• Care Home
  • Care home

Archived: Lake View Nursing Home

Overall: Inadequate read more about inspection ratings

Chorley Road, Withnell, Chorley, Lancashire, PR6 8BG (01254) 831005

Provided and run by:
Sanctuary Care (UK) Limited

Important: We are carrying out a review of quality at Lake View Nursing Home. We will publish a report when our review is complete. Find out more about our inspection reports.

All Inspections

9th and 14th January 2015

During a routine inspection

We carried out an unannounced focused inspection on 9 and 14 January 2015. We did this in response to concerns received by the Commission in relation to care, moving and handling, records and nutrition. We carried out a focused inspection to look at whether the service was safe, effective, caring and responsive.

The service did not have a registered manager in post. The previous registered manager left their post in March 2014. The provider had recruited a new manager who told us they were commencing the process of registering with the Commission. 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 and associated Regulations about how the service is run.

Lake View Nursing Home is registered to provide care for up to 51 people. At the time of our inspection there were 31 people living in the home. The home was providing nursing and personal care for people, including those living with a dementia.

Prior to this inspection we had previously visited the home on 12 and 13 March 2014 and identified several breaches of regulations. We asked the provider to send us an action plan to tell us how and when they would ensure they met their regulatory requirements. We issued the provider with a warning notice for regulations 10 and 15 and told the provider by what date they needed to meet their regulatory requirements.

We also revisited the home on 6th June 2014 to check whether the provider had met the requirements of the warning notice. However we identified ongoing concerns with regulations 10 and 15 and identified further concerns in relation to regulation 18.

We also revisited home the home on 2 October 2014 to check the provider had met the regulatory requirements. However we identified ongoing concerns and breaches in relation to the regulations.

During this inspection we again found multiple breaches of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2010.

During our inspection staff told us the staffing numbers to cover night duty had changed the week of our inspection. The provider had sent us documentation prior to our inspection detailing the staffing numbers in place however we noted this had changed.

We looked at staff files for currently employed staff members and noted discrepancies that related to their application form and employees references.

We identified some concerns during our inspection that related to five staff members and discussed these with the management. The provider took immediate action in response to our concerns.

We asked staff about people’s choice in relation to waking time in the home. Staff told us people had a choice of when they wished to get up. However we noted one person whose care file noted the time they liked to get up was still in bed over one and half hours later than this. During a tour of one of the units in the home. We noted 11 people were still in their bedrooms at 11:55am.

There was evidence of Deprivation of Liberty Safeguard documentation in some people’s care files. We noted one of these documented that the person required constant supervision, however we noted in this person was left unsupervised during our inspection.

We looked at fluid monitoring for people who used the service. We noted some evidence of monitoring taking place however there were gaps in actions noted by staff. We observed the care of one person and saw a lack of fluid offered to this person.

During our inspection we observed the care of people who used the service. We saw the staff interactions with one person who used the service. There was evidence of some positive interactions when staff engaged in meaningful conversation. However we observed some episodes where staff offered little meaningful interaction and engaged in personal conversation between themselves. Some staff offered little reassurance when undertaking personal care and failed to respond when the person who used the service appeared upset or distressed.

We observed the lunchtime period in one of the units. Staff were seen to offer support to people engaging in meaningful conversation. People were offered meal choices and we observed snacks were offered to people who used the service in between meal times.

During this inspection we saw evidence the care plans followed a more consistent format making them easier to navigate. Reviews were seen in the care files that related to care plans and risk assessments for people, however some of these lacked consistency.

Two care files we looked at had details that related to bowels checks. There was evidence of some recording taking place, however we identified inconsistencies in the recording and a lack of actions noted where concerns had been identified.

We observed the care for another person who used the service where we saw they had not been moved on several occasions for several hours over a period of days. We checked this person’s record and saw staff had completed positional change records for these days over the time period where omissions of care relating to positional changes had occurred.

2nd October 2014

During a routine inspection

We carried out an unannounced inspection on the 2nd October 2014. We did this to check whether the provider had met the requirement of the breaches in relation to regulations 9, 10, 13, 15, 18, 22 and 20. We found evidence of ongoing concerns and furthers breaches in regulations.

The service did not have a registered manager in post on the day of our inspection. The previous manager left their post in March 2014 and there had been several changes of the management team in the home since March. There was an interim manager in day to day charge of the home who had been in post for 12 weeks. 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 and associated Regulations about how the service is run.

