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WLMHT Initial Response to Report of the Mid Staffordshire NHS Trust Public Inquiry – Report to the Board Introduction The report of the Mid Staffordshire NHS Trust Public Inquiry chaired by Sir Robert Francis was published in February 2013 and includes 290 recommendations, many of which relate to national professional, statutory and regulatory bodies and require a response from those agencies before the Trust will be in a position to describe plans to implement any required actions. Therefore, this report contains details of the Trust’s initial response to the recommendations and refers to areas where compliance has been established or where plans are in place to implement change in the light of the recommendations of the public inquiry. Background Concerns about mortality rates, patient safety and standards of care delivered at Mid Staffordshire Trust arose circa 2007. As a result, a number of investigations and reviews were commissioned, including one by the Health Care Commission which published its report in March 2009 and an Independent Inquiry chaired by Sir Robert Francis, the report of which was published in February 2010. What emerged from the investigations, reviews and first Francis inquiry was a horrifying picture of the Board of an acute Trust preoccupied with achieving challenging financial recovery and savings plans at the expense of patient care and safety in order to gain Foundation Trust status. The chain of negative impacts on quality of care has been well described in terms of extreme staff shortages, reliance on poorly trained and stressed, often unregistered staff at the clinical front line who were often uncaring and blunted to distress, paralleling the uncaring, bullying way they were in turn treated by their managers. Indeed, a culture of threat and bullying was revealed which permeated every level of the organisation, with the most vulnerable patients experiencing the greatest harm. Elderly, confused and frail patients were found to have been treated in dehumanizing ways, being denied dignity and support for the basic activities of living they were unable to manage because of their ill health. Also, patients whose admissions occurred as an emergency and who were treated through the Trust’s emergency care pathway were amongst those who suffered most, becoming victims of a target culture whereby pressure was applied on clinicians to accelerate patients through the pathway, prioritising the achievement of waiting time targets for example, over the care and treatment patients needed as a result of their 1 health conditions. Failures at every stage of the pathway from triage to discharge were identified. Patient safety was greatly compromised due to failure to meet cleanliness and infection control standards, not administering medications as prescribed, poor support and management of the care of people with mobility difficulties leading to falls, and poor care with regard to prevention and treatment of pressure ulcers. Essential equipment for patients’ treatment was in poor repair or lacking. The Trust was found to be inward looking, with the Board meeting in private and detached from the reality of the wider organisation, whilst inappropriately relying on external agencies and regulators for quality assurance. Data that suggested poor quality of care delivered at the Trust was met with denial followed by undue scrutiny around coding and data issues rather than concern about possible implications for patient safety. Senior clinicians, mainly consultants were described as disengaged from Trust management. In June 2010 the secretary of state for health announced a Public Inquiry into Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust to be chaired by Sir Robert Francis. Having established a clear and consistent description of the failings at the Trust in previous inquiries, the remit of the Public Inquiry was to examine the functioning, cultures and systems of commissioning, supervisory and regulatory organisations and other agencies in relation to their monitoring role at Mid Staffs and establish why problems were not identified sooner and to identify lessons to be learnt about assuring quality of patient care and safety. Findings - Report of the Mid Staffordshire NHS Trust Public Inquiry (2013) Many reviews had occurred and much data was available about aspects of care and safety at Mid Staffs but this had not been identified by the Trust or other agencies as predictive of or associated with extremely poor quality, including risk to patients. ‘Vestigial’ governance processes were described which were not fit for purpose and did not focus on the effect of the service on patients while the Trust took false assurance from the findings of external agencies whose assessments inevitably lacked depth. The Trust also took assurance from the fact other health care providers performed as badly rather than acting in a patient centred way and responding with concern about any detrimental effects on patient experience and safety. ‘Specious’ complaints and incident reporting occurred whereby exploration did not occur beyond surface presentations. There was not found to be any management culture of listening to patients or carers and no quality impact assessment of the major staff reductions that occurred to make financial savings. Poor medical but mostly nursing standards and performance were associated with a failure to take up the challenge of building a positive culture. Patient safety failures were associated with not appreciating the risks associated with disruption and also lack of corporate memory and focus due to repeated, multi – level reorganisations. External regulatory agencies were described as doing the system’s business not patients.’ 