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Archived: Allied Healthcare London

Overall: Requires improvement read more about inspection ratings

66 Prescot Street, London, E1 8HG 07587 630001

Provided and run by:
Allied Healthcare Group Limited

All Inspections

19, 20 and 21 August 2015

During a routine inspection

The inspection took place in two parts; a three day site visit to the provider’s office base on 19, 20 and 21 August 2015, and telephone calls to people who used the service, relatives, care workers and nurses over the following two weeks. The office site visit was unannounced on the first day.

Previously, when we inspected the service in October 2014, we had lots of concerns about how the service was run and we found five breaches of the regulations covering care and welfare, assessing and monitoring the quality of service provision, staffing, management of medicines and consent to care and treatment. We issued warning notices for three of these breaches of regulation.

When we returned in February 2015 we carried out a focused inspection to see if the service had complied with the warning notices. We found the service was no longer in breach of the regulations in respect of care and welfare, assessing and monitoring the quality of service provision and staffing and had made significant changes to the way it organised the delivery of care to improve safety and reliability. At that time it was too soon to assess the impact of those changes for care staff and people who used the service.

During this August 2015 inspection we carried out a comprehensive check on all parts of the service to ensure it was meeting all the current regulations. On this occasion we found the service was no longer in breach of the regulations relating to medicines and consent to care and treatment and no further breaches were found. In contrast to previous inspections people who used the service and staff were much more content with the service. The changes had impacted upon most of them in a positive way.

There are several parts to the service; altogether approximately 900 people are supported by 350 Allied Healthcare London staff. Six teams provide domiciliary care to people in one south London borough. Each team is headed by a care delivery manager (team leader), supported by a care quality supervisor (responsible for assessment, care planning and review), a scheduler (responsible for organising care workers to visit people at agreed times) and an administrative assistant.

The seventh team supports four extra care housing schemes in two south London boroughs, as well as the night owl service for one borough. This team is led by a service delivery manager with scheme managers based on site in each of the blocks of flats. They manage the care workers who are also based there. One of them takes the lead for the night owl service which operates out of the largest of the housing schemes. A care quality supervisor is also assigned to the extra care housing team.

The night owl service provides night time cover for 53 people in one London borough. It supports people who need care during the night, and includes those with continence issues, skin care and repositioning needs, as well as people who are living with dementia and are very active during the night. Two teams of two care workers are provided with a car to travel to visits.

The eighth team, known as the specialist team, supports some people with complex needs on account of their mental health or brain injury, some people requiring 24 hour care and people who use personal budgets to pay for their care. In addition their care staff work with children and young people who require care in their family homes. The office based staff for this team comprise a care delivery manager, a scheduler and a care quality supervisor.

There is a registered manager for these personal care services, but a different person is the registered manager for nursing care. Nightingale Nursing Bureau is also based in this location. Much of their work is related to supplying the NHS with agency nurses and falls outside the scope of registration. This area of their work was, therefore, not inspected. However, they also directly support up to six children and adults with nursing needs to remain at home. This area of their work was inspected.

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.

In addition all parts of the service can request advice and support in relation to people with complex healthcare needs from a regional team of nurses, one of whom acts as the link nurse for this location.

The service had made improvements to the way visits to people who used the service were organised. Every person we spoke with had positive views about their regular care staff or nurses and praised them for their commitment and hard work. In most instances people could rely on visits from well-trained staff who knew them well. However, we found cover arrangements for regular care workers were still not as good as they should have been, particularly at weekends, nor were arrangements for visits requiring two members of staff. We saw the provider was working on a number of solutions to this problem, such as targeted recruitment, but they had not completely resolved the issues at the time of inspection.

The provider had instigated weekend working for the office staff in most teams, including managers. This ensured there were always staff on hand to deal with sudden care worker absence or emergencies involving people who used the service. Other teams had their own on-call arrangements.

Strengths of the service also included staff training, which was often followed up by competency checks; robust recruitment processes and service monitoring and evaluation. Care staff were now deployed for no more than 60 hours per week.

The service benefited from good management and leadership in many ways as managers knew their teams and the people they supported well and there was evidence of collaborative working to solve scheduling and other problems. Systems were in place to monitor and evaluate service provision. However, some staff, people who used the service and their relatives complained to us about inconsistent responses from staff based in the office.

17 and 19 February 2015

During an inspection looking at part of the service

We carried out an announced comprehensive inspection of this service on 28 and 30 October 2014. Breaches of legal requirements were found. After the comprehensive inspection, the provider wrote to us to say what they would do to meet legal requirements in relation to people’s care and welfare, assessing and monitoring the quality of service provision, staffing, medicines administration and ensuring consent for care was obtained from people who use the service in line with the principles of the Mental Capacity Act 2005.

