Updated 28 January 2019
Not used
This is an organisation that runs the health and social care services we inspect
Updated 28 January 2019
Not used
Updated 28 January 2019
Our rating of the trust stayed the same. We rated it as requires improvement because:
However:
Updated 27 September 2024
Pennine Care NHS Foundation Trust was formed in 2002 as a mental health trust. The trust has an income of approximately £280 million and employs more than 4,300 staff. Pennine Care NHS Foundation Trust provides inpatient, community and specialist mental health services across the areas of Bury, Heywood, Middleton and Rochdale, Oldham, Tameside and Glossop and Stockport to a total population of 1.3 million people, providing care to over 70,000 people in 2023/24.
The trust provides 150 different services including:
The trust also provides mental health services for military veterans across the whole of Greater Manchester, working in partnership with other trusts which cover Lancashire, Cheshire and Merseyside.
This assessment covered the mental health wards for older people only. It was a responsive assessment which was triggered due to concerning information we received about several of these wards between June and October 2024 from complaints, whistleblowing concerns and notifications from the trust. The assessment included an on site inspection of all 9 of the trust’s wards for older people which took place on 4, 5, 6 and 7 November 2024. We gathered information from patients and their loved ones, staff and managers, other stakeholders and our own observations of care. We reviewed a range of documents including care records, policies and procedures. We looked at 28 quality statements.
We rated the service as requires improvement. We found 5 breaches of the Regulations in relation to person-centred care and involvement of patients, consent to care and treatment, patient safety, governance and staffing.
Care plans did not usually show how care was centred on the individual or that their views and the views of their carers and close relatives had been taken into account in a meaningful way. Due to vacancies in occupational therapy teams and other pressures on ward based staff, patients did not always have access to a good range of meaningful and health-promoting activities on the wards. Where patients lacked the capacity to consent to their care and treatment this was not always formally assessed for specific decisions in line with the expectations of the Mental Capacity Act and records of decisions taken in patients’ best interests did not always show how this process included the safeguards required by the Act. Where risks relating to specific aspects of people’s care had been identified, for example relating to falls or specific health conditions, they did not always have clear plans of care setting out how these risks would be mitigated.
The trust’s governance systems, for example records audits, did not always have the capacity to identify shortfalls in people’s care and some areas of care, for example compliance with the Mental Health Act and Mental Capacity Act were not subject to any documented quality monitoring process at the time we inspected. Although the wards were usually staffed to safe levels, we saw a high use of temporary staff to cover vacancies, staff sickness and enhanced clinical need on the wards and the systems for induction and training of temporary staff did not always ensure that staff were familiar with the wards and the needs of the patients they were caring for. Substantive staff were not always up to date with their mandatory training and supervision sessions. The mandatory training for staff did not always fully equip them to meet the needs of the patients they were caring for, for example many staff caring for people living with dementia had not received any dementia awareness training as this was not a mandatory training module at the time we inspected.
However, the wards were usually safe and clean and staff complied with infection prevention and control best practice such as handwashing and use of personal protective equipment. Patients had access to the equipment they needed to be safe and to maintain their independence, such as mobility aids. Clinic rooms were kept clean and tidy and medicines were stored safely. Patients had access to the medicines they needed to support their mental and physical health. Much of the care we observed was compassionate and patients told us that staff generally treated them well and were able to meet their needs. Levels of physical restraint and other restrictive practices such as seclusion were low. Staff usually complied with the requirements of the Mental Health Act and patients detained under the Act were aware of their legal rights. Patients had access to medical care when they needed it and were able to participate in weekly reviews of their care at multi-disciplinary ward rounds. Patients had access to independent advocacy on all wards and accessible information about the service was displayed and made available in introductory packs when they were admitted. Staff and patients told us they were aware of how to raise concerns and said they would feel safe to do this if needed. There were governance systems in place which ensured that shortfalls in care quality were usually escalated to the trust’s Board of directors via appropriate sub-committees so action could be taken at an organisational level to improve.
