• Hospice service

Chestnut Tree House

Overall: Good read more about inspection ratings

Dover Lane, Poling, Arundel, West Sussex, BN18 9PX (01903) 871800

Provided and run by:
St. Barnabas Hospices (Sussex) Ltd

All Inspections

20 August 2014

During a routine inspection

We carried out this inspection under Section 60 of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 as part of our regulatory functions. This inspection was planned to check whether the provider is meeting the legal requirements and regulations associated with the Health and Social Care Act 2008 and to pilot a new inspection process being introduced by CQC which looks at the overall quality of the service.

The inspection was unannounced.

Chestnut Tree House is a hospice which provides residential and nursing care for up to ten children and young people who have a life threatening condition including care for those at the end of their life. Respite care and day time activities are also provided at the hospice and care and support is also provided to children and their families in their own homes. A range of other services are provided by Chestnut Tree House including specialist support to family members of children. Community support to children and their families includes access to an out of hours ‘on-call’ service and sessions with trained family counsellors. The service is provided to children from birth, including new-born babies and to those in early adulthood. At the time of the inspection there were a total of 275 children and young people who received a service from the hospice, eight of whom resided in the hospice. This included children and young people with a physical or learning disability.

The service had a registered manager. A registered manager is a person who has registered with the Care Quality Commission to manage the service and has the legal responsibility for meeting the requirements of the law; as does the provider.

Staff working in the hospice understood the needs of the children and young people. We saw care was provided with kindness and compassion. Children, young people and their families told us the standard of care was good. We saw examples of creative care and where children and young people were able to express themselves. Staffing was provided at levels where children and young people were safe.

Staff were well trained, motivated and skilled to provide care to children, young people and their families. There was a comprehensive training programme for staff. Training was provided to staff in the Mental Capacity Act 2005 and there were policies and procedures for this. The registered manager and staff, however, were not clear about arrangements for gaining consent for providing care to children and young people, or of the requirements of the Act, such as the use of the Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards (DoLS) for those over the age of 18 years.

Medicines were safely handled and administered.

Children and young people’s needs were assessed and each person had a care plan of how care was to be provided. Children and young people and their families said they were consulted about their care. The quality of care was regularly reviewed and families of children and young people were asked to give their views on the service they and their children received so any improvements could be made. Two of the staff were ‘dignity champions’ with the specific role of promoting a good standard of care for children, young people and their families.

There were systems to review any accidents or incidents so that any improvements could be made to prevent any reoccurrence.

There was good management oversight of the hospice with a registered manager and team leaders to guide and support staff. Nursing practices were monitored by a system of clinical governance.

12 September 2013

During a routine inspection

We spoke to several parents of children who attend Chestnut Tree House and the parents of children who were cared for at the end of their life by the hospice team. They all told us that the care afforded by the staff at Chestnut Tree House made a "huge difference" to their families. They explained that they trusted the staff to care for their children very well. Describing their children's needs as very complex, they explained that staff knew and understood their child and that they felt comfortable leaving their child to be looked after by the staff. They said this meant they could spend time with their partner or other children in the family. One parent was about to go off to a holiday park with water chutes and lots of cycling. They said this would be impossible without Chestnut Tree House and that their other children would miss out on so many things if they could not have respite nights. They also said that the siblings also enjoyed visiting the hospice.

We found a skilled and committed staff team who enjoyed providing high quality of care to the children. The staff said they liked being able to "nurse children properly"', to have the time to care and the opportunity to really get to know the children and "their little ways".

The care we observed was child and family centred. Individual children were being encouraged to play and enjoy the excellent range of facilities.

20 February 2013

During a routine inspection

Parents of people using the service told us they felt they and their relatives were treated with dignity and respect by staff. We saw evidence of consultation and involvement with people's parents in care planning and all aspects of people's care.

We read care records and found detailed and comprehensive assessments and care plans. We found that people were referred to other services if needed.

We found that people were protected by the service from harm and abuse and that there were adequate procedures in place. The parents whom we spoke to knew how to complain and this was confirmed by the recent carers' survey. Staff knew how to protect people from abuse and had received suitable training.

We inspected staff records, training records, a staff survey and spoke to staff. We found that staff were trained and supported in doing their work.

We looked at governance systems, audits, questionnaires and an external quality inspection. These showed us that the service had appropriate quality assurance systems in place.

15 December 2011

During a routine inspection

Whilst there were not many people at Chestnut Tree house who were able to talk to us when we visited, we did speak with several families who use the hospice at other times. One couple told us that Chestnut Tree House was a 'lifeline' and the support they had received had enabled their family to cope with the death of their eldest child and the complex needs and terminal condition of their second child. They said that without the hospice services they would not have managed.

Other people who we spoke with commented on the exceptional quality of care they received as a family and the skill and dedication of the staff team. Parents said it was the only place they could ever relax and children told us that they loved their stays at Chestnut Tree House.