We undertook a focused inspection to check that the provider had followed their plan to remedy the more serious breaches that related to care and welfare, assessing and monitoring the quality of service provision and staffing and to confirm that they now met legal requirements. This report only covers our findings in relation to those requirements. You can read the report from our last comprehensive inspection, by selecting the 'all reports' link for Allied Healthcare London on our website at www.cqc.org.uk

Allied Healthcare London was established in April 2014 following the merger of three Allied Healthcare services. It provides domiciliary care services to approximately 900 people, of whom approximately 600 receive their service under the contract we had concerns about. The majority of those who receive the service are older people, some of whom are living with dementia or mental ill-health. The service provides care workers to visit people in their own homes at agreed times in order to carry out personal care and other tasks.

The focused inspection took place over two days. On 17 February 2015 our arrival was unannounced. On the second day of the inspection, 19 February 2015, the provider was expecting us. There was no registered manager in place, but an application was in progress. 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.

We found that the provider had completely reorganised the team structure within their office base and the systems used to run the service. The changes they had made had the potential to impact in a very positive way on service delivery, but the benefits were only just starting to filter through to people who used the service and the care staff who supported them. However, the changes were sufficient for the service to meet the regulations, although improvements were still required.

Office based staff who organised the delivery of care had received intensive training and competency checks to ensure they knew how to operate the safer working systems that the provider was in the process of introducing. They spoke highly of the support they had received and told us that now systems were more streamlined, they had time to visit people who used the service to check that the service met their needs and to resolve any problems.

When we looked at the new processes that had been introduced or were going to be introduced within the next month we saw that, if applied properly, there was less margin for error. For example, care workers’ schedules would be more rational with sufficient travel time allotted, therefore their arrival time at people’s homes should be more reliable.

At the time of the inspection, people who used the service and their relatives had mixed views on the quality of the care provided, but it was clear that whilst most valued their regular care workers, the same standard was less often achieved by those who covered the regular care workers’ absence. Care workers also had mixed views on the support and information they received from the provider. Some described a strong relationship with office based colleagues; others felt they were kept in the dark. One area for improvement was telephone access, both people who used the service and care staff complained about how hard it could be to get through to the office.

The standard and timeliness of internal safeguarding investigations had improved. Reassessments of need had been carried out for all people who used the service with complex needs and new care plans had been set up to ensure those needs were met. Reassessments of people with less complex needs were now taking place.

28 and 30 October 2014

During a routine inspection

The inspection took place over three weeks. On October 28th and 30th we conducted a site visit to the office. This was followed up over the following three weeks by phone calls to care workers and people who used the service. We gave the service two working days’ notice of the inspection, therefore it was announced.

A brief follow up inspection had been made in September 2014, where we found the service was not meeting the regulation for assessing and monitoring the quality of service provision. It was too soon for the provider to be able to demonstrate major improvements to the service, but we saw a transformation plan “One Best Way” was in the early stages of implementation.

Allied Healthcare London was established in April 2014, from the merger of three Allied Healthcare services. Approximately 900 people use the service, supported by around 360 staff members. Care workers from the service make over 9,000 home visits each week. The majority of those who use the service are older people, some of whom are living with dementia, but there are also specialist teams within the branch, supporting re-ablement, which is assisting people with their recovery after a stay in hospital, and children and young people with complex needs. Staff from the service also support people living in four extra care housing schemes.

The registered manager had recently left, but a registered manager from another Allied Healthcare service had started to cover the post on the first day of our inspection and was in the process of applying for their registration to be completed. 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.

Although the provider was investing heavily in improvements, at the time of the inspection we found that the service was in breach of five regulations covering staffing, medicines management, care and welfare, consent to care and assessing and monitoring the quality of service provision.

Our concerns did not extend to the specialist contracts held by the provider. However, there were insufficient staff numbers in place to cover the non-specialist work without staff members working excessively long hours. This had an impact on their ability to deliver a high standard of care.

Some assessments and care plans were poorly completed and provided insufficient guidance to care workers about the needs of the people who used the service. Important information from referrers was not always taken into account. Quality monitoring systems had not picked up some issues or resulted in prompt action to address shortcomings until very recently. The service’s ability to monitor missed calls was improving, but more work was needed before we could be confident that the provider had effective systems in place to deal with this issue.

Despite the breaches in regulations, when we spoke with most people who used the service they were positive about the care they received, describing good relationships with their regular care workers. However, safeguarding minutes indicated that there were times when some staff members were uncaring. We observed that improvements to make the delivery of care more robust and, therefore, safer were just starting to have an impact. However, it was too early to judge if they would be sustained.

We found a number of breaches of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2010. You can see what action we told the provider to take at the back of the full version of this report. Where we have identified more serious breaches of regulation we will make sure action is taken. We will report on this when it is complete.

11 September 2014

During an inspection in response to concerns

We carried out this inspection following concerns that were raised about the number of missed calls to people receiving support from the service.

At the time of our inspection there were approximately 900 people using the service. We spoke with the registered manager, two regional managers, the safeguarding lead for the service and one other staff member. We also spoke with five people who use the service.

We found that there were enough staff to meet people's needs and recruitment plans were in place to increase the numbers of staff supporting people. Staff were matched to people that they had worked with before wherever possible so that they were familiar with people's needs.

We found that quality monitoring systems had been ineffective in preventing missed calls to people who use the service, this placed people at risk of harm. The provider was in the process of investigating and taking steps to address this issue.