• Mental Health
  • Independent mental health service

Archived: The Huntercombe Hospital Norwich

Overall: Requires improvement read more about inspection ratings

Buxton, Norwich, Norfolk, NR10 5RH (01603) 277100

Provided and run by:
Huntercombe (Granby One) Limited

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

All Inspections

Other CQC inspections of services

Community & mental health inspection reports for The Huntercombe Hospital Norwich can be found at Huntercombe (Granby One) Limited. Each report covers findings for one service across multiple locations

28, 29 May 2015

During an inspection of this service

7-22 September 2017

During an inspection looking at part of the service

We did not rate the Huntercombe Group following the well-led review as we only rate individual services for independent providers.

We found the following issues that the service provider needs to improve:

  • The Huntercombe Group had been unable to recruit and retain a sufficient number of nurses with experience in CAMHS across the five services that were open at the time of our inspection. This resulted in services relying heavily on temporary staff to cover shifts. We concluded that this shortage of experienced nursing staff was one of the factors that impacted adversely on the safety of these services. Although the provider had made efforts to recruit, across the five services that were open at the time of the inspection, there were a total of 44 whole time equivalent (WTE) vacancies for registered nurses out of a total required workforce of 109 WTE - a vacancy rate of 40%. Meadow Lodge had the highest vacancy rate (50%); followed by Stafford (48%). The lowest vacancy rate for registered nurses in any of the five services was at Cotswold Spa (29%). These figures did not include long-term contracted nurses and block booked agency staff filling substantive roles as a means to mitigate against high vacancies.
  • The Huntercombe Group had not put in place a programme of specialist training of its workforce to mitigate the low numbers of experienced staff.
  • Although the Huntercombe Group had investigated and identified lessons to learn from the serious problems identified at Huntercombe Hospital Stafford, the system for ensuring that these lessons were put into practice was immature and not embedded across all of the hospital sites.
  • There was no identified member of the senior leadership team accountable for the CAMHS service delivery across The Huntercombe Group. This hindered the organisation’s ability to standardise good practice across the specialism. This was reflected in our findings across the services of inconsistent implementation of policies, sharing of good practice and embedding of lessons learnt across teams.
  • We identified a number of significant lapses in governance. There was no effective corporate oversight of the provision of mandatory and role-specific training for staff and no effective system in place to ensure that staff in all services received consistent and regular supervision and appraisal. We found a lack of detail in the minutes of the various provider level governance meetings including the delivery board and quality assurance group. The minutes did not capture the discussion of data relating to performance or adverse incidents. Although senior management were able to inform us what had been discussed at these meetings, the minutes and papers of the meetings did not record this detail.
  • The staff engagement strategy was not consistently embedded across all CAMHS services. Staff, at some services, reported they did not feel consulted or engaged in changes to practice and service developments. They did not feel the systems and processes in place supported an open culture for whistle blowing.

We found the following areas of good practice:

  • The Huntercombe Group had a clearly stated vision and objectives. Managers worked to ensure all staff at all levels understood them in relation to their daily roles. All staff, including temporary workers, received an induction to their service.
  • There was evidence of some improvements in the governance of services since our inspections of Huntercombe Hospital Stafford and Watcombe Hall. The organisation’s early warning escalation system, quality dashboard, quality assurance framework and quality improvement forums provided a range of data.
  • There was a programme of regular audits intended to identify issues and inform improvements.
  • The provider had a number of initiatives that involved young people. For example, the ‘you said, we did’ initiative encouraged young people to be champions of their peers’ views; and the ‘glamour for your manor’ initiative encouraged young people (and staff) to submit proposals for improvements to their ward environment.
  • Several wards had registered with the Royal College of Psychiatrists’ Quality Network for Inpatient Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (QNIC), and some wards had already received QNIC accreditation.

16,17, 20, 21, 23, 24, 28 November 2017 and 7 December 2017

During an inspection looking at part of the service

The Care Quality Commission carried out an urgent and focussed unannounced inspection of Huntercombe Hospital on 16, 17, 18, 20, 21, 24, 28 November 2017 and 7 December 2017.