2 Recommendations As mentioned previously, not all of the 290 recommendations made by Francis (2013) require an immediate response from WLMHT as they either refer to actions required by external agencies or require those external agencies to make an initial response to which WLMHT will then be required to react. WLMHT Response Immediate Response The immediate response by WLMHT Board was to undertake critical self assessment during Board development sessions, identifying any obvious indicators or performance approximating the findings at Mid Staffs. The Trust identified a lead for the implementation of recommendations from the Mid Staffs Public Inquiry, the Interim Director of Nursing and Patient Experience. The Trust also agreed to cascade the findings of the Mid Staffs Inquiry throughout the Trust in order to generate comments and feedback from staff groups regarding any parallels with Mid Staffs and also with regard to ideas about improvement. To date numerous presentations have taken place within the Trust with more planned. Also, the Interim Director of Nursing and Patient Experience will support nominated staff from across the trust to present the report and generate feedback from within their teams, deeper into the clinical and corporate services. The Mid Staffs Inquiry was presented at the Trust Leadership Forum on 25th February and at the Trust Health Care Assistant and Support Worker conference on 18th March. It was central to the Trust learning lessons event on 1st May and the Trust annual safeguarding conference on 17th May. The Trust annual nursing conference on 3 rd July will focus on compassion in mental health nursing. Therefore, the Trust response will be continuous and evolve as part of an iterative process which incorporates feedback, ideas and actions from staff, service users and carers. Importantly, it will build on current good practices. Culture of Putting Patients First Whilst maintaining a strong focus on individual accountability, the Trust also recognises the impact of culture on staff attitudes and behaviour. The Trust accepts that patients must come first in all that we do. With regard to culture of the organisation, the Trust recognises that good staff engagement and support is a prerequisite for patient centred-ness and the high quality therapeutic relationships we want patients, service users and carers to experience as part of their recovery. The Trust is also aware that some members of staff feel alienated from the business of the Trust and that they are ‘done to’ rather than actively involved in decisions that affect them. Some staff also report feeling bullied. Additionally, some senior managers and directors feel unable to understand what generates and sustains this position. Furthermore, actions developed to resolve this picture appear to have failed to make a difference year on year. A number of new initiatives are planned to address this. Included is the drive towards a culture of engagement that encourages staff to speak out about their experiences at the Trust. That is evidenced by a series of listening events facilitated by the CEO, the introduction of a Staff Engagement Committee reporting to the Board, the introduction of staff reporters whose task is to each interview a cohort of 3 colleagues about their experiences at the trust and then report to the Board in a specially organised session utilising the fishbowl approach. The Board listen to the reporters’ feedback and then set time aside to carefully consider what they have heard. Action is then taken to improve staff experience and this will be planned and monitored through the Staff Engagement Committee. Each time staff reporters feed back to the Board, the consequent actions agreed are communicated within the Trust in a newsletter entitled ‘Action for Change.’ Also, feedback from the Health at Work team who have a specific perspective regarding staff experiences of the Trust will be used to inform strategies to improve. An organisational consultancy will be engaged whose remit will be to support the Trust to address complex aspects of workplace culture that may require work to occur ‘below the surface’ as well as above the surface. Openness, Transparency and Candour A principle of putting patients first involves acknowledging, apologising and providing clear support and information to patients and their families when things have gone wrong or safety compromised including how the organisation has responded and what lessons have been learnt. The Trust has in place a ‘Being Open’ policy which addresses these principles and will adhere to any further standards specified by the NHS Commissioning Board. Listening to Patients and Carers Patients and Carers are listened to within the Trust with several patient or service user and carer forums in place. The Meridian Patient Experience Feedback system has been invested in as a means of achieving real time feedback. Clinical teams are embedding the practice of improving the quality of patient and carer experience based on their feedback. All in - patient services have regular community meetings where patients and staff come together and patients are able to feedback on their experiences. Patient representation is included in local clinical improvement groups and governance meetings throughout the trust. Patients and carers regularly provide narratives prior to Board meetings, reporting their experiences of Trust services. Patients and carers provide training to staff throughout the trust regularly, based on their lived experiences at the Trust. The Trust is open to exploring further methods of gaining