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Torbay Hospital

Overall: Requires improvement read more about inspection ratings

Hengrave House, Torbay Hospital, Lawes Bridge, Torquay, Devon, TQ2 7AA (01803) 614567

Provided and run by:
Torbay and South Devon NHS Foundation Trust

All Inspections

Other CQC inspections of services

Community & mental health inspection reports for Torbay Hospital can be found at Torbay and South Devon NHS Foundation Trust. Each report covers findings for one service across multiple locations

22 November 2023

During an inspection looking at part of the service

Pages 1 and 2 of this report relate to the hospital and the ratings of that location, from page 3 the ratings and information relate to maternity services based at Torbay Hospital.

We inspected the maternity service at Torbay Hospital as part of our national maternity inspection programme. The programme aims to give an up-to-date view of hospital maternity care across the country and help us understand what is working well to support learning and improvement at a local and national level.

Torbay Hospital provides maternity services to the population of Torquay and South Devon.

Maternity services include antenatal clinics and a day assessment unit, a consultant led delivery suite and a mixed antenatal and postnatal ward (John Macpherson ward).

We will publish a report of our overall findings when we have completed the national inspection programme.

We carried out a short notice announced focused inspection of the maternity service, looking only at the safe and well-led key questions.

Our rating of this hospital stayed the same. We rated it as Requires Improvement because:

  • Our rating of Requires Improvement for maternity services did not change ratings for the hospital overall. We rated safe as Requires Improvement and well-led as Requires Improvement.

How we carried out the inspection

We provided the service with 2 working days’ notice of our inspection.

We visited the day assessment, antenatal clinics, delivery suite, obstetric theatres, and the antenatal and postnatal ward.

We spoke with 9 midwives and 6 women and birthing people. We received 5 responses to our give feedback on care posters which were in place during the inspection.

We reviewed 3 patient care records, 3 Observation and escalation charts and 3 medicines records.

Following our onsite inspection, we spoke with senior leaders within the service; we also looked at a wide range of documents including standard operating procedures, guidelines, meeting minutes, risk assessments, recent reported incidents as well as audits and action plans. We then used this information to form our judgements.

You can find further information about how we carry out our inspections on our website: https://www.cqc.org.uk/what-we-do/how-we-do-our-job/what-we-do-inspection.

24 and 25 May, 21 and 22 June 2023

During a routine inspection

Torbay hospital is an acute general hospital delivering a wide range of emergency, specialist, and general medical services.

We inspected 4 core services to include diagnostic imaging, medical care, urgent and emergency care and outpatients.

Diagnostic Imaging

The diagnostic imaging department currently includes general X-rays, fluoroscopy and interventional radiology, computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), nuclear medicine, ultrasound imaging, mammography, and dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) scans. For the purposes of this report, the different types of examinations taken will be referred to as modalities.

In the 12 months up until the inspection, the service had performed a total of 179,542 examinations across all modalities. This included 31,585 CT scans, 13,674 MRI scans, 91,854 plain film x-rays and 22,716 non obstetric ultrasound scans.

The inspection team comprised of a CQC inspector and a specialist advisor with expertise in diagnostic imaging. We spoke with 20 members of staff and 6 patients and observed interactions with patients throughout the day.

Medical Care

At Torbay Hospital, medical services include (but are not limited to) general medicine, respiratory medicine, cardiology, renal services, gastroenterology, elderly care, dementia services, dermatology services, stroke services and specialist cancer services.

The trust provides inpatient facilities and outpatient clinics, with clinics at the main hospital sites and as part of wider services based in the community. During this inspection we only visited medical services at Torbay Hospital.

During inspection we visited the George Earl Ward, Simpson Ward, Cheetham Hill Ward, Turner Ward, Medical receiving Unit (MRU), Midgley Ward and New Forrest Ward. These wards were part of the medical care directorate.

The inspection team comprised of 3 CQC inspectors, 1 member of the CQC medicines team and 1 specialist nurse advisor.

We spoke with members of staff, including members of the senior leadership team, nurses, doctors, speech and language therapists, healthcare assistants, domestic and housekeeping staff and patients. We reviewed 14 sets of patient records focusing on the Mental Capacity Act and 9 patient records, which included medical, nursing and observation records.

Urgent and Emergency Care

Urgent and emergency care services are provided at Torbay Hospital, they are delivered as part of the Newton Abbot Integrated Service Unit (ISU) which is the system providing urgent and emergency care. The emergency department operates 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Adult patients receive care and treatment in two main areas: minors and majors. Patients with serious injury or illness, who usually arrive by ambulance, are seen and treated in the majors’ area. This includes a resuscitation area with four cubicles, and 16 cubicles and side rooms, additionally there are four allocated areas which are used, when needed, on a stretch of corridor. The majors’ area is accessed by a dedicated ambulance entrance.

Self-presenting patients with minor injury are assessed and treated in the minors area. There is a dedicated children’s unit within the main emergency department with a small separate waiting area. A further waiting area for children is designated in the main waiting room.

The emergency department is a designated trauma unit and provides care for all but the most severely injured trauma patients, who would usually be taken by ambulance to the nearest major trauma centre. If the patient is not suitable to travel immediately, they may be stabilised at Torbay Hospital and transferred as their condition dictates.

The department is served by a helipad.

From March 2021 to March 2022 there were 101,210 attendances at the trust’s urgent and emergency care. (Source: Hospital Episode Statistics)

The inspection team comprised of 1 CQC inspector, 1 CQC senior specialist in secondary and specialist care, 1 member of the CQC medicines team, and 2 specialist advisors to include a consultant and nurse.

As part of the inspection we spoke with 6 patients. We spoke with 21 staff, including nurses, doctors, managers, support staff and ambulance staff. We observed care and treatment and reviewed 10 care records.