The Care Quality Commission has a duty under Section 3 of the HSCA to consider the immediate safety and welfare of the young people at the hospital. We looked at this throughout our unannounced inspections.

We found significant and immediate concerns that required immediate action. We worked closely with NHS England and The Huntercombe Group senior management team to ensure that immediate concerns for the health and wellbeing of the young people were acted on. We took enforcement action to stop any new patients from being admitted to Huntercombe Norwich. The Huntercombe Group made the decision to remove all of the young people from the hospital. NHS England found alternative placements for all the young people. We then took further enforcement action to ensure that services could no longer be provided at this location.

During inspection we found that:

  • The hospital did not manage risk to young people effectively or protect young people from carrying out acts of self-harm and aggression. Staff failed to manage the safety of the hospital’s physical environment. As a result, young people had access to dangerous items as weapons or for acts of self-harm.Although staff reacted to incidents on the wards, they did not take action to prevent incidents occurring or escalating.

  • The hospital did not learn lessons from serious incidents or take effective action to reduce the risk that a similar event would happen again.Staff failed to report some incidents in line with the provider’s policy. Managers did not review or investigate all serious incidents robustly, openly and transparently. When the provider did investigate an incident, it did not take effective action to address the findings of these investigations. Despite giving repeated assurances that it had put measures in place, serious incidents of a similar nature continued to happen.

  • The hospital did not take the necessary action to protect young people’s physical health.We identified several incidents were staff did not carry out physical health observations on a young person whose breathing had been compromised, following an act of self-harm.The provider failed to ensure there was adequate emergency oxygen on the wards at all times.

  • The provider failed to ensure that there was a sufficient number of skilled and experienced staff on the wards to meet the needs of the young people.

  • Staff did not always treat the young people with dignity and respect.

  • The ward environment was unclean and without an effective system in place to maintain cleanliness.

13 - 14 March 2017 and 23 March 2017

During a routine inspection

We rated Huntercombe Hospital Norwich as requires improvement because:

  • Some staff reported that at times the wards were left with no registered nurse for a short period. This was when one nurse took a break and the other nurse responded to an emergency on another ward. We raised this concern with the provider who gave the concern immediate attention to prevent this from happening again.
  • We did not see evidence of review of supportive observations. For instance, one record showed a patients increasing risk but there was no clear plan of how to manage this risk. There was no evidence of review of the patient’s observation levels in the ward round held by the Consultant in light of the increased risk. Lack of review of increasing risks could lead to a serious incident.
  • Staff did not follow their own policy that says there should be a review of patient’s supportive observations daily and there should be a daily entry in the patient’s clinical notes specifically relating to supportive observations.
  • There was no audit of supportive observation or of rapid tranquilisation. The provider did not identify concerns relating to these areas.
  • Staff did not complete any of the reviewed rapid tranquilisation records correctly. None of the rapid tranquilisation physical health monitoring was completed in line with the hospital’s own policy or best practice.
  • Prescribing of rapid tranquilisation was not in line with the hospital’s own policy.
  • Staff did not routinely assess individual patients capacity and competency and they lacked understanding of this process.
  • Two patients under the age of 16 had capacity assessed under the Mental Capacity Act 2005 (MCA). Only patients over 16 years old should be assessed using the MCA. Those under 16 years old should have competency assessed by a doctor using the Gillick assessment.
  • In three cases, the Responsible Clinician (RC) did not update the patient’s consent form.
  • Some staff were not clear about the role of the independent mental health advocate (IMHA). It was not clear from patients’ notes whether any patients had been referred to the IMHA.
  • We checked nine seclusion records and we found that seven were not completed in line with the MHA code of practice.
  • Male patients’ had to walk passed the female bedrooms to access the communal areas, or be escorted outside around these areas. This was a breach of the Mental Health Act code of practice regarding mixed sex accommodation.
  • Some policies provided by the Huntercombe Group were out of date, such as the Supportive Observation Policy, which was due to be reviewed in September 2016.

