I’ve just been listening again to the
hearing of the Joint Parliamentary Human Rights Committee, where two
members of the Care Quality Commission (CQC) are grilled about their lamentable
(to put it charitably) ‘inspection’ practices in relation to Whorlton Hall and
St Andrews. One of the repeated refrains of the CQC people (apart from blaming
everyone else) is that their inspection methods perhaps aren’t very good at
identifying abusive behaviour in inpatient services, due to pesky staff ‘colluding’
in trying to hide their abusive practices (my interpretation and gloss of their
words…) and even more pesky inpatients ‘inconsistently’ sometimes reporting
abusive practices and their fear of speaking out while at other times reporting
to inspectors that they were being treating with dignity. Meanwhile, both
people who have spent time as inpatients and family members of people who have
been or currently are inpatients say time and time again that when they raise
allegations of abuse to the CQC there are ignored or given the brush-off.
I am beyond words in expressing how I feel about this
session and the (in)action of the CQC. In this blogpost I just want to very
briefly describe some relevant knowledge about service cultures in services for
people with learning disabilities that I’ve come across, particularly relating
to inpatient services. Then I will take a look at the extent to which I think CQC
inspection arrangements are geared up to find abusive service cultures in
inpatient units. Some of this is taken from a quick piece of work I did for NHS
Improvement a couple of years ago, but the interpretation is all mine…
Firstly there has been a whole programme of research by
Christine Bigby, Julie Beadle-Brown and colleagues looking at positive and
negative cultures in housing services for people with learning disabilities.
For a positive culture there are four overarching dimensions of culture when people
living in a house are being supported well: the culture in the house is
cohesive, respective, enabling and motivating.
Christine Bigby, Julie Beadle-Brown and colleagues, from
careful work spending a lot of time in people’s homes, have drawn out 5 things
that distinguish a positive place from a negative place: 1) that staff
supporting people actually show the same values that are espoused by senior
managers and service brochures; 2) that staff recognise their common humanity
with the people they support, and everyone gets on with each other, rather than
people being seen as ‘not like us’; 3) that staff recognise that they are there
to support the person to live the life they want to live, rather than doing
things ‘for’ people; 4) that the people being supported come first, rather than
being supported in ways that suit the staff; 5) that staff are open to new
people and new ideas, rather than resistant.
This way of describing positive and negative cultures makes
a lot of sense to me. What the eagle-eyed among you will have noticed though,
is that they don’t describe aspects of cultures that are more actively toxic
and abusive. Peter Oakes, Dave Marsland and Caroline White have been working
for some years now on identifying and monitoring indicators of the potential
abuse of people with learning disabilities in a range of places.
These authors have identified six clusters of early
indicators in identifying service cultures and environments in which people
with learning disabilities may be at risk of abuse. Three of these clusters are
not about service cultures as such, but they are extremely important as things
to look out for:
1) The behaviours of people with learning
disabilities (changes in people’s behaviour and needs; consistency of people’s
behaviour according to the member of staff they are with or the place they are
in; people harming themselves or bullying others, showing fear, or engaging in
sexualised behaviours)
2) Service design, placement planning and
commissioning (agreed care not being provided; lack of available options for
people in the service; service design and placement planning)
3) Fundamental care and the quality of the
environment (poor support for people with health problems; service dirty and in
poor state of repair; people not supported with personal hygiene).
Three clusters identifying early indicators of potential
abuse are about service cultures – they can be thought of as extremes of the
negative cultures I’ve mentioned above, but that we need to be specifically
vigilant about.
1)
The decisions, attitudes and actions of managers
at all levels within residential services which may place residents at risk,
consisting of 2 clusters (management of the home and the organisation; staff
recruitment, deployment and shift patterns). More practical details about what
you might look out for are in the table below
2) The behaviours and attitudes of staff that may place residents at risk, consisting of 7 clusters (staff knowledge, skills and actions; staff values and attitudes; staff lack of choice, misuse of power, how the service runs; staff boundaries and inappropriate relationships; staff inconsistency and lack of reliability; staff getting important ideas wrong; staff attitudes and responses to abuse). More practical details about what you might look for are in the two tables below (there’s a lot to look out for here!)