Outpatients

Torbay and South Devon NHS Foundation Trust provides outpatient services at Torbay Hospital and 4 community hospitals throughout the region. These are Newton Abbot Community Hospital, Paignton Hospital, Teignmouth Hospital and Totnes Hospital.

We inspected outpatient services at the Torbay Hospital site. We did not visit outpatient services at Newton Abbot Community Hospital, Paignton Hospital, Teignmouth Hospital or Totnes Hospital. However, after the inspection we spoke to some staff based at the community hospitals.

At Torbay Hospital, there is a dedicated outpatient department. In addition to this there is a dedicated oncology outpatient department, breast care department, and several specialist dedicated outpatient clinics. These include dermatology, ophthalmology, and cardiology. Throughout the report we will refer to the different outpatient departments as OPDs.

Throughout the report the outpatient department has been shortened to OPD.

The inspection team comprised of 2 CQC inspectors and 1 specialist advisor nurse.

The team visited the main OPD unit, the Crow Thorne Unit, ophthalmology, dermatology and the fracture clinic. We spoke with 21 members of staff (including managers, nurses, healthcare assistants, healthcare professionals, medical secretaries, receptionists and administrative staff). We spoke with 12 patients and 2 relatives and carers. We observed 2 patients undergoing minor procedures.

1 December 2021

During an inspection looking at part of the service

At Torbay Hospital, medical services include (but are not limited to) general medicine, respiratory medicine, cardiology, renal services, gastroenterology, elderly care, dementia services, dermatology services, stroke services and specialist cancer services.

The trust provides inpatient facilities and outpatient clinics, with clinics at the main hospital sites and as part of wider services based in the community. During this inspection we only visited medical services at Torbay Hospital.

We carried out a short announced focused inspection on 1 December 2021 where we visited the Emergency Assessment Unit 4 (EAU4), Forrest Ward (the trust’s escalation ward at the time of the inspection) and for comparison George Earle Ward. These three wards were part of the medical care directorate. We carried out this inspection because a number of concerns had been raised with us relating to: staff shortages on EAU4; concerns that patients were not receiving enough nutrition and hydration on Forrest Ward; and, concerns that staff were not completing observations on patients in a timely manner on both wards.

This inspection had a short announcement (30 minutes) to enable us to carry out our work safely and effectively. Due to the narrow focus of this inspection, we did not rate the service at this inspection. As we did not rate this service at this inspection, the previous rating of requires improvement remains.

We spoke with 10 members of staff, including members of the senior leadership team, nurses, doctors, allied healthcare professionals, healthcare assistants, domestic and housekeeping staff and three patients.

We reviewed 14 sets of patient records, which included medical, nursing and observation records.

You can find further information about how we carry out our inspections on our website: https://www.cqc.org.uk/what-we-do/how-we-do-our-job/what-we-do-inspection.

10 March to 2 April 2020

During a routine inspection

Our rating of services went down. We rated them as requires improvement.

A summary of our findings can be found in the 'Overall trust' section of the report and detail in the below core service sections.

Please note Torbay Hospital is the acute health service provided by Torbay and South Devon NHS Foundation Trust.

11 February 2019

During an inspection looking at part of the service

We carried out an unannounced focussed inspection of the emergency department at Torbay Hospital on 11 February 2019.

We did not inspect any other core services or wards at this hospital or any other locations or services provided by Torbay and South Devon NHS Foundation Trust. During this inspection we inspected using our focussed inspection methodology. We did not cover all key lines of enquiry. We did not rate this service at this inspection.

Torbay Hospital (unscheduled care) provides an emergency medicine service through a Type 1 Emergency Department (ED) including trauma. There is a minor injuries service provided by the emergency nurse practitioner service with consultant-led support.

Our key findings were:

  • There were appropriate processes for the initial assessment, triage and streaming of patients who presented via the front-door. Patients conveyed to Torbay Hospital via ambulance received timely initial assessments before being transferred to the rapid assessment and treatment area for subsequent clinical management.

  • The department implemented patient safety initiatives including early warning systems and patient safety checklists.

  • Care and treatment was planned and carried out in a timely way.

  • The leadership team had worked to reduce the total nurse vacancy factor so that by the end of April 2019 there will be approximately 1.5 whole time equivalent vacant Band 5 posts. Departmental leaders reviewed the competency and skill mix of staff to ensure sufficient numbers of staff were deployed across the department.

  • Compliance against constitutional standards remained a challenge. However, new models of care and the introduction of well-rehearsed escalation protocols were starting to show signs of some incremental improvement.

  • The department had a strategy to ensure patients were managed as safely and effectively as possible, especially during times of surge activity.

  • Professionals from across the hospital took responsibility for the delivery of the emergency care pathway. Strong team working and a multi-disciplinary approach was evident. A "Can do" attitude was present with staff reporting good morale across the department and wider hospital.
  • Risks were identified and well managed. The trust acknowledged areas for improvement which they were responsible for delivering.
  • Staff reported some concerns over the commissioning arrangements for some cohorts of patients, including those who presented with mental health conditions. Staff recognised more needed to be done to address a perception of health inequality for this group of patients.

However:

  • The environment in which patients received care and treatment remained a challenge. Staff acknowledged the constraints of the department and had developed plans to improve the department through a new build which had received capital investment.

Whilst we do not consider the provider to be in breach of regulations we have identified some areas which require improvement. Specifically, the provider should:

Ensure the mental health assessment room continues to meet national service specifications at all times.

Ensure children are directed to an appropriate waiting area in accordance with national service specifications.