However:

  • Between 19 June 2016 and 19 December 2016 there were 893 restraints used on 52 different patients. There were 1688 restraints in the previous 6 month period between June and December 2105. This was a reduction of 795 restraints. Although there had been a period of time in 2016 with bed number reductions, this represented a downward trend and demonstrated that the hospital was working to reduce the number of restraints.
  • The hospital had mitigated some safety observation risks by installing mirrors and CCTV in the main ward areas.
  • We reviewed 12 patient records and all had a comprehensive risk assessment completed on admission, which staff had updated regularly.
  • Care records showed that doctors completed physical examinations for all 12 patients whose records were reviewed, and there was evidence of ongoing review of patient’s physical health needs.
  • We saw innovative practices such as the use of staff own dogs with patients in a therapeutic environment. This was risk assessed for both the dogs and patients safety.
  • The occupational therapy assistant had completed a course of camouflage make up and had introduced sessions with patients who requested it.
  • The hospital invested in specialist training courses for staff.
  • Rainforest ward received a participation certificate for the Quality Network for Inpatient CAMHS, awarded in October 2016.
  • There were strong links with the school, which was located on site, and had received a ‘good’ rating from Ofsted. The school and ward communication was well established and every effort was made to encourage school participation and a variety of educational courses were available.

Senior managers provided effective leadership within the hospital.

9 and 10 February 2016

During a routine inspection

We rated Huntercombe Hospital Norwich as good because:

  • We observed staff interacting with patients in a positive way. The hospital had a separate accommodation facility, which allowed two families to stay over at a time if required.
  • The provider took action to ensure the ward environment was safe. Where hazards were present, such as blind spots, staff completed risk assessments and installed mirrors to mitigate the risk.
  • The seclusion room, a room used for the supervised confinement of a patient for their own safety, allowed staff clear observation of patients. The room was L shaped and had toilet facilities inside. The toilet area did not have a door however, there was an observation window with a blind which offered privacy to the patient.
  • Hospital staff regularly monitored the physical healthcare of patients, and referred them for specialist care if there was an identified need to do so.
  • The provider actively recruited for qualified staff. They used regular agency and bank staff to cover vacant shifts. Staff used a handover folder for each handover. This contained key information about the patients on the ward, as well as a patient photograph. They reported that this was useful for agency staff as it allowed them to easily identify individual patients and understand potential triggers.
  • Senior managers held daily morning meetings to discuss any concerns or complaints and to formulate action plans promptly. The team discussed staffing and patient specific issues during these meetings.
  • Staff had opportunity to engage in further professional development. The hospital had recruited a psychologist who was training a group of staff to be able to offer debriefs following incidents.
  • Patients detained under the Mental Health Act had access to an advocate and staff read patients their rights regularly in a way they could understand. The staff we spoke to understood the principles of Gillick and used this to include the young people where possible in the decision making regarding their care.
  • The provider had developed robust incident reporting systems and reviewed these promptly at morning meetings.
  • The hospital reported difficulty with involving community teams in discharge planning; this had resulted in two delayed discharges in the last six months. The hospital had employed a social worker to try to address these difficulties.
  • Staff sickness was above 10% on all wards, this was above the national average. Local plans were in place to address this, which included more timely return to work interviews to support staff that had been off sick.
  • The hospital had developed a monthly newsletter which was available to staff and patients to keep them informed of changes which were taking place.
  • The provider was working toward accreditation in the Quality Network for Child and Adolescents Inpatients scheme and had been peer reviewed at the time of inspection.

However:

  • Some wards had damaged furnishings. Staff told us these were awaiting repair.
  • The service had a substantial number of vacancies for qualified staff, and there were a number of vacancies for support workers. However, the provider did have an active recruitment plan to address this.
  • Staff did not regularly review Section 17 leave paperwork, some of which was out of date or no longer applicable in an emergency.
  • Staff did not date care plans or clearly indicate the level of patient involvement.
  • Record keeping was not consistent between wards. Wards kept some records on paper and others on an electronic system. All the staff we spoke to had difficulty with accessing the records.
  • There was no current system for monitoring the amount of hours each patient spent in education. The provider was in the process of developing a monitoring system at the time of the inspection.
  • The provider’s environmental fire risk assessment elapsed in October 2015.

