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Northern General Hospital

Overall: Requires improvement read more about inspection ratings

Herries Road, Sheffield, South Yorkshire, S5 7AU (0114) 243 4343

Provided and run by:
Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

Important: The provider of this service changed. See old profile

All Inspections

Other CQC inspections of services

Community & mental health inspection reports for Northern General Hospital can be found at Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. Each report covers findings for one service across multiple locations

20-22 September 2022

During a routine inspection

The Northern General Hospital is one of sixteen locations where Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust provides care.

During this inspection we inspected and rated the following core services at this location:

  • Medicine (including older people's care)
  • Surgery
  • Urgent and emergency care

5th October 2021 to 7th October 2021

During a routine inspection

The Northern General Hospital, situated in the north of Sheffield, is home to the city's adult accident and emergency department and major trauma centre.

The Northern General is the largest hospital campus within Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust spanning 100 acres. The hospital has over 1100 beds and employs more than 6,000 staff. It provides a wide range of specialist services including orthopaedics, renal, heart and lung services and has a purpose-built spinal injuries unit. There are a general and cardiac intensive care services onsite.

Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust provides acute and community services to an estimated population of 694,000. The trust provides specialist services for the populations of Yorkshire & Humber, parts of Mid-Yorkshire and North Derbyshire.

12 to 14 June and 11 to 13 July 2018

During a routine inspection

Our rating of the hospital stayed the same. We rated the hospital as good because we rated the domain of responsive as outstanding and we rated safe, effective, caring and well-led as good.

07-11 and 23 December 2015

During a routine inspection

We inspected the Northern General Hospital as part of the inspection of Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust from 7 to 11 December 2015. We undertook an unannounced inspection on 23 December 2015. We carried out this inspection as part of the Care Quality Commission (CQC) comprehensive inspection programme.

We did not inspect the GP out of hours collaborative as part of this inspection.

Overall, we rated Northern General Hospital as good. We rated safe, effective, caring and responsive as good. Well-led was rated as requires improvement.

We rated critical care and outpatients and diagnostics as outstanding. Medical care and surgery were rated as good. Emergency and urgent care and end of life care were rated as requires improvement.

Our key findings were as follows:

  • We found the hospital was clean and staff adhered to infection control principles. The trust scored 99% for cleanliness in the patient-led assessments of care environments (PLACE) report for 2015.
  • There was a trust infection control accreditation programme in place. This programme set standards for infection prevention and control practice. Most clinical areas had achieved accreditation; plans were in place where this was not the case.
  • There had been four cases of MRSA reported by the trust between June 2014 and June 2015.
  • There had been 33 cases of C.difficile between April 2015 and November 2015 at the Northern General Hospital. This was a rate in line with the England average per 10,000 bed days. The trust’s rate of C.difficile was below the trajectory target with 42 cases against a stretch target of 52 cases at the end of November 2015.
  • The trust used the safer nursing care tool, professional judgement and nursing hours per patient day to determine appropriate levels of staffing. There were some areas where staffing fell below planned levels on a regular basis, particularly in the Emergency Department, although the trust was mitigating risks as far as possible. Recruitment to vacancies was in progress. Staff were able to use bank or agency staff, where available, to fill staffing shortfalls.
  • The trust was committed to the development of advanced nurse practitioners to ensure patient care was maintained and the potential recruitment difficulties to junior doctor posts mitigated. This also allowed good advancement opportunities for nurses.
  • Mortality indicators showed no evidence of risk.
  • Patients were assessed for their nutritional needs. The trust had introduced HANAT (hydration and nutrition assurance toolkit) to encourage good nutrition and hydration best practice in the hospital environment.
  • There was a well-established culture of continuous quality improvement. This was supported and assured by robust governance, risk management and quality monitoring. The trust used a Microsystems Coaching Academy which worked well to support small scale service improvements.
  • The trust’s vision and values were embedded in practice. These informed performance reviews and staff felt they were meaningful.
  • Clinical directorates had individual five year strategies that were linked to trust’s strategy, aims and objectives. The directorate strategies had consideration of the other clinical departments they worked with to deliver high quality care and the assistance required from corporate directorates and other partners.
  • There were concerns regarding the emergency department at the Northern General Hospital this included the clinical decision unit. Specifically we had concerns regarding the quality of care of patients during times when the department was busy.
  • There were concerns regarding the clinical decision unit specifically regarding the monitoring and escalation of deterioration patients in the seated area of this unit. We raised this with the trust at the time of inspection and a protocol was put in place.
  • The introduction of a new IT system had resulted in the trust not being able to record performance targets in the emergency department.
  • There were variable levels of compliance with mandatory training.
  • There was variation in the quality and completeness of Do Not Attempt Resuscitation (DNACPR) forms.
  • In medicine, there were concerns regarding the access to nursing guidelines that were held electronically and could not always be accessed by all nursing staff. Care needs were conveyed between nurses using verbal communication or handover sheets rather than referring to the nursing care plan.

