Official inspectors are about to visit a Brighton hospital for the second time in three weeks.
The Care Quality Commission (CQC) is sending about 40 inspectors to the Royal Sussex County Hospital, in Brighton, in a week’s time.
They are expected to spend four days at the Royal Sussex. They will also inspect other services run by the Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust.
The trust runs the Royal Alexandra Children’s Hospital and the Sussex Eye Hospital, in Kemp Town, and the Princess Royal Hospital, in Haywards Heath.
A report written for a meeting of the trust board at the Princess Royal Hospital today (Tuesday 29 March) by interim chief executive Amanda Fadero said: “A week today, around 40 CQC inspectors will arrive on site to begin a comprehensive, four-day inspection of our hospitals.
“Last week on Tuesday 15 March at the Royal Sussex County Hospital and on Wednesday 16 March at the Princess Royal they held a series of staff forums which we understand were very well attended.
“The strapline which we have used throughout the run up to this inspection, and in preparing our staff, is ‘be prepared, be honest, be proud’.
“We have made progress in some areas since their last visit while in some key areas we have not delivered the necessary improvement and, as ever, the only approach we can take is to be proud of what we do well and be clear and honest about the areas where our performance is below the required standards – and our plans to raise those standards to meet national requirements and, more importantly, the expectations of our patients and their families.
“In my last board report I set out what we need to do, under six priority areas, and these remain unaltered. For each of these we have continued to invest significant time, resource and energy and some examples of the actions we are taking are summarised below.
“To build on the work already under way to address the significant challenges we have in unscheduled care we have
- Introduced a new transformation team to work alongside the clinicians in the Emergency Department (ED) at the Royal Sussex County Hospital to bring more pace and rigour to the work to improve the physical environment and support the introduction and maintenance of new systems and processes, as recommended by ECIP (Emergency Care Improvement Programme), to improve the efficiency of the ED and the experience of our patients, including, for example, the implementation of single clerking and the redevelopment of the Urgent Care Centre.
- Commenced the roll out of a programme of work to ensure ward-based staff are using the software available via their electronic whiteboards to improve the real-time information we have about our bed state, the pace at which we can admit patients from the ED and the overall flow of patients through the hospital.
“To progress the £485 million redevelopment of the Royal Sussex County Hospital while managing and mitigating the impact of this on the day-to-day operational running of the hospital we have
- Introduced a new satellite parking scheme for staff permit holders working at the Royal Sussex County Hospital. From Monday 14 March we asked to staff to stop using the multi-storey car park on the north of the site and instead use a 100-space car parking facility we have secured at the far end of Eastern Road. The implementation of this has been relatively unproblematic and well-received and the benefits are already being felt by patients and visitors who previously had to queue for up to 90 minutes for a space in the multi-storey car park. In addition, because the queue for the car park has been entirely removed, the North Service Road is less congested and more accessible to the increased traffic associated with the 3Ts redevelopment.
“To improve support for and the engagement of our staff, appraisal rates, uptake of statutory and mandatory training and leadership development (with particular focus on medical engagement) we have
- Continued to build on the prolific programme of staff engagement and development events and opportunities including the team coaching approach which has now been delivered to 32 teams (or nearly 400 staff) and the Leading the Way Too management development course.
- Improved our staff appraisal rates from 50 per cent to 70 per cent in the last 12 months.
- Run an extremely well-received engagement event attended by speciality lead clinicians and clinical directors to begin a series of conversations about the changes which they perceive would enable us to decompress the Royal Sussex County Hospital site and achieve a better balance between urgent, planned and specialist care.
“To proactively work with our partners and stakeholders to build strong, productive and collaborative relationships we
- Attended the first Sussex and East Surrey Sustainability and Transformation Plan Programme Board to work with health and social care partners from across the patch in the development of our local health economy Sustainability and Transformation Plan – as set out in the National NHS Planning Guidance 2016-17 to 2020-21.
- Continue to work with Queen Victoria Hospital on the Strategic Outline Case for an innovative and collaborative approach to the provision of paediatric burns and lower limb trauma care. This case, which has been 18 months in the development, will be submitted to NHS England in early April.
“I want to finish by thanking all our staff, partners and stakeholders for their ongoing hard work and support during my tenure as interim chief executive and to warmly welcome our incoming chief executive, Dr Gillian Fairfield, to BSUH.”
If any of them look at this article please note: mattresses need inspection. When I was on the (PFI) renal ward in 2012 I was in agony from lying on 1/2 to 1 inch unsupportive, squashed down to useless, pads that serve as mattresses with the plain metal beneath creating pain in my poor spine and hip joints. It was no better than lying on a floor. And that is wrong. Has anybody dealt with that since? Same anywhere in the RSCH? Do they look at such issues?
Is it time to get patients to bring their own (plastic-encased) mattress pads?