Action we have taken
We have asked the provider for an action plan in response to the concerns found at this assessment relating to patient safety, governance and consent to care and treatment.
In instances where CQC have decided to take civil or criminal enforcement action against a provider, we will publish this information on our website after any representations and/or appeals have been concluded.
Updated 9 December 2016
Pennine Care NHS Foundation trust adult community provides services across six Greater Manchester boroughs or local authorities. Bury, Oldham, Rochdale, Heywood, Middleton and Trafford.
Adult services are commissioned by four clinical commissioning groups (CCG’s). Bury; Oldham; Rochdale, Heywood and Middleton and Trafford. Services are configured to match the CCG locations.
Adult nursing and therapies services provided by the trust includes:-
Overall rating for this core service Requires Improvement
We rated this service as requires improvement because.
However
Updated 9 December 2016
We rated the community children, young people, and families services (the services) at the Pennine Care NHS Foundation Trust (the trust) as good.
This was because: -
Care and treatment across the children, young people and family’s services was provided in line with national and professional guidance and evidence based practice. Staff across all four of the boroughs (Bury, Oldham, Heywood Middleton and Rochdale, and Trafford) treated children and young people as individuals and involved them in their care and, when appropriate, in decisions about their care. Although not all services were open seven days a week, individual services worked flexibly to provide additional clinics in the evenings and weekends. To bring services closer to the local population clinics and appointments were provided in local children’s centres.
Staff were familiar with the trust’s incident reporting policy and understood their responsibilities to report safety and clinical incidents. People were told when things went wrong, and learning from incidents was shared at local levels within teams and boroughs, and across the organisation through emails, written bulletins and newsletters.
Reporting systems were in place to protect people from harm, abuse and neglect, and staff understood where they could obtain further advice on safeguarding issues. We saw evidence of referrals being made to other professionals and multi-agency teams when staff had concerns about children’s safety.
Staff were competent and passionate about the care and treatment they provided to children, young people and families, and there was effective multidisciplinary working within teams. However, some services we visited were experiencing capacity challenges, and longer waiting times, because of increased demand for their services. Plans had been put in place to improve waiting times in the affected services. Although we were told about one internal waiting list used in the children’s services in Heywood, Middleton and Rochdale, overall the plans put in place by services were showing evidence of improvement in waiting times as a result.
A new electronic computer system was being introduced across the trust, and there was varied progress towards the implementation of this across the services and boroughs. However, technology was used well to engage children, young people, and families with services. This included the introduction of Chat Health by the school nurse service, which enabled children and young people to book appointments with school nurses and ask health related questions. The Sugar3 (Sugar Cube) mobile phone app helped children with type 1 diabetes monitor and self-manage their condition. Plans were in place for all the services to develop a text messaging telehealth service called Florence (FLO). This was to help patients at home benefit from motivation and prompting; questions or education; or to report symptoms and home measurements.
Leaders of the services recognised the ethnically diverse population within each borough, areas of deprivation, and specific health issues affecting their communities. The services worked with the local community to ensure health visiting services met the cultural and religious needs of the local community. Although translation services were available throughout the services and boroughs, we saw little evidence of public health information being displayed in other languages in the treatment centres we visited.
There was good public engagement by the services through local patient forums and support groups. Carers and parents spoke positively about staff and the care provided to their children.
However,
There was a risk to the safety of people who used the school nurse service for vaccinations. This was because the service could not guarantee the ‘cold chain’ (ensuring an appropriate temperature range) for the storage and transportation of vaccines and medications as maximum and minimum storage temperatures were not recorded. Vaccines and medications stored outside the recommended temperature range may not be effective.
The Oldham children’s nutrition and dietetics service did not maintain accurate, complete, and contemporaneous records in respect of each service user. Records were of poor quality and did not always indicate what actions staff had taken following previous reviews of children within the service. This increased the risk that children were not kept safe because they may not receive continuity of care.
