Chief Inspector of Hospitals finds that Avon and Wiltshire Mental Health Partnership NHS Trust must improve

Published: 18 September 2014 Page last updated: 12 May 2022
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England's Chief Inspector of Hospitals, Professor Sir Mike Richards, has published his first report on the quality of services provided by Avon and Wiltshire Mental Health Partnership NHS Trust.

Following an inspection in June, the Care Quality Commission has found that while staff were caring, the trust must take significant steps to improve the quality of their services.
Under CQC's new inspection regime, a team of 70 people which included doctors, nurses, hospital managers, trained members of the public, a variety of specialists, CQC inspectors and analysts spent four days at the trust, meeting patients and staff. They inspected 39 wards and 27 community services, as well as other specialist services, across Bristol, Wiltshire, Swindon, South Gloucestershire, North Somerset, and Bath and North East Somerset. The full reports are available here.

Overall CQC found that staff were kind and caring and were skilled in the delivery of care.  Inspectors noted positive examples of staff providing emotional support to people in challenging conditions.

However, the inspection team had a number of concerns about safety; particularly on the mental health admission wards and forensic mental health wards. The design of some wards made it difficult for staff to observe vulnerable patients and some wards had ligature points that could endanger people at risk of suicide. There were also wards where male and female accommodation was not fully segregated.

These problems were compounded by significant staff shortages on some wards that the inspection team concluded may have affected patients’ care and safety.

There were also times when beds were not available. This meant that adults of all ages who needed inpatient care were sometimes admitted to a ward a long way from their home. It also meant that people were sometimes moved from one ward to another or discharged early.

At the time of the inspection, CQC pointed out its immediate concerns to the trust. Subsequently, the Care Quality Commission has issued four warning notices requiring the trust to take urgent action to improve.

  • At Hillview Lodge, in Bath, inspectors found that the premises had not been well maintained and the design, layout and décor were not appropriate as a therapeutic environment or one in which people’s privacy and dignity were promoted or protected.
  • At Blackberry Hill Hospital in Bristol, the trust had failed to meet guidance on medium secure units in relation to the safety and suitability of premises. Potential ligature points had not been dealt with.
  • At Fromeside Hospital a number of units were experiencing significant staff shortages which may have impacted on patient care and safety. Supervision arrangements for new staff were insufficient.
  • The trust had failed to assess and monitor the quality of its services. It had not made necessary changes following previous inspections and had not taken prompt and appropriate action to manage risks identified by serious incidents and concerns, or respond to staff concerns.
  • CQC has identified 32 areas where the trust must improve. As a first step, the trust must provide a plan setting out how it will address each requirement.
  • Inspectors identified a number of areas of good practice, including:
  • The two hour target to complete assessments of young people at Mason place of safety service in Bristol was being met both in the day and out of hours. Young people under the age of 18 years old had a separate part of the unit if required.
  • The later life mental health liaison service for Bristol and South Gloucestershire provided an innovative service, working with other providers to meet the mental health needs of older people in local hospitals.
  • The Bristol intensive service had employed a recovery co-ordinator as a carers’ champion, significantly improving carers’ involvement in the care and treatment of their relative.
  • The Swindon psychiatric liaison service was working well with the Great Western Hospital to manage people's distress. It was also working together with the local suicide prevention project.
  • The ADHD team cut the waiting time for assessments, from of 18 months to eight weeks, by refocusing the team’s priorities, and creating time for more appointments.
  • The STEPS eating disorder unit has been instrumental in developing and publishing research on a national scale.

Dr Paul Lelliott, Deputy Chief Inspector of Hospitals, said:

"Avon and Wiltshire Mental Health Partnership has room for improvement in many areas. It is a big trust – with an important job to do. Many thousands of people depend on its services.

"On our inspection, we found staff treating patients with respect and communicating with them effectively. People we met during our inspection were mainly positive about the staff and felt they made a positive impact on their experience on the wards. Frontline staff showed us that they wanted to provide high quality care, despite the challenges of staffing levels and some poor ward environments.

"We had a number of concerns about safety - including unsafe ward environments that did not promote the dignity of patients, insufficient staffing levels to safely meet patient’s needs and inadequate arrangements for medication management. Some of these are not new and were known to the trust before our inspection - so it is a matter of concern that these issues have still not been addressed.

"The trust have told us that they have developed strong relationships with local communities, the people who use the services, commissioners, local authorities and other providers over the last year. They will need to build on these relationships, to confront the issues which we have reported on so that they deliver a better quality of care.

"I recognise that there has been a change in the most senior leadership of the trust, which has now embarked on a programme of service improvement. We found that the board and senior management have a clear vision with strategic objectives. The onus is on them now to make the urgent improvements we require - and then to sustain that improvement in the long term. We will continue to monitor their progress – and take further action if that is required."

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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.