• Care Home
  • Care home

Archived: Abbeywell Court

Dragon Square, Chesterton, Newcastle Under Lyme, Staffordshire, ST5 7HL (01782) 561769

Provided and run by:
Abbeywell Care Limited

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

All Inspections

21 May 2013

During a routine inspection

We carried out this inspection to check on the care and welfare of people using this service. Forty one people were in residence when we undertook our inspection.

At the time of this inspection Mr Stephen Paul Hudson remained registered with us as a manager of the service. We have been informed by the provider that he is no longer employed in that capacity. We are taking action to resolve this registration issue.

We spoke with eight people living in the home, four staff and visiting healthcare professionals. We also spoke with three relatives. We found that people were treated with dignity and respect and their individuality was recognised. We saw they were supported to make their own choices.

However, there was little evidence that care records were written with people or that people using the service and their relatives were involved in their formulation.

Where consent to care and treatment was necessary there was little evidence that people's capacity to consent had been assessed or that consent had been sought.

We found that medication was managed and administered as per instruction and medication was stored safely.

We saw that appropriate recruitment checks were completed. This included checks to ensure that staff were not barred from working with vulnerable people.

People we spoke with told us that they could complain and knew how to. Records we looked at showed that complaints were taken seriously and investigated.

17 May 2012

During a routine inspection

We carried out this review as part of our scheduled inspection programme and to see what improvements had been made within the home to make it a safer place for people to live.

We did this by observing practice as the majority of people living at the home had dementia care needs. Some people with dementia are not always able to tell us about their experiences. We used a formal way to observe people during this visit to help us understand their experience of care. We call this a Short Observational Framework for Inspection (SOFI). We undertook two observation sessions each of 30 minutes in a communal area on both the ground and first floor and observed seven people. We recorded their experiences at regular intervals. This included their state of well being, how they interacted with staff members, other people who lived at the home and their environment.

Where we were able to we spoke with people who used the service, with relatives, staff, the acting manager and the provider's representative.

Before our visit we contacted other people who may have had an interest in the service such as fire safety officers, environmental health, and local involvement networks (LINks). LINks are groups of individual members of the public and local voluntary and community groups who work together to improve health and social care services. To do this they gather the views of local people. The local authority has been looking into a number of safeguarding concerns, under large scale investigation arrangements (LSI). These arrangements are put in place, when a service has a number of safeguarding concerns identified for investigation where people may be at risk of harm

An expert by experience took part in this inspection and talked to people using the service and staff. An expert by experience is someone who uses services, or has had experience of services. They are people of all ages, with different experiences and from diverse cultural backgrounds. They help us improve the way we inspect and write our reports. Our expert by experience took some notes and wrote a report about what they found, we have included their observation in the main body of this report.

We observed staff interaction with people and saw that staff were polite and respectful. Staff offered people discreet and sensitive support. Staff were seen to respect people's dignity and appeared knowledgeable about people's needs. People were offered choices and were consulted where possible.

Not all plans identified people's preferences likes and dislikes. There was however evidence that individual risks had been assessed and actions had been identified to reduce these risks to keep people safe. The acting manager confirmed that the introduction of new care plans was taking place, and they were more centred on individual needs.

People we spoke with said, "I have been taken well care of, staff always ask me if I'm okay and if I need anything." "I won't say anything bad about here. I want to go home 'isn't the same here. I am happy here."

30 December 2011

During an inspection looking at part of the service

We visited this service to establish if improvements had been made following our last visit in August 2011, and in response to an on going multi agency safe guarding investigation which was being coordinated by the local authority. There were concerns around specific aspects of care provided to people which included staffing levels, care planning and medication management. The purpose of this review was to check compliance in key outcome areas.

Due to the needs of some of the people living at the home not everyone was able to share their experiences of what it was like to live at Abbeywell Court Nursing Home. We observed how staff and people using the service interacted, and we talked to people about the things they did, what they liked and didn't like about the service.

