• Care Home
  • Care home

Archived: Primrose House

Overall: Good read more about inspection ratings

Middleton Road, Middleton, Morecambe, Lancashire, LA3 3JJ (01524) 853385

Provided and run by:
Primrose House (Morecambe) Limited

Important: The provider of this service changed. See new profile

All Inspections

29 June 2016

During a routine inspection

This unannounced inspection took place on 29 June and 13 July 2016.

Primrose House provides personal care up to 6 people with learning and physical disabilities. The home is a single storey, purpose built building. There are disabled facilities and equipment and a sensory room on site. The home is staffed on a 24 hour basis including waking watch carers throughout the night. There were three people who lived at the home on the day of inspection.

There was a registered manager in place. A registered manager is a person who has registered with the Care Quality Commission 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.

The service was last inspected on 14 and 21 May 2015. At this inspection we found the registered provider was not meeting all the fundamental standards. We identified breaches to Regulation 12, 17 and 18 of the Health and Social Care Act 2014. Suitable arrangements were not in place to ensure medicines were administered in line with current guidance. Paperwork and staff training was not up to date and staff were not suitably supported within their role.

Following the inspection in May 2015, we asked the registered provider to submit an action plan to show what changes they were going to make to become compliant with the appropriate regulations. The registered provider returned the action plan to demonstrate the improvements they intended to make. We used this inspection to look to see if the action plan had been completed and to ensure all fundamental standards were now being met.

At this comprehensive inspection carried out in June and July 2016, we found improvements had been made and the registered provider was now meeting all the required fundamental standards.

Feedback on service provision was positive. People spoke highly about the quality of service.

Improvements had been made to ensure staffing levels met people’s needs. Staffing arrangements were personalised to fit around the needs of the people who lived at the home. People had access to their own transport and were supported to access community activities of their choosing. Staff responded in a timely manner and people did not have to wait to have their needs met.

We observed staff demonstrating patience with people and taking time to sit with them to offer companionship and comfort. People were given time to carry out tasks as a means to promote independence and were not rushed.

Arrangements were in place to protect people from the risk of abuse. Staff had knowledge of safeguarding procedures and were aware of their responsibilities for reporting any concerns.

Suitable recruitment procedures were in place. Staff were checked before employment was secured. The staff turn-over at the home was low and people benefitted from having staff who knew them well.

Improvements has been made to ensure suitable arrangements were in place for managing and administering medicines. Regular audits of medicines were carried out by staff. Protocols for administering as and when medicines were in place and clearly detailed.

Detailed person centred care plans were in place for people who lived at the home. Care plans covered support needs and personal wishes. Plans were reviewed and updated at regular intervals and information was sought from appropriate professionals as and when required. Consent was gained wherever appropriate.

People’s healthcare needs were monitored and referrals were made to health professionals in a timely manner when health needs changed. Documentation regarding health needs of each person was comprehensive and concise.

Systems were in place to monitor and manage risk. Risks were reviewed on a monthly basis and a record was kept to show reviews had taken place.

We saw evidence of multidisciplinary working to ensure people’s dietary needs were addressed and managed in a safe way. Staff were knowledgeable of people’s needs and we observed good practice guidelines being consistently followed.

The registered provider had implemented a range of quality assurance systems to monitor the quality and effectiveness of the service provided. We saw action was taken when audits identified areas for improvement.

Staff were positive about the way the home was managed. Staff described the home as well-led and praised the commitment of the registered manager. Improvements had been made to administrative systems to ensure paperwork was up to date and easily accessible.

Staff had received training in The Mental Capacity Act 2005 and the associated Deprivation of Liberty Standards (DoLS.) We saw evidence these principles were put into practice when delivering care.

Improvements had been made to ensure staff were supported in their role. Staff told us they received supervisions and appraisals as a means for self-development. The registered manager had a training and development plan for all staff. We saw evidence staff were provided with relevant training to enable them to carry out their role.

Staff, people who lived at the home and their relatives all described the home as a good place to live.

14 & 21 May 2015

During a routine inspection

This unannounced inspection took place on 14 May 2015 and 21 May 2015.

Primrose House provides accommodation and personal care for up to 6 people with learning and physical disabilities. The home is a purpose built, single floor dwelling. There are disabled facilities and a range of aids and adaptations in place to meet the needs of people using the service. There is also a sensory room on site.

A registered manager was in post at the time of the inspection. A registered manager is registered with the Care Quality Commission to manage the service. Registered managers have legal responsibility for meeting the requirements in the Health and Social Care Act 2008 and associated Regulations about how the service is run.

The service was last inspected in July 2013. The home was found to be fully compliant at the last inspection.

There were three people living at the home on the day of inspection. Only one person who lived at the home could verbally communicate. This person informed us that they were very happy living at the home and gave positive feedback about the staff. We observed the interactions and body language of the other two people who lived at the home to try and understand their experiences of the care provided.

