• Care Home
  • Care home

Archived: Dom Polski Residential Care Home

Overall: Good read more about inspection ratings

18 Carlton Road, Whalley Range, Manchester, Greater Manchester, M16 8BB (0161) 226 1836

Provided and run by:
Society Of Christ (Great Britain)

All Inspections

14 February 2017

During a routine inspection

Dom Polski is a large detached property that provides accommodation and support for 14 older people. The home provides a service for older people who speak Polish. The home is owned and operated by the Fathers Of The Society of Christ (Great Britain), this is a Polish religious organisation and a registered charity. The Polish language, culture and traditions are upheld within the home.

Rating at last inspection:

At the last inspection, the service was rated as Good.

Rating at this inspection:

At this inspection we found the service remained Good.

Why the service is rated Good.

Staff were fully trained to meet people’s individual needs and had been safely recruited. Staff knew how to keep people safe. Risk assessments were in place to guide staff to provide safe support.

Medicines were administered as prescribed. Health professionals were very positive about the quality of the support provided, the registered manager and the caring nature of the staff and the support they provided each individual.

People and relatives we spoke with were also very positive about the staff team and their kindness. Staff knew people’s needs well and would spend time sitting and talking with them through the day.

Staff were supported by the registered manager through regular supervisions and team meetings. Staff said they enjoyed working at the service and that the registered manager was very approachable.

People are supported to have maximum choice and control of their lives and staff support them in the least restrictive way possible; the policies and systems in the service support this practice.

People’s health and nutritional needs were well met by the service. People and relatives told us the food was very good and they had a choice of meals. Traditional Polish food was offered and relatives and friends could share a meal with people if they wished to.

People were supported with their religious and cultural needs. A priest was available to conduct mass every day. The home was decorated with mementos of Poland. Signs around the home were in Polish as well as English. This helped people to feel comfortable in familiar surroundings and to orientate themselves within the home.

People’s wishes at the end of their lives were agreed with them and their family. People were supported to remain at Dom Polski at the end of their life if they wished to do so.

People and their relatives were kept well informed about the service and had opportunities through residents meetings and surveys to comment on the service and make suggestions for changes. We saw that comments received were acted upon.

Clear care plans were in place for each individual. New care plans for dementia were in the process of being introduced at the time of our inspection. A programme of activities was in place, which people said they enjoyed.

The registered manager had a comprehensive system of quality assurance and audits in place. The provider was said to be very supportive, however did not have any formal system to monitor the service.

Further information is in the detailed findings below.

21 October 2014

During a routine inspection

We carried out an unannounced inspection of this service on 21 October 2014. When we last inspected the service in June 2013 we found that the provider had not taken proper steps to give written guidance to staff on how to protect people with swallowing difficulties from the risk of choking. Following that inspection the provider sent us an action plan to tell us the improvements they were going to make. They said their improvements would be completed by 31 August 2013. During this inspection we found that satisfactory improvements had been made to protect people who used the service from choking.

Dom Polski is a care home providing accommodation, personal care and support for 14 older people. The home provides a service for older people whose first language is Polish and is owned and operated by the Fathers Of The Society of Christ (Great Britain); a Polish religious organisation and a registered charity. The Polish language, culture and traditions are upheld within the home. There were 12 people using this service at the time of our visit.

There was a registered manager in post at the time of this inspection. 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.

Support Staff were confident in describing the different kinds of abuse and the signs and symptoms that would suggest a person they supported might be at risk of abuse. They knew what action to take to safeguard people from harm

A robust system was in place to identify and assess the risks associated with providing care and support. A relative told us and care records confirmed, that risks had been discussed with them and action agreed to keep people safe from accidental harm.

Staff working in the home understood the needs of the people they supported. They supported people in making choices and their own decisions as much as possible. Four people living in the home and a relative told us they were happy with the care provided.

People who used this service received safe care and support from a trained and skilled team of staff. The induction of new staff was robust and they received regular support and mentoring from more senior staff following their appointment. This had been supplemented by further training to equip staff with specific skills, which enabled them to provide person-centred care to people who used the service. Staff fully understood their caring responsibilities and they demonstrated respect for the rights of the people they supported.

During our visit we saw examples of staff treating people with respect and dignity. People using the service and their relatives were consulted and involved in assessments, care planning and the development of the service.

We saw evidence that many aspects of the care and support were based on best practice guidance, such as the recent appointment of infection control champions, whose responsibility was to ensure high standards were maintained by the staff team.

The registered manager had developed an effective system of quality assurance, which measured the outcomes of service provision. Staff, and relatives had been included in this process and their feedback had been used to make improvements to the way the service was provided.

17 June 2013

During a routine inspection

Dom Polski residential home provided a service to mainly Polish people. At this visit we were accompanied by an Expert by Experience (ex-by-ex) and a Polish language interpreter. The ex- by-ex talked with most people who used the service, a number of relatives and had lunch with people who used the service. The ex-by-ex also talked to members of staff. The ex-by-ex did not provide a written report in side the timescale for this report to be produced. However they told us people had only given positive feedback about the service.

The inspector talked with two people who used the service. People were positive about the standard of care at Dom Polski. We were told: 'I like it. That's why I stay, I don't have to stay.'

And:

'I like it all I am very very happy that I am here.'

We saw that people who used the service or their representatives were involved in planning their care. People who used the service had their social and spiritual needs met. We found that procedures were in place to protect people from harm.

We saw systems in place to check the quality of the service provided at Dom Polski.

We found more steps were needed to ensure people had all their health needs fully met.

24 October 2012

During a routine inspection

Dom Polski residential home provides a service to people who are Polish or Polish speaking. The people we talked with also spoke fluent English.

We talked with three people using the service, one relative, and three care staff working in the home including the registered manager.

People who used the service said they liked the staff.

We were told:

'The staff are very kind.'

People who used the service said they felt safe. We were told:

'You feel safe, nobody can get in, even the bosses have to ring the bell. There's no aggression from other residents.'

The relative we spoke with was positive about the care and support provided, and told us:

'Staff are alright, I visit every week and they help my (relative) and others who can't eat by themselves.'

One person felt the food did not always meet their needs because it was salty. We were not looking at food and nutrition during this inspection but we observed the meal at lunchtime. We saw that the majority of people, including this person ate all of this meal.

We saw there were sufficient staff on duty who were skilled at meeting the needs of people living at Dom Polski.

We found that although activities were provided they were not always planned in relation to the individual interests and abilities of people using the service.

11 April 2011

During a routine inspection

People living in Dom Polski told us that they felt supported and well cared for and that care workers understood their needs and how to meet them.

We were told that things that were important to people such as their rights to privacy, dignity and respect was maintained by the staff team and any concerns or worries would be addressed quickly and appropriately.

People felt comfortable in their surroundings and told us that they were very happy with their daily lifestyles including the choice of food available, the environment they lived in and the overall standard of service they received.