Dr. Nigel Acheson

Deputy Chief Inspector of Hospitals (South)

3, 4, 10 May 2017

During a routine inspection

Torbay and South Devon NHS Foundation Trust is an integrated organisation providing acute healthcare services from Torbay Hospital, as well community health services and adult social care. The trust's acute hospital services are run from Torbay Hospital in Torquay. The trust serves a resident population of approximately 375,000, increasing by up to 100,000 at any time during the summer holiday season.

We previously inspected Torbay Hospital in February 2016 and rated the hospital as requires improvement overall.  Following that inspection we rated urgent and emergency care as inadequate, and medical care (including older people's care) as requires improvement.

This inspection was unannounced and took place in May 2017. We inspected emergency and urgent care, and medical care (including older people's care) to review progress made to improve these core services.

We found all the requirement notices issued following our previous inspection for both emergency and urgent care and medical care (including older people's care) had been met. We found significant improvements had been made in both core services.

Our key findings were as follows:

Safe:

  • We rated both core services inspected as requires improvement for safe.
  • Confidential patient records were not always stored securely, leaving them potentially subject to unauthorised access.
  • Completion of safeguarding training often fell below trust targets, which meant staff may not have had the most up-to-date knowledge in order to keep vulnerable people safe.
  • Processes for managing medicines and Patient Group Directions (PGDs) were not always effective. Some medicines were found to be out-of-date, refrigerator temperatures were not always regularly monitored and PGDs were not always signed.
  • We found two fire escape routes on two different wards were cluttered, posing a risk in the event people were required to evacuate the hospital.
  • A significant amount of equipment had no evidence of regular servicing, which meant there was a risk these items could fail or not function correctly.
  • Regular auditing of record-keeping was not always completed.
  • There was a positive incident reporting and learning culture. When things went wrong staff were encouraged and felt able to report incidents. Incident investigations were used as opportunities to learn and improve services.
  • Staffing levels had been reviewed using national tools and the numbers of staff on duty kept people safe most of the time. Consultant cover had been reviewed and changes to rotas had improved availability of consultants.

Effective:

  • We rated both core services as good for effective.
  • Protocols and pathways were evidence-based and followed national guidelines. Compliance with these was regularly audited and areas for improvement were identified and developed.
  • Multidisciplinary working had improved and was working well across the two core services.
  • Staff had a good understanding of the Mental Capacity Act 2005, including consent.
  • Regular training opportunities were made available to staff to ensure they were competent to carry out their roles.
  • Discharge summaries were not completed consistently, which meant other healthcare professionals, for example GPs, were not always aware of their patient's full medical history and ongoing plans.

Caring:

  • We rated both core services as good for caring.
  • Feedback we received from patients and relatives was consistently positive.
  • Patients and their relatives were treated with compassion, involved in discussions about their care and treated by staff with dignity and respect.
  • A small number of patients reported delays in staff responding to call bells.

Responsive:

  • We rated both core services as good for responsive.
  • Patient flow through the hospital had been improved and weekend discharges increased. Work was ongoing with partners and stakeholders to identify further strategies that could help improve patient flow.
  • The trust's escalation process for responding to severe pressures and increased demand had been overhauled and provided much improved communication and joint working across the healthcare system.
  • Complaints were responded to promptly and areas for improvement identified within investigations.
  • Performance against national standards was consistently high. For example, the trust performed better than the England average for the numbers of patients discharged, admitted or transferred from the emergency department within four hours (although this was slightly below the standard of 95%).
  • The emergency department had taken limited steps to support patients living with dementia.
  • A lack of space in the emergency department prevented patients who were waiting in the corridor from receiving adequate privacy.

Well-led:

  • We rated both core services as good for well-led.
  • The improvements that had been delivered were testament to the leadership and staff engagement.
  • Improvement plans and strategies had been developed with staff and were focused on delivering high-quality care.
  • Strong governance processes were in place and these helped drive improvement. Risks were understood, regularly discussed and actions put in place to reduce the risks where possible.
  • Staff spoke of an open, supportive culture and felt able to raise concerns with the leadership teams.
  • Mortality and morbidity reviews did not always take place regularly.
  • Some staff felt divisional leaders were not visible at service level.

We saw some areas of outstanding practice, including:

  • The trust had fully addressed the requirement notices from our inspection in February 2016. In particular we saw significant improvements had been made in the emergency department in terms of safety, quality, performance and patient experience. The department had streamlined processes and introduced a system of triage and rapid assessment, which improved safety, efficiency and patient flow.
  • We saw exceptional multidisciplinary working between the whole healthcare system in response to the trust's escalation process
  • A newly created mental health assessment room provided a safe, welcoming and calming environment, located away from the hustle and bustle of the busy emergency department.
  • There was a separate children's area in the emergency department, which was secure and was not overlooked by adult patients and visitors. This area was staffed by a dedicated trained paediatric nurse workforce. In addition, adult trained nurses received paediatric training as part of their induction and mandatory training.
  • There were cooperative and supportive relationships amongst staff in the emergency department. We observed excellent teamwork, particularly when the department was under pressure.
  • Service improvement was everybody's responsibility in the emergency department. Staff had been engaged in the improvement journey and had been encouraged to participate in service design and to make suggestions for improvement.
  • There was a great sense of pride amongst staff in the emergency department. They contrasted their feelings of despondency at the time of our previous inspection, with feelings of pride and optimism in the present.

However, there were also areas where the trust needed to make improvements.

Importantly, the trust must:

  • Ensure the secure storage of confidential patient records in all areas.
  • Ensure all medical equipment in the emergency department is serviced in accordance with service schedules.

