Yorkshire Post

Trust put back in special measures

Hospital services deemed inadequate

- ALEXANDRA WOOD NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: ale. wood@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

NHS: A NHS trust which runs three hospitals in northern Lincolnshi­re and East Yorkshire has become the first in the country to go back into special measures after inspoctors rated some services “inadequate.”

Northern Lincolnshi­re and Goole NHS Foundation Trust had been placed in financial special measures over a £30m deficit.

A NHS trust which runs three hospitals in northern Lincolnshi­re and East Yorkshire has become the first in the country to go back into special measures for quality issues, following an inspection which rated its emergency services as “inadequate.”

The results of the Care Quality Commission’s latest inspection come weeks after it was revealed Northern Lincolnshi­re and Goole NHS Foundation Trust had been placed in financial special measures in the face of a £30m deficit.

CQC inspectors found significan­t concerns in urgent and emergency care, outpatient­s and maternity services at Diana Princess of Wales Hospital, in Grimsby, and Scunthorpe General Hospital.

Goole Hospital was not included in the inspection, having been rated “good” in October 2015.

The trust – whose interim chief executive Richard Sunley has apologised for “letting down” patients – was placed in special measures in 2013 by Sir Bruce Keogh, when its death rates were higher than expected.

It came off the blacklist in April 2014 following improvemen­ts.

However in the latest inspection from October to December 2016, the CQC found a number of services had deteriorat­ed, resulting in an overall rating of “inadequate.” Findings included: Growing numbers having to wait longer than necessary for outpatient appointmen­ts or inpatient treatments. Data from November 2016 showed two patients had been waiting for surgery for more than a year.

Inspectors were “not assured” emergency patients at Scunthorpe were offered food and water – out of 33 sets of notes reviewed, only one had documented that a patient had a drink of water.

Poor infection control practices at Scunthorpe General Hospital: In the emergency department several equipment trolleys were dirty and dusty, sharps bins were overflowin­g and cleaning schedules showed that the resuscitat­ion room had not been cleaned since April 2016.

Poor leadership and oversight in a number of services and at a senior level within the trust.

NHS Improvemen­t will work with the trust to help it bring about improvemen­ts.

Executive medical director for NHS improvemen­t Dr Kathy Mclean, said: “Coupled with additional leadership support, collaborat­ion in the local area, practical advice and the efforts to improve finances, we hope to help the trust turn things around so it can offer quick, safe and high quality services to patients long into the future.”

Interim chief executive Richard Sunley apologised for not meeting the standard patients expected and said they welcomed the extra support.

He said: “Whilst we had made some improvemen­ts since the inspection in October 2015 – our critical care, end-of-life care and community services have improved and are now ‘good’ – we recognise we have not addressed all the Care Quality Commission’s concerns.

“We are determined to move forward and make changes with pace and focus so we can consistent­ly deliver high quality standards for patients across all of our services.”

We are determined to move forward and make changes The NHS Foundation Trust’s interim chief executive Richard Sunley

 ??  ?? RICHARD SUNLEY: Apologised for letting down patients after critical inspection.
RICHARD SUNLEY: Apologised for letting down patients after critical inspection.

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