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Archived: Harrow DCA

88-98 College Road, Harrow, Middlesex, HA1 1BQ (020) 8427 3738

Provided and run by:
Mears Homecare Limited

All Inspections

25 November 2013

During an inspection looking at part of the service

This inspection was to check the actions taken in the areas of non-compliance identified in our inspection of 13 May 2013. We did not speak with people who use the service on this occasion. We found evidence of compliance from looking at records and speaking with the Registered Manager of the service, senior managers for the provider, and care staff of the service.

We saw examples of the new individual support plan assessment format. It included questions that showed each person's views and choices about their care. We saw evidence that many people who had received short term reablement support chose to remain with Harrow DCA when they required long term care.

We saw the provider's new policy and procedures for handling medicines. It contained clear definitions of administration of medicines. We spoke with four care workers who all said that they had read the policy and had recent training on the procedures for handling medicines. One care worker said that the training was useful. They said that previously they did not always have clear information on medicines for the people they supported, but now medicines administration records were in place with information on the medicines for everyone who needed assistance.

We saw the on line system for scheduling work for care workers. It highlighted the maximum hours that each person with a work visa was allowed to work, and flagged up an alert if they were allocated more than the allowed number of hours.

4, 6 April and 13 May 2013

During a routine inspection

Everyone we spoke with said that they were very happy with the care provided by their regular care workers. One person said, 'I'm blessed. I have a regular care worker; it's like an old friend coming to look after me.' Another person had support to maintain their independence. They said, 'I've started to believe in myself again, started to do things.'

Every person using the service had been visited to agree new personal contracts. However the provider had no process for assessing the capacity of people to agree the contracts.

Appropriate arrangements were not in place in relation to the recording of medicine. The policy and training on administering medicines did not ensure that staff administered and recorded prescribed medicines safely and appropriately.

Appropriate checks were undertaken before staff began work. But checks were not in place to ensure that permissions to work in this country were complied with accurately.

The care workers we spoke with told us that the training provided them with the skills that they needed.

The provider had a system for a monthly analysis of the quality of all the provider's services. People who use the service, their representatives and staff were asked for their views about their care and treatment. Most of the people we spoke with said that they had not made any complaints. One person felt that their concerns were listened to, and the situation had improved.

24 April 2012

During a themed inspection looking at Domiciliary Care Services

We carried out a themed inspection looking at domiciliary care services. We asked people to tell us what it was like to receive services from this home care agency as part of a targeted inspection programme of domiciliary care agencies with particular regard to how people's dignity was upheld and how they can make choices about their care.

We used telephone interviews and home visits to people who use the service and to their main carers (a relative or friends) to gain views about the service. We spoke to fourteen people who use the service and their carers and visited three people who use the service and their carers in the own homes.

Most people told us that they were satisfied with the quality of service and felt safe. 'The carers treat me in a nice and sensitive way', one person said.

Most people who use the service felt treated respectfully and were always called by their preferred names.