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Care Services

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Geolis Care, Sale.

Geolis Care in Sale is a Homecare agencies specialising in the provision of services relating to caring for adults over 65 yrs, caring for adults under 65 yrs, dementia, learning disabilities, mental health conditions and personal care. The last inspection date here was 8th July 2017

Geolis Care is managed by Mr. Dean Oliver Dervan.

Contact Details:

    Address:
      Geolis Care
      3A School Road
      Sale
      M33 7XY
      United Kingdom
    Telephone:
      07708252958

Ratings:

For a guide to the ratings, click here.

Safe: Requires Improvement
Effective: Requires Improvement
Caring: Good
Responsive: Good
Well-Led: Inadequate
Overall:

Further Details:

Important Dates:

    Last Inspection 2017-07-08
    Last Published 2017-07-08

Local Authority:

    Trafford

Link to this page:

    HTML   BBCode

Inspection Reports:

Click the title bar on any of the report introductions below to read the full entry. If there is a PDF icon, click it to download the full report.

31st May 2017 - During a routine inspection pdf icon

We inspected Geolis Care on 31 May and 01 June 2017. We gave the provider 48 hours' notice we would be visiting the office to make sure the appropriate people would be there to assist us with our inspection.

At the time of our inspection, Geolis Care was providing support to four people in the Trafford area. Care workers were supporting the people using the service in a range of ways, including assistance with washing and dressing, social outings, meal preparation and domestic tasks such as cleaning.

The service was not required to have a registered manager as the provider was registered as an individual. This meant he acted as the provider and manager of the service. Registered providers are 'registered persons'.

Registered persons have legal responsibility for meeting the requirements in the Health and Social Care Act 2008 and associated Regulations about how the service is run.

At the last inspection we found issues with the way medicines administration had been recorded. At this inspection we found medicines were now being recorded safely.

At the last inspection we found that the registered provider did not document interviews for new care workers or record how any gaps in their employment history had been explored. We found these issues had not been fully rectified at this inspection.

At the inspection we found there had been some improvements made in relation to assessing people’s mental capacity and recording people’s medicines safely. However, we have identified continued breaches in relation to recruitment of new staff, training and the undertaking of a quality assurance system was still not being completed.

At the last inspection people known or thought to lack mental capacity had not been assessed for their ability to make decisions or give consent to care. At this inspection we found nobody receiving the service lacked capacity, therefore mental capacity assessments did not need to be completed by the service.

Newly recruited care workers did not receive a full induction and the provision of training for all care workers was poor. In addition, care workers did not receive formal supervision or appraisal.

The registered provider did not monitor, audit or quality assure the service for safety or care quality.

People saw regular care workers and told us that they arrived on time and stayed for the full duration of the time allotted for each care visit.

People told us that they felt safe with the care workers. We noted from the training matrix safeguarding adults training was not provided to staff. However, staff we spoke with could give examples of the different forms of abuse they needed to look out for and said they would report any concerns to the registered provider.

The people receiving support with food shopping and meal preparation gave us positive feedback about this aspect of their care. Those supported by care workers to make appointments with other healthcare professionals were also satisfied with the assistance they received.

None of the people or relatives we spoke with had made a formal complaint. All of the people we spoke with said they felt able to speak directly to the registered provider if they had any problems.

We found breaches of the Health and Social Care Act (HSCA) 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulation 2014.

You can see what action we have told the provider to take at the back of the full version of the report.

 

 

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