We saw several areas of outstanding practice including:

  • The patient care and experience delivered by staff in the Bev Stokes Day Surgery Unit, particularly in relation to patients living with learning disabilities and dementia, was outstanding.
  • The duty floor anaesthetist role in theatre developed in Sheffield was going to be used by the Royal College of Anaesthetists as a beacon of good practice.
  • A relative’s room had been developed within the operating theatre complex.
  • On GICU /GHDU, there was the use of an electronic patient information system to ensure timely and accurate records, access to trust and local policies, procedures and guidelines The system ensured effective care was delivered and it was fully integrated and provided real-time information across teams and services.
  • An advanced clinical pharmacy service which included a consultant pharmacist and pharmacy prescribers had been developed to improve the safety and efficacy of medicines used in critical care.
  • The use of the Enhanced Recovery After Thoracic Surgery (ERAS) programme had resulted in marked improvements in the quality of care for patients on CICU.
  • The laboratory team had introduced a ‘Patient Safety Zone’ project into the inpatient wards and in the community. The aim was to reduce labelling errors. Disturbance or distraction while taking blood samples has been identified as a major risk factor for errors. This initiative had been introduced to improve patient safety. Pathology staff showed us lots of publicity material, including branded biro pens.
  • In laboratory medicine, we observed large screens above the bench dealing with urgent samples. It contained a full list of patients waiting for results in the emergency department. The same screens were on display in the emergency department. This meant laboratory staff could see exactly who was waiting in the emergency department and gave context and ‘humanity’ to the samples they were analysing. Urgent results for the emergency department samples were available in one hour because of the use of this management tool.
  • Radiology provided an excellent service of ‘hot reporting’ for reporting x-rays for the emergency department patients; results were ready within 20 minutes.
  • There were numerous examples where staff went out of their way to meet individual’s needs. Staff demonstrated acts of kindness and flexibility to ensure patients and families suffered as little distress as possible.
  • A culture of innovation and improvement was evident throughout all levels of the organisation. For example, geriatric medicine had historically been part of acute medicine but was now combined with community services. It was hoped this would help improve integrated pathways for elderly patients between acute and community services and facilitate provision of services in the community to enable elderly patients to be cared for at home whenever possible.

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

Importantly, the trust must:

  • The trust must ensure patients do not wait longer than the recommended standard for assessment and treatment in the emergency department.
  • The trust must ensure that on initial assessment in the “pit stop area” in the emergency department patient’s vital signs are taken and recorded consistently.
  • The trust must ensure that patients in the clinical decisions unit have timely clinical reviews.
  • The trust must monitor performance information to ensure 95% of patients are admitted, transferred or discharged within four hours of arrival in the emergency department.
  • The trust must ensure robust escalation processes are implemented in the emergency department.
  • The trust must ensure arrangements for governance within the emergency department operate effectively.
  • The trust must ensure the safe storage of intravenous fluids.
  • The trust must ensure doctors follow policy and best practice guidance in relation to the prescription of oxygen therapy.
  • The trust must ensure a strategy for end of life care is implemented.
  • The trust must ensure that DNACPR records are fully completed.

In addition the trust should:

  • The trust should ensure that staff have attended mandatory training in accordance with the trust target.
  • The trust should improve the compliance rates for medical and nursing staff receiving an annual appraisal.
  • The trust should implement plans to increase nurse staffing in the emergency department to ensure there are appropriate staffing levels at all times.
  • The trust should continue to review the provision of 24 hour consultant medical cover within the emergency department as part of being a major trauma centre.
  • The trust should review and implement standards of record keeping, risk assessments and the documentation of care given in the emergency department so staff have the complete information they require before carrying out care and treatment.
  • The trust should continue to take action to ensure the emergency department achieve the recognised standard of 15-minute arrival by ambulance to handover to emergency department.
  • The trust should review guidance in the emergency department to ensure it reflects current evidence-based guidelines.
  • The trust should review the experience of patients to ensure privacy and dignity is maintained in the emergency department, particularly during busy periods.
  • The trust should ensure staff follow policy and best practice guidance in relation to the administration of intravenous fluids.
  • The trust should review the use of nursing care guidelines and ensure they are consistently available for all staff providing patient care, to enable accountability for care provided.
  • The trust should try to reduce the movement of staff to clinical areas outside of their speciality.
  • The trust should introduce a robust process to share lessons learnt from incidents and mortality and morbidity reviews across directorates and care groups.
  • The trust should ensure it reviews the process for the appropriate testing of all medical equipment used for patient care in the critical care units.
  • The trust should ensure that there are appropriate weaning plans in place for all patients with tracheostomies and that these are made in timely way.
  • The trust should consider reviewing review data collection methods and the process for submitting ICNARC data for Cardiac Intensive Care, so that patient outcomes can be benchmarked with other similar services.
  • The trust should consider reviewing the critical care services in line with the Core Standards for Intensive Care Units 2013 to address areas where they are not meeting these standards.
  • The trust should consider reviewing the computer provision on CICU.
  • The trust should consider the implementation of the electronic patient clinical information system on CICU so there is alignment with the other critical care units.
  • The trust should consider a process for obtaining patient feedback following discharge from critical care.
  • The trust should monitor preferred place of care for patients at the end of life.
  • The trust should review implementation of NICE urinary incontinence in neurological disease for outpatients in the spinal injuries unit.
  • The trust should review the fracture clinic environment to ensure meet the needs of patients.
  • The trust should routinely collect waiting time information for patients waiting for appointments.
  • The trust should develop standard procedures for completing interventional radiology non-surgical safety checklists for all staff to follow.
  • The trust should consider undertaking regular audits of patient electronic records to ensure consistency in the completion of MRI safety checklist and pregnancy checks.
  • The trust should continue to take action to reduce the number of medical outlier patients across the trust.
  • The trust should continue to take action to reduce the number of bed moves patients experience during their hospital stay.
  • The trust should monitor access to records in the outpatient departments.