Lake View Nursing Home is registered to provide care for up to 51 people. At the time of our inspection there were 31 people living in the home. The home was providing nursing and personal care for people, including those living with a dementia.

Prior to this inspection we had previously visited the home on 12th and 13th March 2014 and identified breaches of regulations 9, 10, 13, 15, 22 and 20. We asked the provider to send us an action plan in relation to regulations 9, 13, 22 and 20 to tell us how and when they would ensure they met their regulatory requirements.  We issued the provider with a warning notice for regulations 10 and 15 and told the provider by what date they needed to meet their regulatory requirements.

We revisited the home on 6th June 2014 to check whether the provider had met the requirements of the warning notice. However we identified ongoing concerns with regulations 10 and 15 and identified further concerns in relation to regulation 18.

During this inspection we found multiple breaches of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2010.

During our inspection we found there were some improvements in relation to regulation 9; for example we spoke with people who used the service and their family about the care they received in the home. We received some positive feedback about the care provided by staff employed by the provider. However people were not as confident about the use of agency staff providing care for them.

There was a lack of provision for people in relation to their personal care needs in the home. For example there was no provision for people to have access to a bath on one of the floors due to the ongoing refurbishment work and one person told us they had not had a bath for some time.

We saw copies of notifications that had been sent to CQC in relation to allegations of abuse but could see no evidence of the investigation that had taken place. We were made aware of a concern raised by a relative of one person in the home. We discussed these concerns with the regional manager during a feedback session who told us they had not been made aware of these concerns and confirmed they would investigate them.

During our inspection we found some improvements had been made in relation to the administration of medicines. We found medicine administration records (MAR) documented when a medicine was given and we saw completed records detailed the reason why a medication had not been given. Medicines were stored in a lockable trolley. However we saw the medication trolley had been left unattended on two occasions during our inspection and we noted one occasion a medication liquid was left on top of the trolley and we saw evidence that the recording of the fridge temperature identified abnormal readings that had not been reported to the interim manager.  This meant the provider did not protect people who used the service against the risk associated with the unsafe use and management of medicines. You can see what action we told the provider to take at the back of the full version of the report.

During our inspection on we looked at how people who used the service were supported with their nutritional needs in the home. Staff were seen engaging well with people who used the service; we noted positive eye contact and communication as well as staff assisting people with their dietary needs. Staff were observed offering a choice of meals including alternatives to the menu. However we noted some concerns; these included a lack of consistency when staff completed nutritional monitoring records We also observed inaccurate recording of the intake of food and fluids for one person who used the service.  We spoke with the interim manager about this who commenced an investigation. People told us the meals were poor when the chef was not in.

During our inspection we found there were some improvements to the premises including the refurbishment and redecoration of some areas of the home. However we observed there were significant health and safety risks which had not been appropriately managed during this process of refurbishment. We noted there was also a lack of pictorial signage to aid people with orientation in the home.

During our inspection we could not see evidence that people living in the home or their family had been consistently involved in decisions relating to their care. However a relative of one person we spoke with confirmed they had discussed the care of their relative with the staff. There was a breach of regulation 17of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2010. This was because the provider did not have suitable arrangements to ensure people who used the service were enabled to make, or participate in in making decisions relating to their care or treatment.

We looked at how the provider dealt with notifications to the Care Quality Commission (CQC). We noted there was some evidence of notification being sent to us in relation to serious injuries, allegations of abuse and deaths, as required by law.  However we found the manager had failed to notify CQC of to two authorisations under the Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards and three falls which resulted in people being admitted to hospital.

We looked at how the provider dealt with complaints. We saw there was a complaints file in place. There was evidence of the complaints received by the provider and actions that had been taken to resolve these.  We discussed a complaint that we had been made aware of with the manager and regional manager. They told us they had been made aware of the complaint and taken actions relating to this but the details had not been recorded. We were told complaints were discussed at staff meetings; however we noted in records relating to a recent staff meeting that the topic of complaints was not documented. Staff had access to a copy of the complaints policy for them to follow and staff we spoke with told us were they were aware of the policy; however we noted the date for review of this policy was four months prior to our visit.   

We looked at how the provider monitored the quality of service provision and saw some evidence of checks and audits taking place, however there were some concerns that these audits were not always being fully completed and one audit had last been completed in 2013.