Care and treatment provided by the Heywood, Middleton and Rochdale speech and language therapy and occupational therapy services were not always provided in a timely way. This was due to high demand for the service and increasing caseloads, leading to long waiting times for treatment.
Staff understood and engaged with the trust’s strategy and vision; however, some staff were unsettled by the pace of commissioning and tendering changes, and were concerned about the future
Although some services were working towards agreeing consistent treatment pathways and procedures across borough boundaries, some staff told us they did not feel the boroughs worked together.
Updated 28 January 2019
This service has not been inspected before. We rated it as good because:
However:
Updated 9 December 2016
Overall rating for this core service Good lWe rated Community inpatients at Pennine Care NHS Foundation Trust as good.
This was because:
However,
Updated 9 December 2016
Overall rating for this core service Requires Improvement
We have rated this service overall as requiring improvement. This is because:
Updated 28 January 2019
This was the first rating inspection of the Urgent care services.
We rated it as requires improvement because:
The service had put some systems to manage risk so that safety incidents were less likely to happen. However, these were recently developed and were not yet embedded sufficiently to provide the service with assurance that can recognise risks and take appropriate action in a timely manner.
The leadership, management and governance of the walk-in centre did not always assure the delivery of high-quality and person-centred care. There had been a recent review of the governance arrangements which had brought about strengthening of the vision and strategy for the future development of the service.
Systems and processes to ensure staff learned from the incidents and complaints to improve their practice were not consistent to provide appropriate learning for staff. This issue was being addressed as part of an improvement plan.
Staff did not consistently receive suitable supervision or mandatory training to meet their job roles. There was inconsistency noted from staff in their involvement in meetings and awareness of support from senior managers.
Systems were in place to ensure patients were safeguarded from abuse and harm.
Staff involved and treated patients with compassion, kindness, dignity and respect.
Patients could access care and treatment from the service within an appropriate timescale for their needs.
The facilities and premises were appropriate for the services that were delivered.
The service took account of patients’ needs and choices.
There was now a focus on improvement and learning in the team.
Updated 9 December 2016
We rated child and adolescent mental health wards as outstanding because:
The wards provided safe, secure environments. There were effective systems to maintain safety and security.
The Royal College of Psychiatrists’ quality network for inpatient child and adolescent mental health services review team had assessed the service in 2015 and both wards were accredited, Horizon as excellent.
Staff respected and valued patients as individuals and empowered them as partners in their care. There was a strong, visible person-centred culture. Putting patients at the centre of the service, involving and empowering them was clearly embedded. Staff treated patients with dignity, respect and kindness and the relationships between them were positive. These relationships were highly valued by staff and promoted by managers.
The emphasis on patient involvement was obvious across the service. There was a genuine commitment from all staff. Patients were involved in recruiting staff and the young people’s council had a voice in governance. Through the council, patients were actively involved in plans for service developments and improvements.
There was a strong recovery focused ethos. Staff worked within the principles of the ‘my shared pathway’ model. They focused on helping patients to concentrate on their goals for recovery and the progress they had made towards the outcomes they wanted to achieve. This meant that staff ensured patients did not stay in hospital longer than necessary and promoted patients’ early discharge.
There was a large, outdoor therapeutic space called the woodland retreat that was used by patients for time off the ward in a safe environment.
There was a good governance structure to drive the delivery of high quality person-centred care. Managers prioritised safe, high quality, compassionate care and promoted equality and diversity.
Managers encouraged continuous improvement and there was excellent commitment to quality improvement. There was a culture of collective responsibility across the service.
However:
There was a blanket restriction on the use of mobile phones.
We found that on one occasion when a patient was cared for in the extra care area, staff had not adhered to either the Mental Health Act Code of Practice or the trust policy and did not provide the necessary safeguards to the patient.
