Archived: Trust Headquarters

11 Shelley Road, Boscombe, Bournemouth, Dorset, BH1 4JQ

Provided and run by:
Dorset Healthcare University NHS Foundation Trust

All Inspections

5, 6 August 2013

During a routine inspection

Detainees we spoke with said that staff were 'fine' and 'nice'. They reported they were told about the mental health services when they were first assessed in the prison. There was written information available about mental health conditions, what they were, how they could make people feel and how to manage them. These were available in a variety of languages and some were also available in a pictorial format to help people understand them.

When detainees arrived in the prison they were asked about any mental health or learning disability needs that they had and underwent an assessment. If mental health needs were indicated at the initial assessment, urgent assessments by a member of the mental health team would normally take place within 24 hours and regular assessments within one week. Detainees we spoke with were positive about the services they received and indicated that their treatment was helping to address their needs.

Detainees told us that after their initial assessment they had been referred to various different services as appropriate. There was a weekly team meeting where new referrals and the care and treatment of detainees were discussed. Other relevant healthcare professionals (as well as prison staff) were invited to these as appropriate. Healthcare staff would also work directly with other community services to ensure that a care and treatment plan within the community was in place before detainees were released.

23, 24, 26 April 2013

During an inspection in response to concerns

The Care Quality Commission (CQC) inspected 11 locations where patient care was provided by Dorset Healthcare University NHS Foundation Trust between December 2012 and April 2013. We found non compliance with the CQC Essential Standards of Quality and Safety in eight of the 11 locations we visited. At two locations, we found non compliance on two successive inspections.

The CQC inspections demonstrated significant service failings in some areas. These were serious and repeated over time in some areas and there were also service failings across different locations. They raised concerns about the adequacy of the trusts quality assurance and governance processes.

The purpose of this inspection of the trust's headquarters was to assess whether the trust had effective systems in place to assess and monitor the quality of service provision. In undertaking this inspection we considered the five quality domains that CQC plan to adopt during 2013 -14 to inspect NHS trusts. Our inspection used the domains to identify if the trust was well led. Also, to identify whether the trust had systems in place to assure them that their services were safe, effective, caring and were responsive to patient's needs.

We visited the trust over a three day period on 23, 24 and 26 April 2013. We spoke with 24 senior trust staff about their roles and responsibilities and looked at the trust's quality monitoring systems. We met with members of the trust board, which included executive and non executive directors. We also spoke with senior medical, nursing and therapy staff as well as staff who worked in the quality team.

We reviewed a range of documentary evidence which included minutes of sub committees of the board, performance and quality monitoring reports. We looked at the trusts incident monitoring and risk register systems and arrangements for monitoring staff training, supervision and appraisal. We talked to trust staff about how risks were escalated within the trust and about actions taken in response. We looked at how information about risks flowed between the trust board, directorates, wards and teams.

We did not speak to patients directly as part of this inspection. We looked at the systems the trust had in place for seeking patient feedback and acting on it. During the same week, we carried out inspections at seven other locations across the trust where we spoke to patients about the services they received. We have referred to some of the findings of those inspections within this report. Those inspections have also been reported separately via our website.

Overall, we concluded that the systems in place for quality monitoring and for assessing and managing risks to service users and others were not fully effective. The trust had inadequate staffing levels which was the main factor impacting on the quality of patient care. Where staffing levels were sufficient, patients reported higher levels of satisfaction with their care.

28 November 2012

During an inspection looking at part of the service

The purpose of this inspection was to check whether action had been taken to make the premises of the Poole child and adolescent mental health service more child and family friendly.

The trust wrote to us with the actions they had taken and we found that improvements had been made to the premises.

1 October 2012

During a routine inspection

We co-ordinated our inspection of the nurse led primary healthcare service at The Verne prison with H.M. Inspectorate of Prisons (HMIP). Our inspection covered two days.

Two regulated activities were carried on at the prison by Dorset Healthcare University NHS Foundation Trust (the Trust). They were diagnostic and screening procedures and treatment of disease, disorder and injury.

During our two days we spoke with 20 people about their experiences of the healthcare services available to them.

People we spoke with generally expressed a high level of satisfaction. They told us they were able to see healthcare staff quickly. They said they were fully involved in the planning of any treatment they required. They told us that special clinics about health problems such as diabetes or asthma were available to them.

With two exceptions, people we spoke with told us they were always treated with respect by healthcare staff. One person described them as 'good as gold'.

Where necessary the Trust's staff referred people with specific needs to other healthcare professionals to ensure they could be met.

Healthcare staff we spoke with demonstrated commitment to and enthusiasm for their work. They received regular training and had opportunities for professional development.

There were arrangements in place to ensure the Trust's procedures were followed and the quality of the service people received was maintained and/or improved.

26 September 2011

During a routine inspection

As part of our review of Dorset Healthcare University NHS Foundation Trust's community services we talked with people who receive support from the following teams;

Wimborne and Purbeck Community Mental Health Team

Community Brain Injury Service

Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (Tier 3) based in Poole

Bournemouth Community Learning Disability Team

South and East Dorset Community Drug and Alcohol Team

Bournemouth, Poole and South and East Dorset Crisis Home Treatment Team.

In total we talked with 31 people who use these services and 11 relatives. We also met with 31 staff during our review to obtain their views of the service they provide.

People told us that staff work in partnership with them to ensure that they are able to contribute to their care plan. As a result of this, the support they receive is based on their individual needs and wishes. People reported that they had good working relationships with staff which had enabled them to make positive changes in their lives. They told us that they felt they were treated with respect and that staff provided them with a flexible service which took into account their personal lifestyles.

People reported that teams had responded well in emergency situations and they had received the support they required during difficult times in their lives. We heard that staff liaised with other agencies on behalf of people who use the service to ensure their needs were met. People felt that the staff who supported them were knowledgeable, skilled and caring while being professional in their approach. People had confidence in staff to give them the help they needed.

People told us that, in their experience, there were some specific areas of service delivery which could be improved. These were in relation to waiting lists for assessment and treatment, a fully co-ordinated approach to care, the suitability of the environment where they had appointments, their awareness of the Trust's complaints procedure and their understanding of how information about them was recorded and shared.

However, overall, it was clear that people felt that they received high quality care and that receiving support was a positive experience for them, their relatives and carers.