Chief Inspector of Hospitals rates East of England Ambulance Service NHS Trust as Requires Improvement

Published: 31 July 2019 Page last updated: 31 July 2019
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The East of England Ambulance Service NHS Trust has been told it must make improvements following an inspection by the Care Quality Commission.

The trust was rated as Requires Improvement overall as well as for whether its services were safe and effective following an inspection which took place in April and May this year.

It was rated as Inadequate for whether its services are well-led and remains rated Outstanding for whether its services were caring. It is rated as Good for whether its services are responsive.

While the trust’s overall rating has remain unchanged since CQC’s previous inspection in March 2018, the rating for whether services are well-led has changed from Requires Improvement to Inadequate and its rating for whether services are responsive has changed from Requires Improvement to Good.

CQC’s Chief Inspector of Hospitals, Professor Ted Baker, said:

“Our inspectors found that while some progress had continued at the East of England Ambulance Service NHS Trust, there were still a number of areas for concern where improvements were needed.

“We were particularly concerned that there had been significant turnover within the senior leadership team over the last 12 months. At the time of our inspection, key members of the board were in interim positions. We had concerns that the instability in the executive team could affect the trust’s ability to drive through necessary improvements.

“There continued to be a mixed culture at the trust. Not all staff felt that concerns were listened to and recently implemented strategies and initiatives, developed to improve performance, governance and staff welfare, were yet to be embedded.

“The services still did not have enough staff to care for patients and keep them safe despite a focus on recruitment and retention.  

“People continued to wait too long for services and response times, although improved, were worse than the England average. While the quality of services had not declined - and there were signs of improvement in specific areas - there were continued areas of breaches in regulation, such as with the safe management of medicines. We have told the trust it must take act immediately to make those improvements.

“Despite this, we found that staff were overwhelmingly caring and dedicated to providing the best care they could. As a result the trust remains rated as Outstanding for whether the service it provides for people is caring.  We saw outstanding practice in terms of the trust’s ability to respond to major incidents, with teams recognised for their work by external organisations. This included a certificate of appreciation from the Chief Fire Officer for the trust’s HART team – the specialist team which deals with major incidents - which saved a fire officer’s life at the scene of a fire.

“We fed our findings back to the trust immediately after our inspection, citing the areas where improvements must be made. The trust leadership knows what action it must take and we will return to inspect and check on its progress with improvements.”    

The trust has been told it must make a number of improvements including:

• The trust must ensure that systems and processes to safely administer, store, prescribe and medicines is consistently applied across the trust.

• The trust must ensure that it improves response times in emergency and urgent care and patient transport services.

• The trust must ensure that governance and risk management processes are embedded in all areas.

• The trust must ensure that processes in place for appraisals and supervision are consistently applied and demonstrate that staff are competent for their roles.

• The trust must ensure that it improves recruitment and retention to have enough staff to provide a safe and responsive patient transport service.

The East of England Ambulance Service NHS Trust provides emergency medical services to Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Essex, Hertfordshire, Norfolk and Suffolk; an area which has a population of around six million.

Full reports for the trust will be published on CQC’s website tomorrow (Wednesday) at the following link: www.cqc.org.uk/provider/RYC

Ends

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About the Care Quality Commission

The Care Quality Commission (CQC) is the independent regulator of health and social care in England.

We make sure health and social care services provide people with safe, effective, compassionate, high-quality care and we encourage care services to improve.

We monitor, inspect and regulate services to make sure they meet fundamental standards of quality and safety and we publish what we find to help people choose care.