In addition the trust should:

  • Ensure signatures on nursing, medical and prescription records are legible.
  • Ensure risk assessments are consistently completed.
  • Ensure resuscitation trolleys and emergency equipment are checked daily across all medical areas in line with trust policies.
  • Ensure systems aimed at ensuring the safety of medicines are effective, for example the checking of refrigerator temperatures and expiry dates.
  • Consider how staff can be better included in consultation processes where service changes may affect them.
  • Ensure mandatory training targets, including adult and child safeguarding, are consistently met.
  • Ensure fire escape routes are kept free from clutter and obstructions.
  • Ensure all staff comply with minimum training attainment levels.
  • Ensure appraisals for nurses are completed.
  • Ensure that regular mortality and morbidity meetings take place and related issues are included in emergency department clinical governance meetings.
  • Ensure that appropriate and regular audit takes place.
  • Ensure staff to patient ratios in the emergency department are appropriate to keep patients safe at all times.
  • Ensure that intentional rounding frequency where critical observatuions are noted follow guidelines for all patients.
  • Ensure patient confidentiality and privacy is protected in the emergency department.
  • Ensure children waiting in the main waiting room of the emergency department are provided adequate privacy away from waiting adults.
  • Ensure resuscitation trollies and equipment in the emergency department are readily available and kept clean.
  • Ensure the emergency department sluice is secured and that flammable products are not accessible to unauthorised persons.
  • Ensure Patient Group Directions used in the emergency department are signed by staff and counter-signed by managers.
  • Provide training for emergency department receptionists to support the recognition of red flag presentations.
  • Ensure access to major incident equipment in the emergency department is not obstructed.
  • Ensure the bereavement (viewing) room in the emergency department Is an appropriate environment.
  • Review the location and visibility of surgical waste bins that are visible from the emergency department relatives' room.
  • Review the steps to support people in vulnerable circumstances, such as people living with dementia, or people with a learning disability are adequate.

Professor Edward Baker

Chief Inspector of Hospitals

2nd - 5th February 2016

During a routine inspection

Torbay and South Devon NHS Foundation Trust is an integrated organisation providing acute health care services from Torbay Hospital, community health services and adult social care. The Trust runs Torbay Hospital and nine community hospitals in Devon. The trust serves a residential population of approximately 375,000 people, plus about 100,000 visitors at any one time during the summer holiday season.

This report covers the acute services provided from the Torbay hospital location. Torbay hospital has 293 beds and in 2014/15 had 70,000 inpatient admissions, 77,000 emergency department attendances and 424,000 outpatient attendances.

We inspected Torbay hospital as part of our programme of comprehensive inspections. The inspection team inspected the standard eight core services for an acute hospital. This was the first inspection undertaken at Torbay hospital using the comprehensive inspection methodology. We inspected Torbay hospital between 2 and 5 February and on 15 February 2016.

Overall we rated Torbay hospital as requires improvement.

Our key findings were as follows:

Safety

  • Nurse staffing was at expected levels in most areas. However, the emergency department was not always staffed by appropriately qualified, experienced and skilled nursing staff. Nurse staffing on the Louisa Cary ward (children and young people) was often below guideline levels. The numbers of nurses on medical wards regularly fell below the established minimum number.
  • Medical staffing was at expected levels in most areas. However, in the emergency department there were not enough consultants or a named paediatric consultant on each shift. In outpatients there was not enough medical staffing to allow the trust to address its significant backlog of follow up appointments.
  • Infection prevention and control procedures were complied with, such as in the case of regular hand hygiene audits. Clinical areas were generally clean although we saw some unclean areas in the dermatology outpatient procedure rooms. Some patients without Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) confirmed status were being placed on surgical wards, which presented an infection risk to other patients. In dermatology minor surgical procedures were taking place in rooms that were not adequately ventilated or maintained.
  • There was generally a positive culture around reporting, investigating and learning from incidents. However, in end of life care it was not clear how lessons were learned from incidents and we were not assured about the effectiveness of incident monitoring. In outpatients there was a mixed approach to incident reporting.
  • In surgery, information on incidence of falls, pressure ulcers and urinary tract infections was displayed on ward boards giving transparency on their safety.
  • Premises and equipment were not always fit for purpose. The facilities in the emergency department were not suitable or well maintained and compromised patient safety. In critical care intravenous fluids were not securely stored and the safety of babies on the children’s ward was compromised as breast milk was not securely stored. Cautery procedures were carried out in rooms without smoke extractors and without the use of masks.
  • The management of medicines was generally in line with trust policy and legislation, although in outpatients there was inconsistent recording and monitoring of fridge temperatures and there were no records of stock rotation in some areas.
  • There were some areas of records management that needed improvement. We found areas for improvement in surgery, children and young people’s services and end of life care.
  • Staff understood their safeguarding responsibilities and was aware of the trust’s policies and procedures.
  • While most services demonstrated an understanding of patient risk, there was an inadequate response to risk in other areas. In the emergency department, patients did not always receive an initial assessment within 15 minutes. This placed patients at risk. The National Early Warning Score (NEWS) system had been implemented in the emergency department but the scores did not always indicate the action needed.