Updated 9 December 2016
We rated specialist community mental health services for children and young as GOOD because:
Staff managed patient’s risks. There was a proactive approach to managing patients on waiting lists. This meant staff were able to identify changes in risk and prioritise urgent cases.
There were processes in place to support safeguarding and the management of patients at risk. There were good links with local safeguarding bodies.
Patients had access to a range of psychological therapies in line with National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidance.
There was a multidisciplinary approach to the delivery of care. Staff groups worked together to meet the needs of patients.
Patients and parents were involved in decisions about their care and treatment. Feedback from patients was positive. We observed patients being treated in a respectful manner and with a caring and empathetic approach.
Patients and parents were able to give feedback on the care they had received and input into decisions about the service.
There were processes in place to manage adverse incidents and complaints. There was evidence that learning from incidents and complaints were shared across the service.
However
Not all staff were receiving regular managerial supervision. The service did not collate information on compliance with supervision. This meant that the service could not be assured that staff were supported in their role.
There were waiting lists in place in two teams. Some patients had not been seen within the 12 week to assessment and 18 week to commencement of treatment targets.
Whilst morale in the Bury and Oldham Healthy Young Minds teams was good. Staff told us that morale at Trafford Healthy Young Minds was mixed. The Trafford team was going through a process of organisational change. Some staff told us they did not feel engaged with the trust or with the change process.
Updated 9 December 2016
We rated Pennine Care NHS Foundation Trust community mental health services for people with learning disabilities as good because:
However,
Updated 9 December 2016
We rated community-based mental health services for older people as good because:
However:
Updated 28 January 2019
Our rating of this service stayed the same. We rated it as requires improvement because:
However:
Updated 9 December 2016
We rated forensic inpatient/secure wards as good because:
the wards were bright, clean and well equipped.Patients’ rooms were en suite and they had ample space to store their belongings.
There were good security systems in place and these were appropriate for a low secure inpatient environment.
The trust were continuing to address least restrictive practice and were regularly reviewing rules and blanket restrictions on the wards.
Patients had multidisciplinary team involvement and access to evidence based interventions. Staff had the right qualifications and access to a range of training.
Care plans were comprehensive and reviewed regularly.
All the wards had a range of activities available seven days a week and including some evenings. Many of the activities took place within the local community and included access to education and training.
There was clear leadership in the service. Managers knew what was going on within the wards and were known to both staff and patients.
Staff engaged in a range of audits and were using the outcomes of these to review how effective their service was and to look for ways to improve.
However:
Updated 9 December 2016
We rated Pennine Care NHS Foundation Trust as good because:
However:
Updated 28 January 2019
Our rating of this service stayed the same. We rated it as requires improvement because:
Staff did not consistently monitor or document the effects of medication on patients’ physical health regularly and in line with National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidance, especially when the patient was prescribed a high dose of antipsychotic medication and rapid tranquilisation.
The trust had not fully implemented the schedule 5 recommendations to prevent future deaths, for example providing psychological input as a critical treatment to all inpatient wards and to introduce one information technology system.
Staffing levels were insufficient to fully facilitate patients accessing their planned leave, one to one time and access to outside recreational activities. Blanket restrictions were also in place on all the wards we visited.
Staff did not always complete care plans that were personalised, holistic and recovery orientated. They did not always meet the needs for patients with protected characteristics. Psychological therapies were not available across all wards. The trust electronic record system was not fully accessible across all teams.
The information provided for patients with a learning disability was not always in a form accessible to them. The service did not always make adjustments for disabled patients.
Psychiatric intensive care unit beds were not always available within the trust when a patient required more intensive care. Female patients were unable to access a psychiatric intensive care unit bed within the trust.
Patients had access to outside space. However, on most of the wards the outside space was either locked or patients had to be accompanied by staff apart from Norbury ward where patients had access to a small garden freely. Patients and staff reported access to leisure facilities on all sites were restricted due to staff availability to accompany patients.