During our inspection we looked at the care files for six people who used the service; these were kept securely in the home.  We saw each person had an individual care file in place; however they lacked accuracy, consistency in their chronology, were brief and difficult to navigate. We saw reviews of care plans were taking place however we noted there were inconsistencies in the documentation relating to their completion. For example we saw a monthly support plan evaluation form that had been commenced recently but it not been completed in full.

During our inspection we looked at staffing numbers in the home. We were told recruitment was ongoing in the home and staff we spoke with confirmed appropriate recruitment systems when they joined the service.

We found ongoing concerns regarding the number of staff available to meet people’s needs, for example we saw evidence of cover for catering duties noted on some days; however on other days we noted gaps in the duty rota where no staff member had been allocated to cover catering duties. People who used the service were at risk of inadequate provision to provide their meals because there was no evidence of allocated staff to cover catering duties.  

There was very little evidence of meaningful activities taking place in the home and records relating to activities had not been completed for some time. Staff told us they didn’t have time for activities. Relative and people who used the service we spoke with told us activities were lacking in the home and there was also a lack of staff.

A dependency assessment tool was used to identify approximate numbers of staff were in place to care for people’s individual needs; however we noted this did not take account of people who were receiving one to one supervision and the tool had not been completed for three weeks. Staffing rotas were difficult to follow and it was difficult to identify staffing cover. Details relating to the training and details for agency staff was in place however, we could find evidence of checks on some of the staff who were identified on the staffing rota.

6 June 2014

During an inspection looking at part of the service

We previously visited the home on 12 and 13 March 2014 and found two regulations were not met. These related to the environment and assessing and monitoring the quality of the service. We took action in relation to this and issued two warning notices to the provider. We revisited the home on 6 June 2014 to check the provider had complied with the warning notices.

We considered all the evidence we had gathered under the outcomes we inspected. We used the information to answer the five questions we always ask:

' Is the service safe?

' Is the service effective?

' Is the service caring?

' Is the service responsive?

' Is the service well led?

This a summary of what we found:

Is the service safe?

We were informed of an accident which resulted in a hospital admission. We could not find any evidence the provider had sent a notification to CQC. It is a legal requirement to submit notifications to the commission so we can monitor the operation of the service.

We spoke with the deputy about how they ensured people living in the home received their medications safely, effectively and in a timely manner. The deputy told us this would be picked up on a medication audit form that had been introduced. We looked at this document and could not see details of recording in relation to timings of medication rounds. This is important to ensure medication is spaced evenly in line with the prescriber's instructions.

Is the service effective?

We undertook observations on the first floor of the home. We observed staff caring for people's needs however we noted people who used the service who were in their bedrooms were left for long periods of time in between checks by staff.

We were told by the deputy manager the upstairs lounge was supervised by a staff member at all times when people living in the home were using the room. However we observed the upstairs lounge was left unattended on three occasions during our inspection. This meant people who used the service were not protected from the risks associated with the lack of supervision of the upstairs lounge by staff.

Is the service caring?

We spoke with families of people living in the home, the feedback we received was mixed. We were told 'The management respond well to any concerns if there is a problem they will sort it.. The staff are very very caring. I have no concerns what so ever' and 'I think (named staff member) is absolutely lovely it would be sad if we lost her. I think all the staff are lovely'. We were also told 'I don't feel there is enough staff about sometimes' and 'They (the home) use a lot of agency staff. I have seen times when all the staff are agency staff,

We spoke with two people living in the home. They told us they were satisfied with the care provided. One person told us it was, 'spot on' and that one care staff in particular was 'excellent'.

Most of the bedrooms on the first floor had a nurse call bell panel but none of the rooms we inspected had a call bell extension lead. This meant people who were in bed may not be able to easily access their call bell.

Is the service responsive?

We saw a weekly, monthly and quarterly checking system was in place for maintenance, fire and water, however according to records seen, these checks were not routinely signed each month by the service manager and action taken as a result of the audits was unclear. This meant that the provider could not be assured that the facilities were safe or adequately maintained. .

We asked the regional manager if the home had a risk register to monitor and review risks in the home. The regional manager could not confirm if the home had details of a risk register. We were therefore not confident systems were in place to assess and monitor risk in the home.

The homes own maintenance records showed there was no hot water to the showers in six en-suite rooms since at least the beginning of 2014 when the current 'water quality records book reviews' were put in place. Staff spoken with were aware of the problem but could not give an indication of when this problem would be resolved. This meant people were unable to use their facilities.