feedback, such as the ‘mystery shopper’ approach. Enhanced use of complaints feedback is being explored. A review of service user and carer involvement was commissioned in 2012 and the report of this review was presented to the Trust Board at the end of May 2013. The recommendations were accepted. A working group has been convened to implement the recommendations, beginning with developing a centralised, supportive, co-ordinated infrastructure for service user and carer involvement. Funding has been made available to support this initiative. A further development is the introduction of a patient or service user and carer led group which will actively challenge and hold the organisation to account with regard to the nature and quality of services delivered. The importance of carer involvement at all levels is positively encouraged. The Trust provides therapeutic family interventions with staff increasingly provided with encouragement, support and skills to work with families. 4 Programmes of carer support and education are increasingly available within Trust services. Welcome meetings are being piloted in some adult in – patient settings. These meetings are a forum for carers to meet with the multi disciplinary team treating their friend or family member, soon after admission, providing the carers with an opportunity to become oriented to the services, provide information to the treating team about the patient’s strengths, resources and needs while also asking any questions or sharing any concerns they may have. Additionally, The Triangle of Care (National Mental Health Development Unit 2010) has been introduced to services. Care, Compassion, Nurses and HCA’s The Trust nursing strategy is currently under review. The revised strategy will contain the following themes which concur with the recommendations of the Francis Report and the 6Cs of the National Strategy for Nursing: Compassion in Practice: Restructuring the Director of Nursing post. This will free up time for clinical practice and for support and engagement with front line nurses in both in-patient and community settings. Promoting compassion and the value and privilege of delivering standards of basic care, which will be measured and reported into the Trust Quality Committee. Centralised assessment centre for recruitment which will include an assessment of candidates’ aptitude for compassion, caring and the job overall. A new, more focused and competency based preceptorship programme for newly registered nurses to be completed within their first twelve months of qualification. Investing in quality of nursing within our Older People’s Services, including promoting its place amongst the other nursing specialties at the Trust and ensuring staff receive appropriate support, supervision, training and development within a career pathway. Emphasising the nursing contribution to multi disciplinary teams by building up evidence based practice and investing in training and supervision to support the transition of learning into practice within the specialist areas of psychosis, personality disorder and dual diagnosis, child and adolescent mental health (as well as older people’s services). This applicable to both community and in-patient settings. Investing in a staff clinical supervision project delivered by a team of international experts in the field. This project focuses on qualitative aspects of clinical supervision and aims for clinical supervision which is of an evidence based standard of effectiveness to be provided and received by staff within the Trust. 5 A HCA training programme informed by Trust HCA’s and Senior Nurses which is also in line with National HCA Training standards. Inclusion of the code of conduct for HCA’s and Support Workers in Trust job descriptions for these roles. Nurse staffing will be reviewed annually and the findings presented to the Quality Committee. A Trust-wide Senior Nurse ‘back to the floor’ programme will be initiated and centrally co-ordinated, increasing senior nurse visibility, role modelling and support to front line staff whilst ensuring senior nurses remain in clinical practice. Continuing to support nurses to make a key contribution to implementing the Recovery Approach in community and in-patient settings To embed a culture of nursing research, audit and evidence based practice supported by the key joint appointment with Buckinghamshire New University of the Professor of Mental Health The revised strategy will be presented for consultation at the annual Trust nursing conference on 3rd July 2013 where the keynote speaker is Jane Cummings, Chief Nursing Officer for England who will be presenting ‘Compassion in Practice.’ The focus of the conference will be on implementing ‘Compassion in Practice’ within a mental health nursing context. In March 2013 a HCA conference was held, which focused on Compassion, Recovery and the role of the HCA. Delegates identified their training needs and this information has been employed to inform a Trust wide standardised training programme for HCAs. Nurse staffing has recently been reviewed and the findings presented to the Quality Committee. When benchmarked against other Trusts providing similar services, Trust nurse staffing was favourable. As mentioned above, nurse staffing will be reviewed on an annual basis. Institute of Mental Health In partnership with HEI’s and led by the newly appointed Professor of Mental Health, WLMHT is exploring the development of an Institute of Mental Health which will bring together, in an integrated way, the many strands of workforce transformation and development, quality priorities and staff training ‘under one roof.’ The focus will be on generating evidence based practical skills, leadership development and team working. Importantly, training programmes will be directly responsive to the needs of patients and carers and informed by lessons learnt from patient and carer experience feedback, serious incident reviews and complaints, as well as from workforce related data. 6 Leadership With regard to developing leaders capable of facilitating a patient centred culture where patients and their families are treated with care and compassion and whose voices are heard and included in the business of the organisation, the Trust is implementing a comprehensive leadership development plan around a competency approach which utilises the Talent Management Framework. Quality The Trust Quality Strategy describes a comprehensive five year plan for quality improvement at the Trust. It is the central component of the Trust integrated business plan, reflecting the fundamental importance the Trust places on continuously improving the quality of clinical services. In keeping with the nature of recommendations from the Francis Report, one of the Trust Quality Priorities is that all patients must be treated with dignity, respect and compassion. Recovery is central to the model of care at the Trust and is and of itself a compassionate, patient centred approach to the delivery of mental health services. The Quality Strategy was approved by the Board in March 2013. With regard to the impact on quality of financial saving plans, the Trust has in place a process of quality impact assessment which must be completed in conjunction with any cost improvement plans. Recovery As mentioned, recovery is central to the model of care and the Trust has invested in the implementation of the recovery approach. The Trust was an ImROC pilot site for two years from 2011 and has now signed up as a member of ImROC part two whereby the focus of a bespoke programme is on embedding recovery practices in clinical teams. With the implementation of the recovery approach, patients and carers are considerably more active in the business of the trust with a number of experts by lived experience working alongside clinicians in the organisation. Board Contact with the Life of the Organisation The Board takes several steps to ensure it remains in contact with the life of the organisation, including the experiences of patients and staff. The Board listens to a patient or carer narrative prior to each meeting and board visits to corporate and clinical areas take place on a regular basis. Each month the Board reviews a complaint in detail. The Trust receives details of complaints, CQC visits and incidents each month and will receive an annual patient experience report. The Board is considering how to achieve more in depth review of patient complaints. Trust Response to Specific Recommendations The following matrix aims to provide details of the Trust response to specific recommendations of the Mid Staffs Inquiry. The Board is asked to approve the response to these recommendations. The next step would then be to inform a comprehensive action plan from the recommendations. 7 Themes from the report What we already do well Where we know we need to improve and what we are doing about it What is new for us from the report? Putting patients first Patients must be the first priority in all the NHS does by ensuring that, within available resources, they receive effective care from caring, compassionate and committed staff, working within a common culture, and protected from avoidable harm and any deprivation of their basic rights. The Trust engages proactively with patients across all services Staff engagement – the Trust has nominated ‘Reporters’ to act as staff correspondents who report to the Board regarding staff experience of the Trust and back to the organisation through Action for Change newsletters. The CEO hosts listening events. The Trust has set up a Staff Engagement Committee which reports to the Board Friends and Family test – this is now being taken forward nationally by NHS England; the Interim Director of Nursing is the nominated lead for the Trust. The NHS Constitution should be the first reference point for all NHS patients and staff and should set out values, rights, obligations and expectations of patients. Consider integrating patients through representatives into Trust structures The Trust is fully committed to the recovery approach and is participating in the ImROC programme, which puts patients at the centre of the care provided. The Trust has mature and effective engagement arrangements, such as patient / service user and An Action for Change workstream will ensure that carer forums across all services staff are made more involved in and aware of the results of Trust consultations in order to improve The Trust’s Meridian system is being rolled out involvement and transparency in decision making in order to record real time patient feedback The Staff Charter is being updated with the NHS The Trust ensures there is patient and carer Constitution and the versions for staff and engagement in Trust meetings and staff managers are being consolidated into a single recruitment Trust Charter to ensure inclusivity The Trust operates a programme of regular Board member visits to services and reports back to each Board meeting Patient and carer stories are presented to premeetings of the Board to present first hand accounts of the quality of our care The Forensic service has published a booklet of patients’ stories about their recovery journeys, to inspire those who are newly admitted or early on their treatment pathway References to NHS Constitution will be included in job descriptions and contracts with external agencies working at the Trust. The