Effective

  • In most services patient’s needs were assessed and care and treatment delivered in line with legislation, standards and evidence-based practice.
  • In some areas the equipment being used was not of an expected standard. In end of life care temporary fridges were being used on a permanent basis, without effective temperature monitoring. In outpatients aging equipment was preventing staff from providing effective services.
  • Facilities did not always support effective services. The emergency department facilities were not suitable or well maintained. This compromised patients’ safety and experience. There was no designated space to assess patients with mental health conditions. The critical care unit did not meet currents standards although the building of a new unit had started. The design and use of some outpatient facilities did not keep patients safe at all times.
  • Patients’ nutrition and hydration needs were being met.
  • In most services there was evidence that patient outcomes were assessed. There were some areas where the trust was not meeting the national audit standard. In the emergency department patient outcomes varied, performance was mixed against national audits to benchmark performance and the results of audits were not always used to improve treatment, including management of Sepsis. Unplanned reattendances to the emergency department were not investigated to identify reasons.
  • Staff were generally competent to deliver services to patients. In outpatients a nurse practitioner was performing procedures without formal qualifications.
  • Multi-disciplinary working was evident in many services inspected. However some areas of multi-disciplinary working in the emergency department were not working effectively.
  • Limited access for mental health services out of hours caused extended waits for patients in the emergency department.
  • Staff demonstrated an understanding of their responsibilities in relation to consent, the Mental Capacity Act 2005 and the Deprivation of Liberty Standards (DoLS), although there was a mixed understanding of the Mental Capacity Act and limited knowledge of DoLS in critical care.

Caring

  • Feedback about the care received was consistently positive.
  • We saw examples of caring interactions between staff and patients.
  • In critical care we found examples of staff going ‘above and beyond’ expectations to support patients and relatives during difficult times.
  • Patients and their relatives were often involved in their care planning.
  • In end of life care staff we talked to had a good understanding of the impact that a person’s care, treatment or condition might have on their wellbeing and of those close to them.
  • In maternity patients’ choices were important when planning and delivering care.
  • In children’s services parents and children spoke highly of the service. Children were involved with the planning of their care wherever possible. In outpatients we saw relatives and carers being included in decision making.

Responsive

  • Poor patient flow across the hospital impacted on the emergency department. There was also a lack of decision makers available in the emergency department, which affected the flow of patients out of the department.
  • Delays in admitting patients to a hospital bed meant the emergency department was often full, and could not immediately treat new patients. Not all patients received their initial clinical assessment in 15 minutes.
  • Bed pressures also impacted on timely discharges from the critical care unit. Elective (planned) surgery was affected by the lack of bed availability in critical care.
  • In surgery the pressure on bed availability within the hospital meant patients were not always receiving timely surgery. Numbers of patients who had their surgery cancelled remained above the average for England. The trust continues to work with commissioning and partner organisations to reduce waiting times for surgery.
  • In maternity there was a public health midwife to support people to make lifestyle changes and the service had systems to make adjustments for patients living with learning or physical disabilities.
  • The gynaecology service introduced enhanced recovery procedures to improve the flow of patients through the service.
  • The children and young people’s service provided responsive planned and emergency care, although there were delays accessing mental health services.
  • The end of life service collected some information about numbers of deaths of patients on end of life pathway and whether they died in their preferred place of care or not. Most end of life patients had a treatment escalation plan including a resuscitation decision.
  • Plans were in place to increase clinics in outpatients. However at the time of the inspection patients were frequently not able to access services in a timely way for follow up appointments due to a follow up back log and the capacity of clinics.
  • We saw evidence of person-centred care. In surgery patients living with dementia or learning disabilities had their needs met. Children and young people were at the centre of their care and paediatric services were highly responsive.
  • There was a positive culture around dealing with feedback and complaints and learning lessons. In some areas such as the children’s and young peoples’ service this included identifying trends and themes to embed learning.

Well led

  • Service visions and strategies were developed in most areas but there was a disconnect between acute medicine and the emergency department. As a result patients did not always experience appropriate access and flow. There was not a coherent strategy in place to deliver the vision staff had for end of life care within the integrated organisation.
  • While governance, risk management and assurance systems were in place for the services reviewed, these were not always operating effectively for example, in the emergency department, medical and critical care services.
  • There was evidence of leadership supporting change in many services. However, the emergency department had been working under pressure for a considerable period without effective changes to improve the situation. In medicine there was a lack of leadership oversight in some areas and in outpatient services leaders were not always highly engaged with their teams.
  • Staff generally spoke positively about the culture within services. Recurrent themes were of the openness and transparency such as in relation to raising concerns. However, staff did not always feel supported or empowered to make changes to improve services.
  • There was evidence of innovation in many service areas reviewed. For example, in surgical services, there was an embedded culture of finding ways to reduce the length of stay for patients in hospital with more operations being undertaken as day cases.

We saw several areas of outstanding practice including:

  • Staff in the emergency department were positive and professional under pressure, maintaining a supportive role to patients. They were always kind and thoughtful, ensuring that patient’s anxieties were relieved as much as possible.
  • The trust was the highest achieving in the south west peninsula for cancer treatment targets and had the highest survival rates in the south west. The trust was also the highest achieving cancer centre in the patient survey and in the 10 nationally.
  • We spoke with one patient on the surgical ward who was going through a distressing time as they found out their daughter was admitted for emergency care. The staff in the hospital had arranged and facilitated to take them down to see their daughter and had constant updates from the medical team involved in their care.
  • In the middle of the surgery recovery room there was a large clock with four faces on it pointing in different directions. This allowed patients to orientate themselves with the time as soon as they woke up after theatre reducing confusion and distress.
  • We found that WHO checklists were completed using a large whiteboard in every theatre allowing all staff to observe and act upon it. These were being developed further to be interactive projection boards where each patient would have a bespoke WHO checklist depending on its requirements.
  • The innovative way in which the hospital was managing capacity by making traditionally inpatient surgical stays as an outpatient procedure.
  • The innovate way in which technology had influenced the educational facilities at Torbay Hospital. Particularly around the use of virtual reality headsets to train staff for specific situations such as the surgical checklist.
  • The use of video calling over the internet using portable tablet devices in the critical care unit was an example of outstanding practice. This technology primarily allowed doctors to have a ‘face-to-face’ discussion with relatives who were not in the country, but also allowed those relatives to see and speak to their loved ones being treated on the unit.
  • The critical care unit’s rehabilitation programme was exceptional. As well as having focus on patients while they were in the unit, there was rehabilitation support and follow-up routinely provided in the hospital for patients who had been discharged. This service was then further extended into the homes of patients who had been discharged from the hospital. Because the programme worked so well, the unit’s occupational therapist had been invited to speak nationally on the subject to encourage other hospitals to look at ways they could deliver a similar service.
  • The care being provided by staff in the critical care unit went ‘above and beyond’ the day-to-day expectations. We saw staff positively interacting with all patients and visitors and evidence of staff going out of their way to help patients. Patients and visitors gave overwhelmingly positive feedback.
  • There was a perinatal mental health team based in the maternity unit. This had led to consistent care for women with mental health conditions and provided multidisciplinary care to women during and following their pregnancy.
  • The divisional quality manager provided ‘critical incident stress debriefing’. This involved group sessions where people who had been involved in critical incidents or difficult situations were invited to talk through the process and any issues that had arisen.
  • The maternity services had secured funding to have short videos produced that were available on the trust website. They were designed to build on the information given to women at the start of and during their pregnancy as it was realised that people do not take in all the information they are given by healthcare professionals. The videos could be watched at people’s leisure and aim to provide women with all the information they need to make informed choices for example around screening tests and methods of delivery.
  • When women called in to say they thought they were in labour instead of being asked to come into the unit to be triaged a midwife would offer to visit the woman at home to establish if they were in labour or not. Choices about how and where they would like to have their baby could then be decided upon. This had facilitated some unplanned home births which were seen as a positive outcome. The midwives found it had meant less unnecessary attendances at the maternity unit.
  • One of the general theatres operating department practitioners had noticed there were sometimes communication issues between midwifery and general theatre staff. They had carried out a project to improve multidisciplinary communication. As a result of the project a caesarean section and obstetric emergencies information chart had been produced, that was laminated and displayed in the labour ward and a theatre ‘do’s and don’ts’ also laminated and displayed for staff to follow.
  • We saw a good level of involvement of children and young people in consultant interviews.
  • In end of life care, bereavement officers gave out feedback cards to bereaved relatives and comments which were then discussed with the bereavement officers line manager. This had resulted in the trust introducing free parking to relatives of patients at end of life. Bereavement officers had also been able to reduce the time that death certificates took to be issued through project work. This had increased the efficiency of the process and reduced some of the emotional impact on relatives at a stressful time.
  • The medical records department had consistently supplied 98-99% of records to clinics on or before the clinics, with note preparation carried out to suit consultant’s individual preferences, and had plans to electronically track notes on a live system.
  • The physiotherapy direct referral service, allowed patients to access physiotherapy without the need for a GP referral. Patients using this service normally received an appointment within 72 hours of self-referral.
  • In the oncology outpatient department, there was a home delivery service for some oral chemotherapy medicines. Patients received telephone consultations with their consultants for three appointments, and then came into the clinic on their fourth for a review.
  • The virtual triage clinic in Fracture clinic had reduced the numbers of unnecessary fracture clinic appointments by 15%.
  • The diagnostic imaging department had turned 93-99.9% of reports around within one week across all specialties and patient types. In particular, there was a dedicated inpatient-reporting radiologist for every session, which had reduced the average turnaround time for an inpatient report to six hours. The department also produced run charts to identify any outliers, and investigated the delay in their reports.
  • Bereavement officers gave out feedback cards to bereaved relatives and comments were were then discussed with the bereavement officers line manager. This had resulted in the trust introducing free parking to relatives of patients at end of life. Bereavement officers had also been able to reduce the time that death certificates took to be issued through project work. This had increased the efficiency of the process and reduced some of the emotional impact on relatives at a stressful time.

However, there were also areas of poor practice where the trust needs to make improvements.

Importantly, the trust must:

  • Make the management of the emergency department environment safe. Patients waiting on corridors to be seen must be reviewed and monitored to ensure their safety.
  • Address the 24 hours a day, seven days week consultant cover for paediatrics in the emergency department and allocate a named consultant for each shift.
  • Ensure that there is consultant cover provided to all medical wards and escalation wards seven days a week.
  • Ensure risks to the health and safety of patients when identified are actioned. When Early Warning Scores indicate an increased level of observation that this level is consistently maintained.
  • Ensure plans in place to monitor sepsis pathways are completed.
  • Ensure there is timely access to psychiatric support in the emergency department. A safe room must be provided to ensure both patients and staff undertaking an assessment are safe.
  • Review the process of medically expected patients having to wait in the emergency department.
  • Ensure senior decision makers in the hospital are involved in the movement of patients through the emergency department.
  • Ensure the escalation processes in place to support the emergency department during busy periods are effective to address the issues causing the escalation.
  • Ensure the governance systems in place for the emergency department reflect the known issues and are used to address the concerns identified. The trust should ensure that when areas of anomaly such as the high readmission rates and rates of patients leaving before being seen are audited and investigated.
  • Ensure there are sufficient numbers of suitably trained, competent and skilled staff deployed to meet the needs of patients. The trust must provide evidence of the sustainability of these increased levels and how monitoring of sufficient staffing is being maintained.
  • Ensure ongoing monitoring of the initial time to initial assessment and clinical observation. Appropriate monitoring and actions must be undertaken to ensure the safety of patients.
  • Ensure patients arriving at the emergency department are seen within an appropriate timescale by an appropriate doctor. The trust must ensure monitoring of this timescale to ensure the ongoing care and treatment of patients.
  • Take action to ensure patients cared for on escalation wards, outlier wards and at weekends have access to medical input and review from appropriate clinicians.
  • Take action to minimise the length of stay medical patients spent as outliers in surgical areas.
  • Review staffing skill mix on Elizabeth and Warrington wards to ensure patients cared for there, particularly out of hours, are safe.
  • Ensure patients cared for at weekends; in escalation wards or as medical outliers receive appropriate risk assessments.
  • Review how staff are trained in fire safety on wards and ensure a named, competent fire warden is in place.
  • Ensure critical care staff have a full understanding of the Mental Capacity Act (2005) and Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards and that patients subject to these are appropriately assessed, supported and authorised.
  • Review staffing levels on Louisa Cary ward to ensure they meet the recommended guidance (RCN 2013) particularly at night.
  • Ensure the safe storage of breast milk on Louisa Cary ward and the special care baby unit was not secure which compromised the safety of babies. This was raised with staff at the time of the inspection.
  • Ensure risks for end of life care are captured and reviewed effectively through the governance system.
  • Ensure all staff that monitor and adjust syringe drivers are competent and have the skills to carry this out.
  • Ensure minor surgical procedure rooms are clean and fit for their purpose and ensure these standards are maintained with regular monitoring.
  • Ensure there is adequate ventilation and extraction in outpatient procedure rooms where cautery is carried out.
  • Ensure emergency oxygen is checked and records kept.
  • Ensure medicines stored in refrigerators are checked and to keep accurate temperature records.
  • Take action to capture record and investigate post procedure infection rates in the dermatology general outpatients department.
  • Ensure departments carry out regular hand hygiene audits in all outpatient areas and display the results for staff and patients.

