• Care Home
  • Care home

Archived: East View Housing Management Limited - 27 Alexandra Road

Overall: Good read more about inspection ratings

27 Alexandra Road, St Leonards On Sea, East Sussex, TN37 6LD (01424) 714014

Provided and run by:
East View Housing Management Limited

All Inspections

07 and 13 May 2015

During a routine inspection

This inspection took place on 7 and 13 May 2015. To ensure we met staff and the people that lived in the house, we gave short notice of our inspection to the service.

This location is registered to provide accommodation and personal care to a maximum of three people with learning disabilities. Two people lived at the service at the time of our inspection.

People who lived in the house were younger adults below the age of sixty five. People had different communication needs. Some people were able to communicate verbally, and other people used gestures and body language. We talked directly with people and used observations to better understand people's needs.

The home had a registered manager. 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.

Our inspection on 21 May 2014 found that the provider was in breach of Regulation 20 of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (HSCA) which relates to records. This was because some records were not always well maintained. For example, weight checks had not been recorded in line with people’s needs and monthly keyworker reviews had not been consistently completed. A keyworker is a member of care staff with key responsibility to support an individual, to meet their support and care needs.

The provider sent us an action plan to show how they intended to improve the records they kept by October 2014. During this inspection we found that improvements to record keeping had been made and fully embedded into common practice by the registered manager.

People and staff were encouraged to comment on the service provided and their feedback was used to identify service improvements. There were audit processes in place to monitor the quality of the service. Maintenance systems were not always sufficiently robust to ensure low priority repairs and maintenance tasks were completed in a timely manner.

We recommend that the service explores relevant guidance from reputable websites about quality monitoring and action planning to improve the maintenance audit system and ensures effective communication of this with staff .

Staff were trained in how to protect people from abuse and harm. They knew how to recognise signs of abuse and how to raise an alert if they had any concerns. Risk assessments were centred on the needs of the individual. Each risk assessment included clear measures to reduce identified risks and guidance for staff to follow to make sure people were protected from harm. Risk assessments took account of people’s right to make their own decisions.

Accidents and incidents were recorded and monitored to identify how the risks of reoccurrence could be reduced. There were sufficient staff on duty to meet people’s needs. Staffing levels were adjusted according to people’s changing needs. There were safe recruitment procedures in place which included the checking of references.

Medicines were stored, administered, recorded and disposed of safely and correctly. Staff were trained in the safe administration of medicines and kept relevant records that were accurate.

Staff knew each person well and understood how to meet their support needs. Each person’s needs and personal preferences had been assessed and were continually reviewed.

Staff were competent to meet people’s needs. Staff received on-going training and supervision to monitor their performance and professional development. Staff were supported to undertake a professional qualification in social care to develop their skills and competence.

The Care Quality Commission (CQC) is required by law to monitor the operation of Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards (DoLS) which applies to care homes. One person was subject to a DoLS, we found that the registered manager understood when an application should be made and how to assess whether a person needed a DoLS.

The service provided meals and supported people to make meals that met their needs and choices. Staff knew about and provided for people’s dietary preferences and restrictions.

Staff communicated effectively with people, responded to their needs promptly, and treated them with kindness and respect. People were satisfied about how their care and treatment was delivered. People’s privacy was respected and people were assisted in a way that respected their dignity.

People were involved in their day to day care and support. People’s care plans were reviewed with their participation and relatives were invited to attend the reviews and contribute.

People were promptly referred to health care professionals when needed. Personal records included people’s individual plans of care, life history, likes and dislikes and preferred activities. The staff promoted people’s independence and encouraged people to do as much as possible for themselves. People were involved in planning activities of their choice.

People received care that responded to their individual care and support needs. People felt confident they could make a complaint and that the registered manager would address concerns.

There was an open culture that put people at the centre of their care and support. Staff held a clear set of values based on respect for people, ensuring people had freedom of choice and support to be as independent as possible.