16, 29 May 2013

During an inspection looking at part of the service

We visited the child and adolescent mental health service and two units providing care and treatment to adults. All 27 patients receiving care and treatment at the hospital were detained under the Mental Health Act 1983.

Following our last inspection the provider submitted an action plan to show how they would make improvements to address the failings that we had identified. At this inspection we assessed standards to see whether they had achieved and maintained compliance as planned.

We found improvements had been made and that patients were receiving a safe and effective service. Previously restrictive practices had been addressed and records were individualised. Patients were supported to express their views and action was taken to address the issues they raised. Patients' rights, dignity and independence were respected. The way that physical restraint was managed and recorded had been made safer and was being more effectively monitored.

The provider's policies and procedures, including those for protecting vulnerable patients had been reviewed and re-launched to staff. Staffing levels across the service were adequate and staff demonstrated that they were competent and confident to undertake their roles. Further recruitment was in progress.

There were effective arrangements in place to monitor the quality and safety of the service, and to drive further improvement. Staff and patients told us that morale had improved and that they felt safe at the hospital.

13, 14 December 2012

During an inspection in response to concerns

This report is based on a visit that was carried out as part of a co-ordinated responsive inspection. We inspected all five occupied wards at Rowan House: Wensum (locked rehabilitation ward) and Gresham one, two, three and six (low secure wards). There were 23 patients receiving care and treatment, all of whom were detained under the Mental Health Act 1983.

The hospital was experiencing a period of transition following the closure of a medium secure service and some staff and patients had moved from medium to low secure wards immediately preceding our inspection. Although 19 patients were placed in an environment considered by the provider to be low secure, inspectors found that security procedures were more aligned to medium secure specifications. We also found that ward routines and some practices did not ensure that patients' individual rights and preferences were respected.

Patients were involved in, and supported to understand the planning and delivery of their care and treatment. Individuals' needs were assessed and care and treatment was planned to effectively meet their needs. However, care plans and risks assessments were not always reviewed in a timely way. Patients were involved in planning their future care and support. One patient said, 'I want to move closer to home. They are trying to do this.'

20 August 2012

During an inspection looking at part of the service

At the time of our visit there were 24 people living in Rowan House, living within six houses according to their healthcare needs. We visited three of these houses, observed how people were supported and spoke with five people using the service.

People told us that they enjoyed activities organised for them, such as going out in the grounds to walk a dog with a member of staff.

One person told us that they could see their independent advocate when they wished to and that they found this helpful.

16 May 2012

During an inspection looking at part of the service

Some people living in the hospital were unable to express their views about the service to us verbally. However, during our visit we observed care being delivered sensitively and staff interacting with people at their own pace. People indicated that they were happy with their care. We also observed positive interactions between staff and people they were looking after.

One person told us that they had been involved in making decisions about moving on from the hospital and were waiting for a new placement nearer to their family. They were clearly very pleased about this.

During our inspection we spoke with a group of people living on one house, which had recently been amalgamated with a neighbouring house. They confirmed that they understood how the changes were being managed; however some people were clearly finding this difficult.

18 October and 3 November 2011

During a themed inspection looking at Learning Disability Services

There were 37 people at Rowan House when we visited, and we spoke with nine people from various units on the site to gain their views on the service.

Some of the people told us that they had been involved in their admission to the hospital and helped with their care plans, others said that the admission was arranged for them and that staff arranged the care plans. People told us that they enjoy a range of activities and going out on trips.

People we spoke with told us that staff treated them with respect, one person said the staff 'encourage them to do things and treat them fairly' another person we spoke with said that if something wasn't right they would 'speak to staff they trust'

The registered manager provided us with contact details for three relatives of people being treated at Rowan House, and we spoke with them to gain their views on the service. One relative told us they visited every four to five weeks and were always 'made welcome' They also told us that 'staff explained what was happening to their relative and told them of plans for the future which may include a home visit'