For part of our visit we were accompanied by an expert by experience. An expert by experience is some one who uses services, or has had experience of services. They are people of all ages, with different experiences and from diverse cultural backgrounds. They help us improve the way we inspect and write our reports. Our expert by experience talked to some people, spoke to relatives and spoke to some staff. They looked at what happened around the home and saw how everyone was getting on together and what the home felt like. They took some notes and wrote a report about what they found

The expert by experience reported "Clearly efforts have been made to improve the physical environment and also the quality of care experienced by people in this home. The management were taking steps to improve staff training and steer the home towards a more person-centred approach. However, people appear still to have little opportunity for choice and minimal involvement in their daily regime."

A relative reported that "The care in the home was 'a million-times better' than when their relative was in hospital. They said staff explained what they were doing before they did things, and did not just carry out the task without communicating their intent."

Each person had a plan of care but these varied in content and did not always show if people had been involved in their development. Records were in place to show that people's needs and any risks were being assessed or monitored. Records showed that people's health and personal care needs were met. They saw the doctor when they were ill.

We looked at staffing levels and spoke to the management team about them. We were aware that a number of staff had left the service in a short space of time and despite actively trying to recruit, the service had not recruited sufficient staff to provide optimum staffing levels at the time of our visit

10 September 2012

During an inspection looking at part of the service

We carried out this review to see what improvements had been made within the home to make it a safer place for people to live. We did this by observing practice as the majority of people living at the home were unable to share their views with us. We also spoke with staff and the acting manager, the provider and the home's management consultant

We observed staff interaction with people and saw that staff were polite and respectful. Staff offered people discreet and sensitive support. Staff were seen to respect people's dignity and appeared knowledgeable about people's needs. People were offered choices and were consulted where possible.

We found it difficult to access current information within people's care plans because they lacked structure and also contained some out of date information. Not all plans identified people's preferences likes and dislikes. There was however evidence that individual risks had been assessed and actions had been identified to reduce these risks to keep people safe.

In relation to activities, we found that people living on the first floor seemed to have better opportunities than people living on the ground floor. This lack of stimulation may affect people's quality of life.

We found that numerous improvements had been made within the home including a new management structure that has initiated some quality audits within the home to help them monitor the quality of the service provided. Overall record keeping has improved enabling the home to demonstrate how it is meeting essential standards of quality and safety.

The biggest improvement we noted was in relation to staff training. Training had been arranged and largely attended by all staff in relation to managing behaviours and understanding people's needs, wishes and rights. Staff commented that this training had improved practice within the home and thus people living at Abbeywell Court are receiving a safer service.

22 February and 21 March 2011

During a routine inspection

People we spoke to did not provide information on their experience whilst living in the home.

We closely observed a group of five people living on the first floor of the home for a two hour period and recorded how they seemed and what they did, who they talked to or engaged with and how staff interacted with them. We then reviewed the information we had collected and made a judgement about how the service meets their needs.

We found that people using the service were involved in meaningful activity 29% of the time we carried out our observation but some of this was actually eating their lunch. We saw that 9% of the time people had positive responses but spent 73% of their time passively observing their environment. We saw that 52% of time people had some engagement with staff, 2% with visitors and 5% with each other. We found that the majority of staff interactions were positive.

We found that people's dignity was not always promoted and maintained. In the handover that takes place when new staff arrive in the building, staff referred to one person as having a 'tantrum' and another person was described as seeking attention or putting it on for attention.

We saw that some undergarments used as hip protectors were not labelled and were used on a communal basis. This is not acceptable.

We observed staff dealing positively and successfully with one person who became agitated, verbally aggressive and threatening. Staff action diffused the situation.

The activity co-ordinator on the first floor worked alongside some of the people engaging in group activities during the morning.

We saw that people's health needs were not always addressed immediately. We heard in staff handover that a person had reported they had a 'bad chest' and appeared to be 'chesty' during the previous shift. The person had not been seen by a doctor.