21 May 2014

During a routine inspection

Our inspection team was made up of one inspector. We set out to answer our five key questions; Is the service caring? Is the service responsive? Is the service safe? Is the service effective? Is the service well-led?

Below is a summary of what we found. The summary describes what people using the service and staff told us, our observations during the inspection and the records we looked at.

If you want to see the evidence supporting our summary please read the full report.

Is the service safe?

People who lived at the service told us that they felt safe and that their care was provided as they wanted it. One person told us 'Things are OK, there's nothing I want changed'. At the time of the inspection, two people lived at the service.

We found that care and treatment was planned and delivered in a way that was intended to ensure people's safety and welfare. We looked at one care plan and saw that it was sufficiently detailed to allow staff to deliver safe care. However, we found that some key worker reports had not been completed and records such as routine monitoring of weight had also lapsed. People told us that staff sometimes spoke with them about their support plans.

Records showed that systems were in place to make sure that staff learnt from events such as accidents and incidents, complaints and concerns. Records kept by the service ensured that risks were identified and reviewed. This helped reduce risks to people and enabled the service to improve.

CQC monitors the operation of the Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards which applies to care settings. This is when restrictions may have to be made to help keep people safe. While no applications have needed to be submitted, proper policies and procedures were in place. Relevant staff had been trained to understand when an application should be made, and how to submit one.

Staff files contained all of the information needed by the Health and Social Care Act as well as details of the training they had received. This meant the provider could demonstrate that the staff employed to work at the service were suitable and had the skills and experience needed to support the people who lived there.

Is the service effective?

Staff we spoke with understood people's evident care and support needs well. We saw that this was reflected in the way that they engaged and interacted with people. People told us that they were happy with the care they received. One person said 'Things are fine'. People understood that they had given their consent to receive the care and support provided and knew that they could change their minds about the decisions that they had made.

Is the service caring?

People were treated with respect and staff were courteous. Staff were aware of people's interests, they encouraged people and offered them a wide variety of activities. People told us that the staff were supportive and we saw that they communicated effectively with people. We saw that staff were aware of verbal and physical triggers for challenging behaviours. They spoke with people in a way that helped to settle people's anxieties and reduce the potential of challenging behaviour.

Is the service responsive?

People's needs had been assessed before they moved to the service. People we spoke with told us they were happy with the support provided and that it met their preferences, interests and goals. People had access to activities that were important to them. For example, some people had work placements, or went to college and day centres which helped to develop their life skills.

Is the service well-led?

The name of a previous registered manager appears in this report, who was not in post and not managing the regulated activity at this location at the time of the inspection. Their name appears because it had not been removed as the registered manager of this location at the time of our inspection.

Staff had a good understanding of their roles in the service and felt supported by the acting manager. There were quality assurance processes in place to maintain standards in the service. We found the acting manager had good knowledge of the running of the home.

31 October 2013

During a routine inspection

During the weekday the house was unstaffed as the people living there were out at activities. People also had an active social life and were often out in the evening. In view of this and to ensure we got to meet staff and people living we arranged a short notice announced inspection of the service.

We met one person that lived in the house, two other people chose not to engage in the inspection process. The person we met had communication difficulties and their responses did not relate to the outcomes we inspected. We met the manager and also two staff during our visit. The staff members worked mainly in other houses nearby operated by the provider. However they knew the people in the house well and provided cover as and when required. The manager was seen interacting well with the people in the house and showed a good understanding of their care and support needs.

Records showed us that people enjoyed a busy lifestyle and had a good community presence. They were supported to make use of local amenities by staff.

We saw that appropriate systems were in place for the safe management of medicines, and for the receipt of and response to complaints. People lived in a well maintained and homely environment.

We had some concern that a robust recruitment and induction process for new staff was not clearly evidenced and that records were not always kept updated.

31 August 2012

During an inspection looking at part of the service

Three people lived in the house with staff support. When we visited we spoke to one of the people who lived there. They told us that they were happy living at the house and would not wish to live any where else.

They spoke positively about the recent upgrades to the property and thought the environment they lived in was much better now.