Trust is also The Trust commissioned an independent review including this in of service user involvement, the report of this was equality impact presented to Board in May 2013 and assessments and recommendations approved. A working group has staff codes. been convened from this which will implement the recommendations. Encourage communication A new patient-led group has been formed to add between staff and another layer of Board accountability for care carers, including by provided. e-mail The Trust is further developing its patient experience report to Board Explore how patients can access 8 The Trust is exploring the use of ‘mystery shoppers’ as a way of receiving feedback on quality of community services A pilot will be commissioned whereby MHA managers will undertake unannounced visits to Trust services Common culture Commitment to common set of values and accessible basic care and treatment standards and also: Openness, transparency and candour Strong leadership in all professions Support for leadership roles Level playing field for accountability Information accessible and used allowing comparison of performance by individuals, services and organisation The Trust’s revised quality strategy is strongly values-driven and includes a five year improvement programme, with established monitoring arrangements Learning lessons from CIPs – the Trust is setting up a Change Management Office to consolidate lessons learned from the implementation of saving schemes and reflect these in ongoing CIP planning and performance management user friendly information from their records and how they can enter their comments if they wish. Develop a systematic way of following up patients after discharge for feedback N/A The Trust’s values are embedded in the Integrated Business Plan, quality strategy and annual business objectives. The Reporter process and ongoing listening exercises will provide an opportunity to review progress against cultural priorities revealed by the Information is produced at CSU level and can be staff survey over the course of the year further disaggregated to give a comparable picture of effectiveness across the Trust The Leadership and Management development programme is being revised and aligned with the Board members meet regularly to undertake NHS leadership competency framework. structured development work. Relevant recent topics include feedback from staff reporters, the One CSU produced a booklet outlining lessons findings of the Francis report and the way learned from incidents, which is to be rolled out forward for the staff survey. across the Trust. Lessons learned from incidents are reviewed at the Patient Safety and Safeguarding Committee, with a range of local workshops also taking The Trust is producing updated guidance on whistleblowing to ensure staff are aware of how to raise concerns and feel comfortable in doing so 9 place. The Trust holds a central lessons learned openly. summit annually. Standards of service Fundamental basic standards of care need to be applied by all those who work and serve in healthcare. Behaviours at all levels need to be in accordance with at least these standards. Internal audit routinely reviews our compliance with a selection of CQC essential standards The Trust is establishing a standardised approach N/A to lessons learned following service changes / CIP implementation. The Trust’s clinical audit function has performed a Trust wide Patient Safety Audit, which was The Trust is developing a compliance register scoped around common themes / learning points where all compliance is registered and monitored. from Serious Incidents. The Trust is in proactive discussions with the The Trust also undertakes Enhanced CQC regarding their new visiting arrangements Engagement and Observation Audits across all and the role of the Chief Inspector of Hospitals. inpatient services, which are crucial to The regular series of liaison meetings is set to measuring and improving patient safety. continue. The Trust has developed clear service specifications in line with NICE guidelines for all services. This is complemented by a programme of clinical audit which assesses compliance with NICE guidelines and identifies any areas for improvement. The Trust currently has no breaches of CQC standards The Trust appraisal system reflects Trust values and staff are assessed in terms of their behaviours against these. The Trust proactively benchmarks its services against other Trusts and uses this information to inform the design and operation of our services. 10 Complaints handling Recommendations from Patients Association’s peer review into complaints at the Mid Staffs should be reviewed and implemented. Making a complaint should be easy and any concern made by a patient should be treated as a complaint unless the patient’s permission is refused. A senior clinician and nurse should be obliged to be involved in responding to complaints to facilitate a speedy resolution, wherever possible. Complaints relating to possible breaches of basic standards and serious complaints should be accessible to the CQC, relevant commissioners, health scrutiny committees, Communities and Local HealthWatch. Learning from complaints must be effectively identified, disseminated and made known to the complainant and the public, subject to suitable anonymisation. Complaints process is easily accessible for patients and carers and viewed as a key source of feedback by clinical staff and senior managers. All patients are made aware of the complaints process (contact telephone number, website, email address complaints team and PALS) and who they can raise their complaints with, including via the Advocacy service. This is consistent