspections is added to reports after any representations and appeals have been concluded.
The overall rating for this service is ‘Inadequate’ and the service is therefore in ‘special measures’. This means we will keep the service under review and, if we do not propose to cancel the provider’s registration, we will re-inspect within six months to check for significant improvements.
If the provider has not made enough improvement within this timeframe. And there is still a rating of inadequate for any key question or overall rating, we will take action in line with our enforcement procedures. This will mean we will begin the process of preventing the provider from operating this service. This will usually lead to cancellation of their registration or to varying the conditions the registration.
For adult social care services, the maximum time for being in special measures will usually be no more than 12 months. If the service has demonstrated improvements when we inspect it. And it is no longer rated as inadequate for any of the five key questions it will no longer be in special measures.
For more details, please see the full report which is on the CQC website at www.cqc.org.uk