In addition the trust should:

  • The trust should ensure that the privacy and dignity of patients in the resuscitation area of the emergency department is maintained and not overlooked from the adjacent corridor.
  • The trust should review the security of injectable medicines on trolleys that are widely accessible in the emergency department.
  • The trust should ensure that sharps bins are used correctly and are not accessible to the public.
  • Staff should be aware of consistent management of paediatrics through the emergency department and ensure children’s safety.
  • The damaged areas of the emergency department should be repaired to ensure the safety of patients and reduce any risks of cross-infection.
  • The trust should ensure staff are supported with sufficient training for the risks associated with mental health patients spending long periods of time in the emergency department.
  • The trust should ensure staff are supported with sufficient training for the safeguarding of patients and protect them from avoidable harm
  • The trust should ensure hand hygiene audits are completed for the emergency department.
  • Staff appraisal rates for staff in the emergency department were low and the trust should ensure these are completed.
  • The trust should ensure information communication is known consistently by all staff. This included the alerting of patients with a learning disability to the wider hospital.
  • The trust should ensure doctors complete patient records with legible signatures, designations and the use of the General Medical Council stamp.
  • The trust should ensure adequate stock control policies and procedures are in place to ensure expired clinical products are disposed of in a timely manner.
  • The trust should ensure clinicians are aware of infection control procedures and comply with hand-washing guidelines when assessing and treating patients.
  • The trust should ensure nurses and other staff working in clinical areas are offered a robust and timely response to concerns they raise and incidents they report.
  • The trust should consider the provision of practical de-escalation and breakaway training for ward-based staff, particularly on the emergency assessment units and care of the elderly wards.
  • The trust should consider providing staff on medical wards with de-escalation and breakaway training to support them in caring for people who present with dementia-related violence.
  • The trust should do all that is reasonably possible to reduce the numbers of patients waiting over 18 weeks for treatment.
  • The trust should reduce the numbers of operations being cancelled.
  • The trust should improve the completion of care planning summaries within 24 hours.
  • The trust should ensure that record keeping for emergency equipment checks are done in line with trust policy and therefore in line with national guidance from the resuscitation council.
  • The trust should improve access into the surgical assessment unit to allow for stretchered patients to be assessed in that facility.
  • Intravenous fluid storage in the critical care unit should be improved to ensure these cannot be tampered with.
  • The recording of mandatory training compliance in critical care should be improved so that this is easily accessible and reportable.
  • The trust should ensure plans to relocate the antenatal and gynaecology clinics and as a result, improve the privacy and dignity issues for women attending fertility clinics and the early pregnancy clinics, continue.
  • The trust should continue to consider plans around delivering the Day Assessment Unit service to ensure women receive an effective service with adequate staffing levels and reduced waiting times when using the service.
  • The trust should continue to consider the best arrangements for ensuring screening blood tests taken from babies reach the external laboratory in time for the sample to be read and that staff are all trained to complete the blood spot card effectively. This would mean fewer babies are called back for a repeat test.
  • The trust should work with partners to eliminate unnecessary delays in accessing the Children’s and Adolescents Mental Health Services, particularly out of hours and at weekends.
  • The trust should review facilities for parents on the special care baby unit to ensure sufficient chairs to enable mothers to nurse their babies appropriately.
  • The trust should review access to the treatment room on the paediatric ward
  • The trust should ensure clarity and consistency around care planning for children and young people on Louisa Cary ward.
  • The trust should ensure the quiet room is maintained to an appropriate standard to provide a clean and pleasant environment for patients and their families.
  • The trust should ensure incidents associated with end of life care are able to be collated to ensure the palliative care team are alerted and can access the incident reports.
  • The trust should ensure palliative and end of life assessment of need, care planning and recording is consistent and utilises personalised end of life care planning documents available.
  • The trust should ensure that recording of nutrition and hydration needs is consistent and utilises the trust tools provided for example the malnutrition universal screening tool.
  • The trust should ensure clarity around key strategic roles for end of life care cross the organisation
  • The trust should ensure there is an appropriate level of staffing available for mortuary services.
  • The trust should ensure accurate audit data is available which can be used to support delivery of end of life care across an integrated organisation.
  • The trust should ensure a coherent strategy is identified, disseminated and actions in place to deliver effective end of life care across an integrated organisation.
  • The trust should ensure the mortuary staff and others such as specialist palliative care team have regular training in major incident awareness to ensure the trust can respond if required.
  • The trust should ensure medicine fridges in outpatient areas are kept locked at all times.
  • The trust should ensure medical records remaining in clinics overnight are locked away securely.
  • The trust should ensure staff undertaking procedures have appropriate skills and knowledge to do so.
  • The trust should ensure staff understand their role and responsibilities when holding clinics in generic rooms, with regard to cleaning, emergency equipment and medicine storage and monitoring.
  • The trust should ensure all staff adhere to the uniform policy and cross infection guidance with regard to long hair below collar length.
  • The trust should ensure staff do not eat or drink in areas where blood samples and other chemicals are found.
  • The trust should consider CCTV for the monitoring of isolated patients in the radiology west department.
  • The trust should consider improving the environment for children in the outpatients department as the mixed environment means it is not child-friendly.

