• Services in your home
  • Homecare service

Archived: MiHomecare - Berkhamstead

271 High Street, Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, HP4 1AA 0333 121 4201

Provided and run by:
MiHomecare Limited

All Inspections

21 June 2013

During a routine inspection

The people who used the service told us that they were happy with the care provided. They said that the care staff offered them help and support and without them they would not be able to manage in their own homes. One person told us that the care staff 'bring in summer sunshine when they come into my home'. Others told us that the service had improved so much and that they were very happy with their present carers. We were told that the care staff delivered care in a 'lovely way always laughing and joking', "when the carers come I know I can relax as they will care for my husband as well as I could want". The care staff 'has an empathy with my mother', ' they have a lovely relationship based on respect'.

We visited people in their own homes, we spoke to people and their relatives on the phone, we accompanied staff on their rounds to see how they communicated with and cared for the people., We spoke with staff in the office and we contacted 10% of the people who used the service and asked them to fill in a questionnaire about the service.

We looked at and asked how people were respected, cared for, how their medicines were managed and how the service was run.

We found the agency complaint with all areas we inspected.

14 September 2012

During an inspection looking at part of the service

The people who use the service told us that their regular carers were wonderful and that they would do anything for them. Some told us that the carers were as important to them as their family members. However people were not happy with the communication with the office staff. They also told us that they had no confidence that any communication between them and the office would be passed on to the carers. Other people said that they had a problem with not being told if there was to be a delay in their carers attending them. They also said that they understood the delay but needed to be told about it.

We found that staff had been trained to meet the needs of people who use the service . The number of complaints had dropped significantly since the last inspection in February 2012.

Action plans had been drawn up to meet the shortfalls from the last inspection and with the exception of communication the outstanding actions had been met.

Care plans had been reviewed and were being produced in a typed format to enable the carers to read them more easily. The number of complaints had significantly reduced and those who had complained told us that they were happy with the response of the agency.

New systems had been put in place recently to reduce the number of carers attending one person and for the person to receive their care at a more regular time. The people had yet to feel the benefit of this.

16 February and 1 March 2012

During an inspection in response to concerns

All the people who we spoke with on 27 and 28 February 2012 were dissatisfied with the service that they received from the agency. They told us that the care workers were often late, and they were never confident that the care worker would arrive to provide the care that they needed. Everyone told us that their regular care workers were very good, using terms such as 'brilliant', 'can't fault them'. One person said, 'The carers are wonderful, it's the management who don't have a clue,' and this theme was expressed my most of the people who we spoke with.

Two of the 17 people who we spoke with, both of whom had only one visit a week for assistance with bathing, were happy with the care they received. But 15 people told us that the agency was not able to meet their assessed needs. Three people told us that the agency expected a relative to provide care when they were not able to provide a care worker. One relative told us that they visited their relative several times a day because the agency frequently failed to send the care workers that were required.

All the people who use the service and relatives who we spoke with on told us that they felt that the agency did not employ enough care workers to meet their needs. One person said, '.The staff come & go, we can never really get to know them well. They never have enough staff.' Everyone who we spoke with told us that there were frequent changes in the care workers allocated to them, and they never knew who was coming to provide their care.

15 of the 17 people who we spoke with said that they had raised concerns with the agency concerning missed calls and poor care, but they had either had no response, or no actions were taken to address their concerns.