Although the trust had implemented audits throughout the adult inpatient wards the documentation audit was not effective to provide assurance that the collaborative care planning had been fully implemented and that care plans were produced to meet individual needs.
However:
The wards were safe and clean and the trust had implemented appropriate systems for managing the risks to patients belonging to the opposite gender. Risk assessments were in place for all the patient records we looked at apart from one on Taylor ward where specific risks had not considered nor assessed.
There were skilled staff able to deliver care and multidisciplinary and interagency team work was well established.
Patients were given a full physical health check on admission and at regular intervals thereafter. Physical health needs including referral to specialist services were completed in a timely manner and advice given to promote healthier lifestyles.
Feedback from patients and comments cards we received about the care and treatment they received were mostly positive. Our observations of staff confirmed staff treated patients with compassion, dignity and respect and involved them in making decisions about their individual care and treatment.
Staff planned for patients’ discharge, including good liaison with care managers/co-ordinators.
Consultation with patients, carers and staff had taken place to assist the trust in making future decisions about eliminating mixed sex wards.
There was a clear statement of vision and values displayed throughout the wards we visited. Staff were positive about the new management and proud about their work. Staff felt able to raise concerns without retribution.
Updated 9 December 2016
We rated substance misuse services as GOOD because:
The building was clean and well maintained. There was good provision of facilities including consultation rooms and group rooms. A range of information was available to clients in the waiting room.
Staff assessed clients’ needs and risk on admission to the service. Assessments were comprehensive and reflected in treatment plans.
The service employed staff and volunteers with lived experience of addiction. This was in line with the recommendations of the Strang report (2012).
There were strong links with external services and the local recovery community. Clients were encouraged and supported to develop recovery capital and access support.
Staff were knowledgeable around safeguarding and understood trust policies and procedures in this regard. There were good links with local safeguarding bodies.
Staff treated clients with respect and understanding. Feedback we received from clients was positive. Clients were actively involved in decisions about their care and treatment. Support groups were run for family members and carers of clients.
There was a process in place to report adverse incidents. Staff knew how to report incidents and there was a process to launch a formal investigation where required. There was evidence of learning from incidents.
Senior management was a visible presence. Performance monitoring was in place.
However:
The introduction of a new service model had caused low staff morale. The new model was in response to changed funding levels. Staff had been consulted and invited to submit their own proposed service models.
Compliance with clinical supervision and annual appraisal was either low or hard to evidence.
Updated 9 December 2016
We rated community-based mental health teams for adults of working age as requires improvement because:
Information relating to the risks of patients were not included in patients’ care records.
Staff did not maintain an accurate, complete and contemporaneous record that included a plan of care. This meant that information needed to deliver care was not available to staff when needed.
Staff were not up to date with basic life support and fire safety training.
Copies of forms showing that patients had the capacity to consent to treatment were not attached to medication charts at any of the teams we visited.
Patients were not involved in making decisions about the service. There were no formal meetings for patients to attend to give feedback on the service.
Some teams did not have a target time for referral to assessment and treatment. We found little evidence of staff routinely planning discharges with patients.
Staff did not receive regular clinical supervision and there were no records of clinical supervision taking place. Staff at Bury early intervention team did not have access to regular team meetings.
However:
Caseloads within the teams were manageable. Cover was provided when staff were off work. Agency staff were employed to cover long term sickness.
Regular multidisciplinary meetings were held to discuss patients. Staff communicated effectively within the team and with other teams and organisations.
Patients told us they were actively involved in discussions about their care and treatment and were happy with the treatment provided.
We observed staff being supportive, caring and respectful towards patients who used services.
Staff made attempts to engage patients who had failed to attend their appointment. Staff also made efforts to engage with patients who were reluctant to engage.
Staff felt able to raise concerns and were supported by managers and their teams.