3) Isolation, consisting of 2 clusters (isolation of individuals; defensiveness and lack of openness). Again, more practical details about what you might look for are in the table below.
There is a lot of detail in these tables (in very tiny writing), but I think it’s
important to include them because it shows practically how it can be done, and
the team producing these indicators have worked with services to spot these
cultures early on and do something about them.
These are also the kinds of things that people with learning
disabilities in inpatient units and family members are rightly sensitive to and
pick up on really quickly. Looking at a few reports from the ever excellent
Bringing Us Together and from the National Development Team for Inclusion,
people and families time and again discussed toxic, abusive inpatient service
cultures where they were spotting exactly the same indicators I’ve just
outlined above – the tables below show some of the things people and families
said.
This is a lot of stuff, much of it in tiny writing in tables. I think that detail is important to show that:
1)
Looking out for indicators of abusive service
cultures is more/different than looking out for not very positive service
cultures.
2)
People have been working for a long time on
practical ways to spot abusive service cultures, and the experiences of people
and families show that they are really good at spotting when something might
be seriously wrong.
CQC inspections, though, aren’t set up to proactively
examine and find abusive service cultures in inpatient or other places where
people with learning disabilities are living (I know I’m referring exclusively
to people with learning disabilities rather than also talking about autistic people
in this blog, because the stuff I’m talking about has focused on people with
learning disabilities, but there is no reason why this doesn’t apply to
autistic people in these places too). How?
First, they like paperwork and ‘evidence’. The way that
people (including people with learning disabilities, families, and I suspect
many visiting professionals) pick up these cultures can often be dismissed by
regimes like the CQC as ‘soft’, based on intuition, and not within the realm of
‘proper’ evidence. Many people who try and alert the CQC report this sense of
what they have to say being dismissed. Well – what all these people experience
is real and is tapping into something vital that the CQC have admitted they are
missing.
Second, in principle they wait until things are so bad they are unignorable, rather than seeking to proactively spot abusive cultures early and nip them in the bud.
Third, in inspections of specialist mental health services
(including specialist inpatient services for people with learning disabilities
and/or autism), the CQC inspects services using their standard framework (Care
Quality Commission, 2015a, 2015b). The inspection process is designed to ask
five fundamental questions. In Appendix
B to the provider handbook (Care Quality Commission, 2015b) each of the five
questions is broken down into between three and seven Key Lines of Enquiry
(KLOEs), with associated prompts for each one. The five fundamental questions
are as follows. Are services:
1)
Safe? By safe, we mean that people are protected
from abuse and avoidable harm (5 KLOEs).
2)
Effective? By effective, we mean that people’s
care, treatment and support achieves good outcomes, promotes a good quality of
life and is based on the best available evidence (7 KLOEs).
3)
Caring? By caring, we mean that staff involve
and treat people with compassion, kindness, dignity and respect (3 KLOEs).
4)
Responsive? By responsive, we mean that services
are organised so that they meet people’s needs (4 KLOEs).
5)
Well-led? By well-led, we mean that the
leadership, management and governance of the organisation assures the delivery
of high-quality person-centred care, supports learning and innovation, and
promotes an open and fair culture (5 KLOEs).
Although the Safe? Question should be proactively looking
out for early indicators of abusive cultures, the Key Lines of Enquiry
questions are much more focused on looking for positive and negative service
cultures, rather than taking seriously how to find an abusive service culture.
Care and Treatment Reviews in some ways are similar, with the added proviso that their
marginal status means that they are even less likely to uncover and be able to
do something about abusive service cultures.