Professor Sir Mike Richards

Chief Inspector of Hospitals

16, 18 September 2013

During a routine inspection

In preparation for this inspection we reviewed all the information we hold about this location. We contacted Healthwatch Sheffield, Monitor and NHS Sheffield Clinical Commissioning Group.

During our visit we spoke with 49 members of staff including the trust executive team, senior managers, matrons, medical staff, support workers, domestic staff and students.

We spoke with 59 people using the service and nine family members. We also reviewed 24 sets of care records and 16 sets of staff files. We visited Accident and Emergency (A&E), Medical Admissions Unit (MAU), Surgical Assessment Centre (SAC), Huntsman 4 (Orthopaedics), Brearley 1 (Respiratory), Bev Stokes Day Unit and Princess Royal Spinal Injuries Unit wards Osborn 1 (Acute) and Osborn 3 (Rehabilitation).

The majority of people using the service and relatives we spoke with told us that they were receiving good care. Some comments included 'The care I've had has been second to none' and "They've been fantastic.'

The majority of the people that we spoke with were positive about the staff, their skills and ability to undertake their roles. Some comments included 'The staff here are fabulous. They are a good bunch' and 'Some work beyond the call of duty.'

We found that people using the service, their relatives and staff were asked for their views about care and treatment in the hospital and they were acted upon. We found that there were appropriate systems in place for monitoring quality and managing risk.

14, 20 December 2012

During a routine inspection

During our visit on 14 December 2012 we spoke with 28 members of staff and 14 people who used the service. We looked at nine sets of patient medical and nursing notes.

We visited four inpatient wards; Hadfield 3 (geriatric medicine), MAU 1 and MAU 3 (medical assessment units) and Huntsman 4 (orthopaedics).

During the second visit on 20 December 2012, we met with various members of governance staff to discuss the quality and governance structures within the trust.

People told us that they were satisfied with their care and treatment. People were complimentary about the staff and told us that they felt well looked after. We observed respectful and positive interactions on the wards between staff and patients. We found that medical and nursing records and risk assessments were in place and clearly recorded.

We found that people who used the service were protected from the risk of abuse. People who used the service that we spoke with during our visit told us that they felt safe in the hospital.

We found that the trust had an effective system to regularly assess and monitor the quality of service that people received.

5 January 2012

During a routine inspection

During our inspection visit conducted 5 January 2012 to the accident and emergency department we talked with a number of patients who had been admitted to the department.

Patients told us they had been happy with their care and kept well informed, for example, explaining 'care had been really good'. They explained how staff had been friendly and helpful with more than one patient stating that 'staff were lovely' and another patient stating 'staff were excellent, very caring and very concerned [for the patient]'.

23 March 2011

During a themed inspection looking at Dignity and Nutrition

Both inpatient and outpatients surveys indicated that Sheffield Teaching Hospitals scored highly on patients being treated with respect and dignity. They also scored highly on questions relating to nutrition.

The wards we visited both had 28 patients' beds. There were 14 patients based in single sex bays and 14 patients in single rooms.

Patients told us that the staff offered them the opportunity to have a say in how their needs could be met, had taken note of their views, had explained their treatment to them and would listen to them. Patient's comments included; 'Perfect staff, I've been alright here, they all treat me well, they treat me with respect you see'. And, 'Staff are absolutely brilliant, kind and thoughtful'. Four relatives told us the staff were considerate of people's needs. One relative said, 'We are very happy with the way all the staff care for and speak to my relative'.

Overall, patients told us that staff offered them appropriate support to meet their personal care needs. Patients we spoke to said they had no concerns or complaints about their care or treatment at the hospital.

On the wards we visited they had strategies in place to ensure patients' nutritional needs were met. There were 'protected meal times', which means that patients are not disturbed during their meals, and nutritional assessments and care plans. We spoke to seven patients and four relatives to find out whether their hydration and nutritional needs were met during their hospital admission. Patients told us they had access to drinks and snacks at all times. One patient said, 'There is always ample to drink, they fill up water jugs all the time'. And 'We can have toast or a biscuit if we get hungry'. Two relatives told us that the staff were monitoring (their relatives) food intake.

We asked patients for their views of the food served to them. They told us;

'I'm satisfied with the meals they're alright'.

'Food, I think it's very good, I can have a choice, but I just eat what's given me, doesn't worry me what I eat'.

Overall we found the organisation of the mealtimes on the wards were different. On one ward we saw patients experienced a more organised service led by senior staff. This was observed to positively affect the patient experience.