• Services in your home
  • Homecare service

Archived: Camphill St Albans

Overall: Good read more about inspection ratings

76 Sandridge Road, St Albans, Hertfordshire, AL1 4AR (01727) 811228

Provided and run by:
Camphill Village Trust Limited(The)

Important: This service is now registered at a different address - see new profile

All Inspections

21 January 2016

During a routine inspection

The inspection took place on 21 January and 29 February 2016. The visit was carried out by one Inspector and was announced which meant that the registered manager was given a short period of notice due to the nature of the service. The purpose of this was to help facilitate the inspection and make sure that some people who used the service and staff members were available to talk with us.

At our last inspection on 23 July 2013, the service was found to be meeting the required standards in the areas we looked at. Camphill St. Albans is a domiciliary care service that provides personal care and supported living for people in their own homes. Care is provided to people with learning disabilities, mental health conditions and other complex needs who live in privately rented houses and flats; the majority of which are situated within a mile radius of the registered office and St. Albans town centre. At the time of our inspection 31 people, who lived in 14 different properties, received care personal care and support.

The service is part of the Camphill Village Trust (CVT) which previously used a ‘life sharing’ model of support. This meant that in many cases staff members, known as ‘co-workers’, lived with the people they supported and their family members to provide care on behalf of the Camphill St. Albans CVT. However, people now receive care based on a ‘supported living’ model to help them live as independently as possible. This means that staff employed by the service visit people in their own homes, and elsewhere in the local community, to provide them with the support they need to help meet their individual health and social care requirements.

People are encouraged to view themselves and others who used the service as being part of a ‘community’ network, one that not only provides them with care and support, but also access to a range of local facilities relevant to their needs which include an art studio, allotments and café. However, people are free to decide the extent to which they use these facilities or join in with the wide range of other activities and social opportunities provided by the service.

There was a manager in post for the service who had registered with the Care Quality Commission (CQC). A registered manager is a person who has registered with the CQC 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. The registered manager was supported by two assistant managers and a team leader in the day-to-day operation of the service. They were also supported by a senior representative of the provider, known as the ‘general manager’, based at offices in close proximity to the service.

During our inspection some relatives of people who use the service expressed significant levels of concern, disappointment and frustration about the way in which care and support was currently provided. In their view the service had, over a period of time, moved away from its original ethos and founding principles.

Some relatives felt that these change had a detrimental effect on the levels of care and support their family members received. A number of these concerns had already been raised with and addressed by the relevant local authority. People’s relatives and other interested parties have had a number of opportunities, over a long period of time and in different forums to discuss the changes made to the service, how it has evolved and how it currently operates.

The relatives of other people who use the service, together with social care professionals who provided us with feedback, were very positive about the service, staff who provided support and the overall quality of care people received.

Although people were supported to take their medicines safely by trained staff, medicines were not always managed in a safe and proper way. This was because the processes, systems and checks used to manage medicines were not as safe or effective as they could have been in all cases.

People told us that staff helped them stay safe, both in their homes and when out and about in the local community. Staff received training about how to safeguard people from abuse and were knowledgeable about the potential risks and how to report concerns. Robust recruitment practices were followed and there were sufficient numbers of suitable staff available to meet people’s care and support needs at all times.

Plans and guidance were in place to help staff deal with unforeseen events and emergencies in a safe and effective way. Potential risks to people’s health and well-being were identified, reviewed and managed effectively.

People who received support, most relatives and social care professionals were positive about the skills, experience and abilities of staff employed at the service. Staff received training and refresher updates relevant to their roles. They had regular meetings with managers to discuss and review their personal development and performance.

People were encouraged and helped to maintain good health and were supported to access health and social care professionals when necessary. They were also encouraged and supported to eat a healthy balanced diet that met their individual needs.

Staff obtained people’s agreement and consent to the care and support they provided. They supported people in a kind and caring way that promoted their dignity. Staff had developed positive relationships with the people they supported and were clearly very knowledgeable about their needs and personal circumstances.

People who received support, and some of their relatives where appropriate, were involved in the planning and reviews of the care provided. The confidentiality of information held about people’s medical and personal histories was securely maintained at the service.

People received personalised care and support that met their needs and took account of their preferences. Staff were knowledgeable about people’s background histories, preferences and routines. People were supported to pursue social interests and take part in meaningful activities relevant to their needs, both at home and in the local community.

People who received a service and some of their relatives told us that the registered and general manager and staff listened to them and responded positively to any concerns they had. People were encouraged to raise any concerns they had and knew how to make a complaint if the need arose.

24 July 2013

During a routine inspection

In our last inspection of October 2012, we had found that the service was not compliant with all the standards. The provider had not taken adequate steps to ensure that people were protected against the risk of receiving inappropriate or unsafe care and treatment due to lack of information for care staff in people's own homes, and quality monitoring procedure were inadequate.

We found that people who used the service were supported to live independently in a small number of properties located within a mile of the office base. Some of the people lived in group homes and others lived in flats or houses suited to their individual needs. We found that peoples' choices, preferences and wellbeing were at the forefront of everything that was in place at Camphill. For example, many of the people who used the service had indicated that they would like to 'work', and we were told about the various 'jobs' that people had been assigned to do. There were activities and social events every day which people could participate in, if they wished. People we spoke with were very positive about the 'community' and the support they received from the staff at Camphill.

13 September 2012

During a routine inspection

People we spoke with told us that they had been treated with respect, and had received the care and support they needed. Comments made by people included, 'I think it's a wonderful place, and I am very lucky to be here.' and, 'They (the staff) are very caring, and understand how they can support me.'

People told us that staff were understanding, supportive, caring and attentive, and always had time to listen to them. People said they felt very involved in planning their care and support. People confirmed that staff assisted them to attend health appointments, such as doctor's appointments.

People and relatives we spoke with said they were generally visited by the same support workers. People confirmed that when the support worker had been unable to come, due to exceptional circumstances, the agency had phoned them to let them know. Whenever possible, another member of staff had been assigned to support them for the time being. One person we spoke with said, 'Staff help me with my life skills; they even helped me to get a passport.'