We observed positive interactions between staff and people who lived at the home. We observed staff engaging in meaningful conversations with people. Staff were kind, patient, and compassionate and were caring towards people.

Feedback from relatives in relation to care provision was positive. Family members stated that their relatives were happy living at the home and that they were well cared for.

Records retained by the provider showed us that robust pre-recruitment checks were in place prior to any person being employed by the service. Staffing levels were appropriate to ensure that people were kept safe but staffing levels did not always allow person centred care to be achieved. People were at risk of being socially isolated as there were not always enough staff on duty to enable people to access community facilities.

One person told us they felt safe and secure living at the home. Suitable arrangements were in place to protect people from the risk of abuse. Safeguards were in place for people who may have been unable to make decisions about their care and support.

We looked at how medicines were prepared and administered. We saw medicines were given in a respectful manner and systems were in place to ensure that all medicines were stored securely and effectively. However good practice guidelines were not always followed. Staff did not always follow directions as stated on the Medication Administration Record.

We found people were involved in decisions about their care and were supported to make choices as part of their daily life. Each person had a detailed care plan which covered their support needs and personal wishes. However we found that these plans had not been updated at regular intervals. This meant that staff were at risk of not having up to date information about people’s needs and wishes. Records showed there was a personal approach to people’s care and they were treated as individuals.

Staff spoken with were committed to providing a high quality service and confirmed that team work between the team was good. However morale in general was low. Staff said that there was sometimes a lack of leadership from the registered manager. The provider was currently considering implementing major changes within the service but staff felt that they were not included in this process of change. Staff said that training did not happen as much as it used to and felt that supervisions were sometimes too infrequent. Staff did not always feel supported to carry out their role effectively.

Relatives we spoke with gave positive feedback about the service and how they were communicated with. No relatives had any complaints about the service. The provider had a complaints system in place but this was not always effective as one person who lived at the home told us that they did not have any complaints but did not know how to complain.

29 July 2013

During a routine inspection

We met with people who lived at Primrose House, who prefer the term clients. All the clients had severe disabilities and/or sensory loss. We talked with staff and examined records. We observed care in the dining area and in one of the lounges. We saw that staff related well to clients and the home had a pleasant atmosphere, with a great deal of good humour. We saw that staff were patient in helping clients at their own speed and that there were sufficient staff to enable this to happen. We saw that care records were reviewed regularly with clients and their friends and professional helpers. This up to date information was particularly good to see, as all the clients had lived at Primrose House for over 15 years. We saw that medication was safely stored and that staff had received appropriate training in its administration. We saw that staff at Primrose House were up to date in understanding the requirements of the Mental Capacity Act 2005, and ensured that all decisions regarding care were agreed with clients, or with their families or professional helpers. This ensured decisions reflected the least restrictive options available. We heard from staff that they were supervised regularly and received training appropriate to the task. We were told that support was available both from managers and from the Trustees of Primrose House. We heard that Trustees visited regularly, although no records were kept.

29 January 2013

During a routine inspection

Not all the people we spoke to living at Primrose House were able to use words to tell us if they were happy with the way the service was run, and the way they were supported. We were able to speak to people and observe their care as well as interactions between them and staff. One person told us they enjoyed living at Primrose House and that staff respected their routines and lifestyle.

One person living at Primrose House told us the importance of maintaining their independence was essential to them. They told us they were able to choose their own routines and lifestyles and these decisions were respected by staff. They said that staff supported them to maintain their independence but were quick to respond to their requests for assistance.

We saw that people's health care needs were supported by staff who they commented were 'friendly' and 'great'. Staff told us they were well trained and supported. We saw they were respectful of the needs of people living at the home.

People told us that the environment was comfortable and they were able to choose the d'cor of their bedrooms. They said, 'I have all my favourite football teams on my walls'.

24 May and 7 June 2011

During a routine inspection

We visited the home and met the people who live there. Residents we met were not able to make any specific comments, but appeared content and relaxed in their surroundings and comfortable in the presence of carers.

We spoke with a number of relatives of people who live at the home and received extremely positive feedback. Some comments we received included;

'It is an absolutely brilliant place we are so lucky to have this home.'

'I don't know how they could make it any better ' in over twenty years we have never had any concerns.'

'You can tell the staff want to be there and that means a lot to us. The home is a godsend'

People told us that they felt carers understood residents' needs and worked hard to ensure that care planning processes included the views of residents and their families.

People said that they felt their loved ones were safe and well cared for and told us that staff were kind, caring and competent.

People felt that the standard of accommodation provided was very good, and several people commented on the fact that the home was always clean and nicely maintained.

Some people remarked that the provision of activities had greatly improved. One parent told us, 'they are always out doing something and they even go on holiday.'

People said that they knew how to raise concerns, although many were very keen to tell us that they had never needed to! People also said that they found the manager very approachable and were confident that any concerns they did raise would be taken seriously and dealt with appropriately.