• Care Home
  • Care home

Archived: Springfield House

Overall: Good read more about inspection ratings

6 Stoke Road, Cobham, Surrey, KT11 3AS (01932) 862580

Provided and run by:
Springfield House Nursing Home

Important: The provider of this service changed. See new profile
Important: The partners registered to provide this service have changed. See old profile

All Inspections

5 February 2016

During a routine inspection

Springfield House Nursing Home provides personal care and support for a maximum of 27 older people, some of whom may be living with dementia. On the day of our inspection 20 people were living in the home.

This was an unannounced inspection that took place on 5 February 2016. We carried out this inspection to follow up on our inspection on 2 June 2015 where we found the provider was in breach of some of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014. Following that inspection we received an action plan from the provider informing us of the actions they planned to take in response to our inspection.

The home had a registered manager. 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. The registered manager assisted us with our inspection on the day.

Staff followed correct and appropriate procedures in administering medicines and medicines were stored safely and appropriately.

Staff understood their responsibilities in relation to the Mental Capacity Act 2005 and Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards. Staff followed the correct procedures for people who did not have capacity to make decisions for themselves.

Care was provided to people by staff who were trained and received relevant support from their manager. This included regular supervisions and undertaking training specific to their role.

Care plans were individualised and contained information to guide staff on how someone wished to be cared for. Information included detail around people’s mobility, food and personal care needs. Where people had risks identified guidance was in place for staff to help reduce these risks.

Quality assurance checks carried out by staff to help ensure the environment was a safe place for people to live and they received a good quality of care. Staff were involved in the running of the home as regular staff meetings were held. People were asked for their views about all aspects of their care and could make their own decisions.

There was a good atmosphere in the home where people and staff interacted in an easy-going manner. People and relatives were happy with the care provided and they were made to feel welcome when they visited.

There were a sufficient number of staff to care for people. Staff supported people to take part in various activities and treated people with respect and dignity.

Safe recruitment practices were followed, which meant the provider endeavoured to employ staff who were suitable to work in the home. Staff were able to evidence to us they knew the procedures to follow should they have any concerns about abuse or someone being harmed.

People had care responsive to their needs. People were provided with a choice of meals each day and those who had dietary requirements received appropriate food to ensure they were not at risk of choking.

Staff maintained people’s health and ensured good access to healthcare professionals when needed. For example, the doctor, optician or district nurse.

Complaint procedures were available to people and there was a contingency plan in place should the home have to be evacuated.

There was an open positive culture within the home and it was evident the registered manager had good management oversight and was respected by staff.

We found the provider had taken all necessary action to ensure they were meeting the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014.

02 June 2015

During a routine inspection

Springfield House Nursing Home is a care home providing accommodation and nursing care for up to 27 older people, some of whom are living with dementia. There were 23 people living at the home at the time of our inspection. Accommodation is arranged over three storeys.

The inspection took place on 2 June 2015 and was unannounced.

The home had a registered manager in post. ‘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.’

People were not adequately protected from potential risk of harm because steps to mitigate identifiable risks were not always taken. For example access to staircases were not always restricted in accordance with risk assessments which placed people at risk of falling down them.

Not all staff understood their responsibilities in relation to the Mental Capacity Act and Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards (DoLS). People could not always be confident that decisions made on their behalf fully respected their legal rights. Where people may lack the capacity to make a decision for themselves, it was not always clear that decisions had been made in their best interests.

Care plans were person centred and regularly reviewed, but did not always contain sufficient information about how complex care, such as how pressure wounds were managed. There were no guidelines in records to assist staff in effectively supporting people who were living with dementia.

Whilst there were a variety of activities, these were not always meaningful to the people who lived at the home. The feedback we received from some people was that there was not enough to do and that they felt “Bored.” We observed long periods where people were left sitting without interaction or engagement.

People said they felt safe and that staff protected them from harm. The registered manager had systems in place to ensure that any safeguarding concerns were investigated thoroughly and reported to the appropriate external agencies where necessary.

Appropriate checks were carried out in the recruitment of new staff to help ensure only suitable staff worked in the home.

There were enough staff deployed in the home to meet the needs of the people who lived there. People received personal care when they needed it and their calls were answered in a timely way.

The home was clean and well maintained. A team of housekeeping staff were employed to clean the home and undertake the laundry.

