The Sentinel

‘WE APOLOGISED TO THE PEOPLE WE SUPPORT AND THEIR FAMILIES’

‘Inadequate’ care home in special measures

- Gary Porter gary.porter@reachplc.com

THE owners of a Stoke-on-trent care home have apologised to residents and their families after it was placed in ‘special measures’ following a damning inspection report.

A string of ‘serious failings’ were uncovered by inspectors when they visited 202 Weston Road residentia­l care home in Meir.

As a result of the Care Quality Commission (CQC) inspection, which took place over two separate days in January, the home has been rated ‘inadequate’.

Weston Road, which caters for people who have learning disabiliti­es and autism, is now in special measures and must produce an action plan ahead of being re-inspected within six months.

The recently-published CQC report revealed that mould was discovered in one bedroom, parts of the home ‘had strong malodours and cleaning schedules were not regularly completed’, radiator covers were not in place putting people at risk of harm, and a recent fire evacuation form which identified required improvemen­ts had ‘no detail’ of how those would be achieved.

Other serious issues uncovered included staff ‘not always accurately recording accidents and incidents’, resulting in some cases potentiall­y not being reviewed ‘to ensure required action was taken’.

The report also revealed: “Staff informed us of one person’s identified health condition, however there was no risk assessment or guidance available for staff to follow to safely support this person.

“We requested this be addressed as a matter of urgency, and the provider acted to ensure a risk assessment was in place. However, following our inspection we were notified by the provider of an incident involving this specific healthcare need, and staff did not follow the protocol in place. This placed the person at risk of harm.”

The home had previously been rated ‘good’ back in 2019. But the CQC said its latest inspection ‘was prompted in part due to concerns received about people’s safety, staff training and oversight’.

The report states: “A decision was made for us to inspect and examine those risks. We undertook a focused inspection to review the key questions of safe, effective, and well-led only. For those key questions not inspected, we used the ratings awarded at the last inspection to calculate the overall rating.

“We have identified breaches in relation to safe care and treatment, the premises and equipment, need for consent, person-centred care and good governance. The overall rating for this service is ‘inadequate’ and the service is therefore in special measures.

“This means we will keep the service under review and, if we do not propose to cancel the provider’s registrati­on, we will re-inspect within six months to check for significan­t improvemen­ts.”

A spokespers­on for Lifeways, which runs the care home, said: “The safety and wellbeing of the people we support is our highest priority. We sincerely regret the findings of the CQC’S recent inspection of Weston Road, which was not fully consistent with the high standards we expect at Lifeways. We have apologised to the people we support and their families.

“Our internal governance systems had put in place an improvemen­t plan prior to the CQC inspection, and we have been working diligently, at pace, and in partnershi­p with Weston Road, the local authority and the CQC to implement the identified improvemen­ts. We responded immediatel­y to the environmen­tal concerns on the day of the inspection.

“Further improvemen­ts include new leadership at the service, a review of Deprivatio­n of Liberty Safeguards applicatio­ns, strengthen­ing of medication procedures, and an overall ongoing upgrade to the service environmen­t. We are confident that people we support and their families are already seeing a swift return to the highest standards of care.”

 ?? ?? DANCE CHANCE: Talented Evie Hodgkinson, of Stone, joined a profession­al performanc­e of Snow White after two years of dancing at the town’s Rooftop Studios. The 16-year-old linked up with the Midland Theatre Ballet’s production at Birmingham’s Crescent Theatre last month.
DANCE CHANCE: Talented Evie Hodgkinson, of Stone, joined a profession­al performanc­e of Snow White after two years of dancing at the town’s Rooftop Studios. The 16-year-old linked up with the Midland Theatre Ballet’s production at Birmingham’s Crescent Theatre last month.

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