Professor Sir Mike Richards

Chief Inspector of Hospitals

7 February 2013

During an inspection looking at part of the service

We inspected Torbay hospital to check on improvements made following an inspection we performed in September 2012. During the inspection in September 2012 we found shortfalls in the surgical checks the hospital were using. We also found two of the 18 wards at the hospital were not as clean as others.

Following the inspection the trust sent us an action plan detailing how they would make improvements and gave us timescales in which they expected to achieve the improvements.

At this inspection we found the surgical safety checks used at the hospital had improved and cleanliness levels on the wards had also improved.

Since our last inspection the trust had introduced a new surgical safety checklist which mirrored the one recommended by the National Patient Safety Agency (NPSA). Staff said was now embedded in everyday practice.

On ward areas we saw many areas of improvement including new staff job roles, improved cleaning schedules and replaced equipment.

24, 25, 26 September 2012

During a routine inspection

Patients we spoke with were all happy with the care and treatment they received. One patient referred to Torbay Hospital as 'The Jewel in the Crown'. Patients were all extremely complimentary about the staff and told us they felt safe. They knew who to speak to if they had concerns. Staff knew how to report any abuse.

During our inspection we found many areas of local and national initiatives to improve patient experience.

During our Inspection, we went into operating theatres to look at surgical safety checks. We found that these were not being done in line with recommended national guidance set by the National Patient Safety Agency.

We found that appropriate cleanliness was not maintained in two ward areas. We saw some practices in theatre areas were not appropriate for the prevention of infections and spread of infection.

Staff training was managed well at the hospital. Staff were satisfied with the amount and quality of the training. Staff told us they felt well supported and appropriately supported and were complimentary about senior managers at the hospital.

During our inspection we saw many examples to show how quality and the service was continually monitored internally and externally at the hospital. We saw that the Trust were keen to continually improve and address and areas of non compliance. We saw care records had improved since our inspection last year with further improvements planned.

3 December 2011

During a routine inspection

During our site visits to South Devon foundation trust (Torbay Hospital) Centre, we went to 13 ward and clinical areas in addition to the outpatient clinics at the hospital. We spoke to over 60 patients and visitors. We also spoke with many members of staff.

We were told that patients thought their privacy was protected and that they felt staff were respectful during their visit to the hospital. Patients also told us that they had felt involved in planning their care or treatment.

Patients said they felt safe and said staff were very kind to them.

One patient had been admitted and moved several times due to her condition, her feelings were that all the moves were needed to give her the best treatment, she was kept informed of why she was being moved and all was done with respect and good humour.

Patients said they were pleased with the way they received their medicines in hospital. They told us staff are 'excellent', 'marvelous' and 'brilliant'. Patients told us they were happy with the way they received their medicines and that staff are helpful if they had any questions. One patient told us that the staff 'couldn't be faulted, nothing is too much trouble'.

Patients thought staff worked very hard to keep ward areas clean. Patients appreciated the mobile shop that visits each area every day.

Staffing levels were satisfactory patients said their needs were being met. We had many positive comments about staff. One patient said, 'The staff are fabulous, I can't fault them; another comment made was 'ask and it is done for you' Frequent comments made were 'nothing is too much trouble' 'so kind, even it's when busy'

Patients told us they knew how to complain and that if they had any concerns they would raise them straight away with the staff on the ward. Patients also knew about the Patient Advisory and Liaison (PALS) team.

4, 5 April 2011

During a themed inspection looking at Dignity and Nutrition

Without exception people told us they thought their needs were being met. They talked warmly about the staff giving their care and of the good standards on the wards.

One patient told us said they felt involved in their care, but tended to rely on relatives to tell them. One relative said they appreciated being involved in the care and felt they could ask staff questions. The relative said they had found the key worker particularly helpful; they said 'The staff are marvellous. Our named nurse has been very helpful answering all our questions but they are all very approachable'.

One person told us that they arrived a week before our visit, they described how they had been kept informed of their care and said 'Every bit had been explained'. When asked if they were happy with the care they had received they said 'Absolutely, I'm happy with the time they spend with me and the care I have had'.

People were asked if staff asked if it's alright before they help (e.g. help with washing, toileting, taking blood, tests,) they said they did. They also said they were treated with respect at all times.

The feedback about the taste of the food was good; everyone we asked said they always had enough to eat, it was always hot and there was always plenty of choice. Some comments made include;

'I have to have a fat free diet, today I had a lovely salad as good as any in a restaurant followed by excellent apple and custard'.

'The menu looks like there's plenty of variety so I am looking forward to eating again'

'They give me a wet wipe for my hands before I eat'

'I get enough in fact I leave some sometimes'.

'The food is hot enough and the dessert comes after the main meal.

I seem to be feeding all day long'.