People received their medicines in a safe way. There were good systems to ensure people received the medicines they needed at the right time.

There was a programme for training staff in core areas, but not all staff had specialist skills such as supporting people living with dementia or suffering from bereavement.

People received adequate food and drinks and were complimentary about the choice of meals that they were offered each day. We saw that mealtimes were a social occasion. For those people who required help to eat, this was done I an unhurried way.

Staff supported people to access health care professionals, such as doctors, dietician, dentist and optician and had choice over which professionals they saw.

People told us that staff were kind and caring. We saw that people’s privacy and dignity were upheld. Staff knocked on bedroom doors before entering and offered support with personal tasks in a discreet and sensitive way.

Complaints were treated seriously and managed well which encouraged people to voice their opinions.

The management team operated a good system of record keeping and undertook continuous quality checks.

Relatives were made to feel welcome when they visited and they and their relatives met together for meetings to discuss the running of the home. People and relatives were happy with the care provided.

During the inspection we found some breaches of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014. You can see what action we told the provider to take at the back of the full version of the report.

6 November 2013

During an inspection looking at part of the service

This was a follow up inspection that related to staff knowledge around the Mental Capacity Act (MCA) 2005, cleanliness and infection control and training and support for staff.

We found that staff had received updated training in the MCA and had an understanding of what this meant in relation to gaining consent.

We saw that there were hand washing signs in each bathroom around the service. Areas of the service had been cleaned since our last inspection and there was a system that recorded what areas had been cleaned and what had not.

The training schedule we saw showed that staff were mostly up to date with the mandatory training which included fire safety and infection control. We found that there was a schedule around staff appraisals and that this was on-going. We also found that most of the clinical staff had received one to one supervision with their manager and that other staff supervision had been booked.

1 August 2013

During a routine inspection

As part of this inspection we spoke with five people who used the service, six members of staff and the deputy manager. We also observed people being supported with care by staff.

All of the people we spoke with told us that staff gained consent from them before any care was given. One person told us 'They (staff) wouldn't do anything without checking with me first.' We saw documents that confirmed that the service gained consent from people. These related to people's care plan and 'End of Life' care plan. However we found that staff were not aware of guidance around people's capacity to make decisions.

We saw that people were supported with their nutrition and hydration needs. People told us that they liked the food at the service. One person told us 'The food is delicious.' Staff told us that they understood the need to record what people ate and drank throughout the day.

Although the service was mostly clean and tidy there were areas around the home where there were concerns around infection controls. The service did not have monitoring systems that identified what areas had been cleaned. The service did have an up to date infection control policy. One person told us 'Oh yes its clean here.'

All of the staff that we spoke with told us that they felt supported by their manager and by their colleagues. However we found that one to one supervisions were not up to date and there were no up to date appraisals for staff. We also found that staffs mandatory training was not up to date.

We saw that the service had an effective complaints system. People we spoke with told us that if they felt they needed to complain they would not have any problems doing so. Staff told us that they supported people if they wanted to make a complaint.

22 January 2013

During an inspection looking at part of the service

On this inspection we saw improvements had been made to the staff recruitment files. We found that regular audits had taken place to monitor the quality of the service.

We found on this inspection that all staff had received up to date safeguarding awareness training and criminal record checks had been undertaken for all staff.

15 August 2012

During a routine inspection

We were not able to speak to some of the people using the service because they had complex needs which meant they were not able to tell us their experiences. However, we used a range of other methods to gather information about this service.

We spoke to four people using the service. They told us that they thought Springfield House was a lovely place to live and would recommend it to anyone.

Once person told us that the staff are 'Very nice' and 'look after us very well. ' All of the people said that they enjoyed the trips out but wished they could go out more often.

18 November 2011

During a routine inspection

People who were able to speak with us said they were treated with kindness and respect by the staff and were involved in the way their care was organised. Carers of people using the service spoke of their high levels of satisfaction with the service and confirmed their involvement in deciding if the home could meet their relative's needs. A carer spoke about attending reviews of their relatives care plan, where they were asked if they were satisfied or if they felt any changes needed to happen. People using the service said they felt safe and secure in the home. Carers and staff said they had never seen any practices in the home that had concerned them and they were confident that the manager would investigate and act on any issues brought to her attention. There was some very positive praise received for the registered manager. A carer said, 'Springfield House is just simply the very best nursing home you could wish for. I am so grateful to have found it'