across the trust. Involvement of senior clinicians – senior clinicians and nurses are involved in undertaking complaint investigation and responding to complaints consistently across the trust. Where investigation is required, complaints are referred to the service director/head of service to appoint an investigator, usually a senior nurse manager or the responsible clinician. All reports and letters to patients resulting from the investigation are agreed with the service executive directors at the end of the investigation and signed off. The Trust tracks actions from complaints via the Exchange complaints database. The system captures the outcome of complaints and recommendations within each CSU. It is recognised that further work is needed to refine the complaints system to ensure that lessons are learnt and being implemented on an ongoing basis. Actions are discussed at relevant meetings within the CSUs to go through outstanding action plans from complaints. Centrally the actions are reported via the quarterly reports and statutory annual complaints reports which goes to the service user & carer experience sub-committee and Quality Committee for review and sign off. The Trust will publish anonymised details of clinically relevant upheld complaints on its website – subject to consent of complainant The Trust plans to develop a process to regularly review a sample of complaints against the findings of the All complaints are logged and compliance with Patient deadlines is monitored through the Exchange Association’s peer system within each CSU and escalated if not review. The compliant. The central governance team findings of this will monitors compliance through KPIs, IPR, patient be used to refine experience quarterly and annual report and the complaints statutory annual complaints report. These reports review process are provided to the Quality Assurance Committee, service user & carer experience sub-committee The Trust plans to and the Board. introduce a means of assessing The Trust’s PALS service has been ‘seeded’ into complainant the CSUs. The overall structure of the PALS satisfaction with the service will be reviewed once the new Director of process. Governance takes post (July 2013). While the Trust does notify complainants about lessons learned from their complaints, there is more work to do around embedding and monitoring change 11 Performance Management & Information Through Quality Accounts, full and accurate information about a Provider’s compliance or noncompliance with standards should be published and available on Trust website. Quality Accounts should contain observations of commissioners and overview and scrutiny committees. Providers should publish real time information on performance of their consultants and specialist teams in relation to mortality, morbidity, outcome and patient satisfaction, and on the performance of each team and their services against the fundamental standards. Real-time information must be provided to commissioners, regulators and the public should include statistics of outcomes, and safety-related information from investigations, complaints and incidents. Every provider organisation should have a designated board member as a chief information officer. Quality Account meets the DH requirements and has been independently audited by our external auditors – no significant issues raised. Commissioners and other stakeholders provide comments on our Quality Accounts which are reflected in the document. The planned replacement of RiO will further refine N/A the quality of the Trust’s performance data, including easier access to performance information. While performance information is already shared with commissioners, a working group has been set up to ensure that appropriate data are routinely shared with the public. Performance data can be disaggregated to individual team level in terms of safety, patient experience and clinical effectiveness. The Integrated Performance Report has been reviewed and ratified by the Board in order to focus more clearly on those targets which are sensitive, at risk or under-target. Our Medical Director is designated Board member for Information Governance and is the Caldicott Guardian. The Director of Finance / Deputy Chief Exec is our Senior Information Responsible Officer. 12 Openness, transparency and candour The NHS Constitution should include clear obligations to comply with the following principles: Openness: enabling concerns to be raised and disclosed freely without fear and for questions to be answered; Transparency: allowing true information about performance and outcomes to be shared with staff, patients and the public; Candour: ensuring patients harmed are informed of the fact and that an appropriate remedy is offered, whether or not a complaint has been made or a question asked about it. Quality Accounts should be accompanied by a declaration by all directors certifying the accounts to be true and Providers should have their quality accounts independently audited The Trust has a Being Open policy, which already in place and well embedded Nursing Increased focus on a culture of compassion and caring in nurse recruitment, training and education. The knowledge and skills HCA conference has been held and a standardised HCA training programme planned Openness – see common culture above Transparency – see performance management and information above While the Being Open policy is up to date and N/A reflects national guidance, the Trust is currently refining the monitoring and reporting arrangements around this and reviewing the serious incident and complaints policies to ensure they are consistent. Candour – see complaints handling above Benchmarking