Is the service well led?

On the day of our inspection we were informed the interim manager had left and the deputy manager was responsible for the running of the home. This meant there had been three changes in the manager in the last six months. One relative told us 'It is unsettling manager after manager. There have been a lot of managers in the last six months. The home has not been managed well there is no leadership'.

We undertook a visual inspection of the home and noted basic repairs had not been undertaken. For example most of the communal bathrooms we looked at had one or two tiles missing under the sinks, cobwebs were visible in many areas of the home. We saw that a nightdress had been thrown out of an upstairs window and was on the path area to the rear of the home, another nightdress was on a sloped roof space. This meant some areas of the premises looked unkempt

12, 13 March 2014

During an inspection in response to concerns

We found that people's needs were assessed and care plans were in place. The comments we received about people's experience of living at Lake View were mixed. One person who lived at the home told us, "I'm happy with the basic care provided, staff are around if I need anything and the food is good". However another person living at Lake View told us, "I don't like going to the dining room for my food because the staff are too busy to bring me back afterwards".

We found that suitable and safe medicines storage arrangements were in place. We found that some medicines records were not completed properly.

We saw that some areas of the home were untidy and unclean. Some areas were in need of repair and upgrade.

Most people who used the service, staff and relatives told us they was not enough staff to meet the needs of people living at the home properly. We saw that some people who lived on the Ashlea unit (for people living with varying degrees of dementia) were left unattended for short periods of time.

We saw that some audits were taking place but it was evident from the issues we found at the home that effective systems were not in place to ensure that people living at the home were receiving appropriate care, and were kept in a safe environment at all times.

People were not protected from the risks of unsafe or inappropriate care and treatment because accurate and appropriate records were not maintained.

24 June 2013

During a routine inspection

At the time of our inspection there were 45 people living at Lake View Nursing Home. We spoke to a number of people who used the service and relatives who visited on the day. People who lived at the home were positive about their experiences and the comments received reflected this. One person living at the home stated, "I can honestly say they have looked after me. You've seen for yourself that my breakfast has been made and brought to me and all my tablets are laid out for me to take. I can't say a wrong thing about anyone". Another resident said, "I can make decisions for myself, I choose what I want to wear and what I want to do".

People's needs were assessed and care and support was planned and delivered in line with their individual care needs. From speaking to staff it was clear that they were able to act appropriately in the event of an emergency such as a fire or a medical issue.

Regular medicines audits were being completed and plans were in place to complete staff competency assessments. However people were not protected against the risks associated with medicines because the home's policy for medicines handling was not consistently adhered to.

The provider had an effective system in place to identify, assess and manage risks to the health and safety of people using the service and others.

11 January 2013

During a routine inspection

At the time of our Inspection there were forty one people living at Lake View Nursing Home. We spoke to a number of residents and relatives who visited on the day as well as members of staff. People who lived at the home were positive about their experiences and the comments received reflected this, one person stated, "I came here because I was lonely but now I am very happy, I knew after half an hour that I was in the right place". Another resident said, ""The staff are lovely and look after me, I never feel like I am being rushed or don't know what is happening".

Care plans showed that people's care was delivered in a person centred way and that their likes and dislikes were noted and recognised by staff. From speaking to staff, looking at their personnel files and staff training files it was apparent that staff felt supported and had the opportunity to develop. At all times during our visit, across both units, staff were seen to be treating people with dignity and in a person centred way that ensured users of the service were happy with the care and support received.

31 January 2012

During a routine inspection

People who we spoke with told us they were happy with the service and with the care and support they received. Comments included, "I was lonely before I came here, I have met some nice people", "I'm very happy it is a lovely place", "I can see the doctor when I am not feeling very well" and "There are plenty of things going on to keep us occupied".

People told us they were able to make choices and decisions about how they spent their day. Comments included, "You can please yourself" and "I can do what I want, within reason, it's my choice".

People said they were often asked if they were comfortable and happy and would be able to raise any concerns with staff or management. Comments included, "I feel safe here", "I would tell the manager if anything was wrong, he would sort it out" and "Staff are very caring; they look after everyone properly".

People told us, "There are enough staff, I only have to press the button and they are here day or night" and "The staff are nice and friendly". A visitor said, "The staff are very good with the residents".

We found there were effective systems for assessing and monitoring the quality of all aspects of the service which would help to protect people against the risks of inappropriate or unsafe care.