Issue - meetings

South East Coast Ambulance Foundation NHS Trust (SECAmb) Care Quality Commission (CQC) Report

Meeting: 29/06/2023 - Health Overview and Scrutiny Committee (Item 7)

7 South East Coast Ambulance Foundation NHS Trust (SECAmb) Care Quality Commission (CQC) report pdf icon PDF 344 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

7.1       The Committee considered a report providing an overview of SECAmb’s progress in its Improvement Journey following the findings of its 2022 CQC report, which led to a rating of inadequate in the well-led domain.

7.2       The Committee asked what the current rates of staff turnover and sickness were.

7.3       Matt Webb responded that SECAmb’s annual rolling turnover rate was 18.2% against a target of 10%. Although retention issues were sector-wide, SECAmb was investing heavily in improving leadership visibility and exit interviews to understand what could be done to improve staff retention. Since the pandemic there had been a significant increase in staff citing burnout and exhaustion as reasons for leaving. As part of its improvement journey SECAmb had appointed a Programme Director for People and Culture whose role was to implement the People and Culture Strategy that included aiming to improve staff wellbeing and Freedom to Speak Up processes. Other work had been done to improve rotas and reduce the burden on staff.

7.4       The Committee asked how staff were being engaged in SECAmb’s Improvement Journey, what feedback had they received from staff since it began and how the bullying culture identified in the CQC report was being addressed.

7.5       Matt Webb explained that SECAmb is actively communicating with staff on how concerns that they had raised were being addressed. A challenge for SECAmb as part of its improvement journey was that the nature of the CQC report required the organisation to make a number of regulatory improvements. However, having improved in those regulatory areas SECAmb was now better placed to address cultural issues. Staff and unions were engaged to help feed staff views into a five-year strategy which will make any improvements sustainable in the long term. SECAmb has also been working with Healthwatch to make sure patient views are also taken into account.

7.6       The Committee asked if there would be value in SECAmb running its own staff survey in order to track improvements.

7.7       Matt Webb explained that the work on leadership visibility was a more effective way of gaining staff feedback, as the visits were targeted and scheduled and allowed for a dialogue between frontline staff and the organisation leadership. Staff feedback from these visits had been positive as staff felt they were being heard and ensured there was more direct feedback than would otherwise be received through an online survey. SECAmb was also trialling engagement software that focused on smaller teams to provide more granular detail on staff views.

7.8       The Committee asked how many SECAmb managers were yet to complete a sexual safety workshop.

7.9       Matt Webb answered that the training was mandatory for all managers and leaders in SECAmb, and the uptake had been very high with more than half (70% of managers) already having attended one. Ray Savage added that the fact the course was externally led had been beneficial for ensuring there was no unconscious bias involved.

7.10     The Committee asked whether SECAmb had schemes that allowed staff to  ...  view the full minutes text for item 7


Meeting: 22/09/2022 - Health Overview and Scrutiny Committee (Item 14)

14 South East Coast Ambulance Foundation NHS Trust (SECAmb) Care Quality Commission (CQC) Report pdf icon PDF 389 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

14.1.    The Committee considered a report providing an overview of SECAmb’s Care Quality Commission (CQC) report findings, following a rating of inadequate in the well-led domain, and the Trust’s Improvement Plan.

14.2.    The Committee asked how staff are involved in the improvement plan.

14.3.    Matthew Webb, Associate Director of Strategic Partnerships and System Engagement, confirmed SECAmb is absolutely listening to staff and not just transmitting to them. The Trust has now spent the last 6 months listening to staff, as it began its improvement journey last year through the ‘Better By Design’ programme prior to the release of the CQC report in June. Matthew Webb said that Better By Design did not address all the concerns identified by the CQC Report but demonstrated there was a recognition of the fundamental concerns and issues that needed to be addressed as an organisation. He confirmed the Trust recognises staff can contribute to each of the four improvement pillars and are helping to co-design them. There are also leadership visits being undertaken by middle managers and Board members to meet staff and listen to their challenges and concerns, as well as opportunities for staff to communicate via email with executives and receive a response to their concerns. Cultural change will take time, so in the short term ahead of winter, the Trust is aiming to ensure staff have the right toolset, resources and support to enable them to respond to patients effectively.

14.4.    The Committee asked when SECAmb is aiming to exit the Recovery Support Programme (RSP).

14.5.    Matthew Webb explained the Trust has worked through a number of criteria with NHS England covering how it will exit the Recovery Support Programme (RSP). It is working towards a period of 9-12 months before it will leave the RSP, at the earliest. However, a target end date is currently being agreed with NHS England and commissioners. The CQC has also issued warning notices that must be achieved by November 2022. Issues around culture, however, will likely take 24 months or more to fix.

14.6.    The Committee asked why the Trust’s CQC rating slid backwards to inadequate following achieving good in 2019, and asked what reassurance could be given it will not happen again.

14.7.    Matthew Webb agreed that the Trust made a number of improvements between 2016 to 2019, however, it did not as an organisation maintain or sustain them. This is because at the time SECAmb developed a CQC Action Plan to rectify the issues raised by the CQC, which it treated it as a transactional plan to satisfy the CQC’s warning notices. This time, however, SECAmb has developed an Improvement Plan, which is a long term plan recognising the significant journey the Trust is on not just to address the cultural issues raised by the CQC, but also to improve the quality of care it provides and develop the best support it can to staff. The Improvement Plan aims to ensure these changes are embedded and sustained over the long term.

14.8.  ...  view the full minutes text for item 14