against other Trusts has found nurse staffing levels to compare well. The WLMHT strategy for nursing is being N/A reviewed and will be circulated for consultation on 3td July 2013 The Chief Nursing Officer for England will speak at the WLMHT Annual nursing conference 13 framework should be reviewed with a view to giving explicit recognition to nurses’ commitment to patient care and the priority Ward nurse managers should work in a supervisory capacity and are not office bound. They should be involved and aware of the plans and care for their patients. There should be a responsible officer for nursing in each trust, and they should be accountable to the NMC. The Director of Nursing is registered with (and therefore accountable to) the NMC and is the responsible officer for nursing. regarding ‘Compassion in Practice’ The Director of Nursing role will be reviewed to allow more time in clinical practice and engaging and supporting nurses Recruitment centres will be implemented and nurse and HCA applicants will be assessed for aptitude for compassion and the job overall A competency based preceptorship programme will be introduced for newly registered nurses The recovery approach will be adapted for services for patients requiring high levels of nursing support for basic care The essence of care standards will be implemented in services for older people Professional development pathway will be supported for nurses working in older people’s care Nurse education and training resources will be focused on skills and knowledge required to meet complex clinical needs, ensuring clinical skills are accessible to patients. This will include PSI, dual diagnosis, physical healthcare, dementia care, CAMHS, Non medical prescribing and working with personality disorder. An institute of Mental Health will be developed in collaboration with BNU and other HEI partners 14 Standardised training will be provided for Health Care Assistants and Support Workers across the Trust, incorporating National Standards for Health Care Support Workers and the HCA code of Conduct Clinical supervision project will ensure quality of clinical supervision delivered is effective to improve clinical skills and in providing personal support to the supervisee Mandatory training and supervision will be provided for bank nurses Standards for Ward Manager and Clinical Team Leader presence in clinical areas will be agreed. Nursing metrics and indicators will be agreed across the Trust and reported and monitored though the nursing and quality governance framework Nurses will work in partnership with estates and facilities to maintain high environmental cleanliness standards. A formalised system for assuring standards of medication management will be introduced A governance framework for nursing which ensures a line of reporting into the Trust Quality Assurance committee will be agreed and implemented 15 A centrally co-ordinated ‘back to the floor’ programme for senior nurses will be implemented Leadership The common culture and values of the NHS must be applied at all levels of the organisation, particularly to leaders. A common code of ethics, standards and conduct for senior board-level healthcare leaders and managers should be produced and should be consistent with the common culture (Fit and Proper Persons Test). Board has recently undertaken a skills audit and is continuing to roll out its Development Programme. Talent management programme is being developed and rolled out to ensure all staff have access to leadership development opportunities. The Trust has a common code of ethics and values which is available to all current members of staff and sent to all new joiners as part of the induction process. The Trust is reflecting on the Fit and Proper Persons Test as part of its ongoing Board Development work and FT application. N/A The principles appearing in those ethics and standards should apply to all staff, and it is the responsibility of employers to ensure that they are honoured. 16 Conclusion The Board at WLMHT responded immediately and positively to the publication of the Report of the Mid Staffordshire NHS Public Inquiry by undertaking critical self assessment, reflecting on where there may be indicators of performance approximating the findings at Mid Staffs and where improvements could be made in the light of them. This process of critical assessment and reflection is being mirrored across the Trust and a plan is in place to facilitate this within individual teams. Feedback will be used in an iterative process as part of a continual Trust response to the Mid Staffs Inquiry whereby reflection will be used to identify improvements within teams which will be implemented and monitored. Key areas of initial response are; Aspects of organisational culture, especially that which relates to staff reports of experiencing bullying and threat Extensive leadership programme Increasing support to nurses and HCA’s in delivering standards of basic care The centrality of treating patients with dignity, respect and compassion as a quality priority A Comprehensive Quality Strategy Extending the scope of how service user and carer feedback is employed within the Trust Further implementation of the Recovery Approach In summary, WLMHT has taken the findings at Mid Staffs very seriously indeed and has responded by utilising the lessons learnt to improve performance and quality of care at this Trust over the long term. An implementation plan will be developed from this report. The implementation plan will be presented at the Trust Quality Committee on 11 th July and monitored through that meeting thereafter. Anne Aiyegbusi Interim Director of Nursing and Patient Experience 14th June 2013 17