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Care Services

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Rosebank House, Caversham, Reading.

Rosebank House in Caversham, Reading is a Hospitals - Mental health/capacity specialising in the provision of services relating to assessment or medical treatment for persons detained under the 1983 act, caring for adults under 65 yrs, caring for people whose rights are restricted under the mental health act, mental health conditions and treatment of disease, disorder or injury. The last inspection date here was 8th September 2017

Rosebank House is managed by Elysium Healthcare Limited who are also responsible for 10 other locations

Contact Details:

Ratings:

For a guide to the ratings, click here.

Safe: Good
Effective: Good
Caring: Good
Responsive: Good
Well-Led: Good
Overall: Good

Further Details:

Important Dates:

    Last Inspection 2017-09-08
    Last Published 2017-09-08

Local Authority:

    Reading

Link to this page:

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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.

1st January 1970 - During a routine inspection pdf icon

We rated Rosebank House as good because:

  • Staff and patients reported feeling safe on the unit. Staff carried out regular environmental and ligature risk assessments. The unit met the department of health guidance on same sex accommodation. Staff never used restraint and patients and staff reported a calm and stable atmosphere.

  • We reviewed five care records and found risk assessments present and up to date in all five. Staff updated risk management plans and discussed risk at multidisciplinary team meetings. Staff encouraged positive risk taking.

  • Staff completed care plans with patients and encouraged patients to be involved in decisions about their care and treatment. Staff used recognised rating scales to measure progress. All patients had a discharge plan and a target discharge date.

  • Staff monitored physical health care effectively. Many patients had physical health concerns and all had clear care plans to manage their physical health needs.

  • Staff kept prescription and medicine charts in good order. Staff checked for gaps or discrepancies in medicine charts at each handover and carried our regular medicine audits.

  • Staff were aware of patients’ individual needs. The new occupational therapy team intended to source community resources for older people and we saw evidence of staff meeting the needs of one patient with particular communication needs.

  • Staff and patients contributed to multidisciplinary team meetings.The full range of mental health disciplines provided input into the unit. The provider was working with staff and patients to encourage continued recovery based practice suitable for a rehabilitation environment.

  • Staff received appropriate training and support. Compliance with mandatory training was high and staff accessed regular supervision, appraisals and attended team meetings.

  • Staff interacted with patients in a caring and respectful manner at all times. Patients attended daily planning meetings and regular community meetings and staff encouraged them to contribute.

  • Patients knew how to raise a complaint and staff handled these appropriately.

  • Staff reported they knew senior managers in the organisation and felt supported by the new provider. All staff spoke positively about the team ethos and spirit and enjoyed working at the unit. Staff knew how to raise concerns and felt safe to do so.

However:

  • Staff sickness was high at 9 per cent and three out of five qualified nursing posts were vacant. The provider used regular agency staff where possible to provide continuity and offered incentives to potential new applicants.

  • At the time of the inspection, we were not clear on the processes for reporting safeguarding concerns. Following the inspection the registered manager confirmed the process had been agreed with the responsible local authority.

  • There was no record on the incident forms or in meeting minutes of what lessons were learned and no evidence of actions taken as a result of incidents. However, staff reported incidents appropriately and the registered manager informed us learning from incidents was shared at team meetings.

  • The unit risk register did not reflect current risks and did not feed into the wider risk register for the organisation. Senior managers were addressing this issue.

  • The consultant assessed capacity to consent to admission and treatment on a regular basis. However we found no evidence that staff assessed capacity or recorded best interest decisions in relation to any other decisions.

 

 

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