No big conclusion really, except to say that for the CQC to
express surprise at their inspection regimes not being able to find abuse in
inpatient service cultures is patent nonsense. Given the serial nature of
abusive practices being exposed (largely by the media) in inpatient units for
people with learning disabilities and autistic people, a responsible regulator
should have put its house in order well before now. All the stuff I’ve mentioned
here is readily available to an organisation like the CQC, and people would
have bent over backwards to help. My rating:
·
Safe: Inadequate
·
Effective: Inadequate
·
Caring: Inadequate
·
Responsive: Inadequate
·
Well-led: Inadequate
For those of you interested, here's a list of references of stuff I've referred to in this blog.
Beadle-Brown J, Bigby C, Bould E. Observing practice
leadership in intellectual and developmental disability services. Journal of
Intellectual Disability Research 2015; 59, 1081-1093.
Bigby C, Beadle-Brown J. Culture in better performing group
homes for people with intellectual disability at severe levels. Intellectual
& Developmental Disabilities 2016; 54, 316-331.
Bigby C, Beadle-Brown J. Improving quality of life outcomes
in supported accommodation for people with intellectual disability: what makes
a difference? Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual
Disabilities 2018; 31, e182-e200.
Bigby C, Knox M, Beadle-Brown J, Clement T, Mansell J.
Uncovering dimensions of culture in underperforming group homes for people with
severe intellectual disability. Intellectual & Developmental Disabilities
2012; 50, 452-467.
Bigby C, Knox M, Beadle-Brown J, Clement T. ‘We just call
them people’: positive regard as a dimension of culture in group homes for
people with severe intellectual disability. Journal of Applied Research in
Intellectual Disabilities 2015; 28, 283-295.
Bringing Us Together. Stronger Together – Family Event.
2016a. Bringing Us Together.
Bringing Us Together. Stronger Together – Families talk
about their experience of independent hospitals. 2016b. Bringing Us Together.
Care Quality Commission (2015a). How CQC regulates
specialist mental health services. Provider handbook. London: Care Quality
Commission.
Care Quality Commission (2015b). How CQC regulates
specialist mental health services. Appendices to the provider handbook. London:
Care Quality Commission.
Clare ICH, Madden EM, Holland AJ, Farrington CJT, Whitson S,
Broughton S, Lillywhite A, Jones E, Wade KA, Redley M, Wagner AP. ‘What
vision?’: experiences of team members in a community services for adults with
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online.
Gillett E, Stenfert Kroese B. Investigating organizational
culture: a comparison of a ‘high’ – and a ‘low’ – performing residential unit
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Hatton C, Rivers M, Mason H, Mason L, Emerson E, Kiernan C,
Reeves D, Alborz A. Organizational culture and staff outcomes in services for
people with intellectual disabilities. Journal of Intellectual Disability
Research 1999; 43, 206-218.
Hogg J. Protecting adults with intellectual disabilities
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Humphreys L, Bigby C, Iacono T, Bould E, Humphreys L.
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Marsland D, Oakes P, White C. Abuse in care? The
identification of early indicators of the abuse of people with learning
disabilities in residential settings. The Journal of Adult Protection 2007; 9,
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Marsland D, Oakes P, White C. Early indicators of concern in
residential support services for people with learning disabilities: The Abuse
in Care? Project. 2012. Hull: University of Hull Centre for Applied Research
and Evaluation.
Marsland D, Oakes P, Bright N. It can still happen here:
systemic risk factors that may contribute to the continued abuse of people with
intellectual disabilities. Tizard Learning Disability Review 2015; 20, 134-146.
National Development Team for Inclusion. Informing the
service model: A report about the experiences of people with learning
disabilities and families. 2015. Bath: NDTi.
NHS England. Care and Treatment Reviews: Policy and guidance.
2017. Leeds: NHS England. https://www.england.nhs.uk/publication/care-and-treatment-reviews-policy-and-guidance/
[accessed 26 June 2017].
Quilliam C, Bigby C, Douglas J. Paperwork in group homes for
people with intellectual disability. Journal of Intellectual &
Developmental Disabilities 2015; 40, 286-296.
White C, Holland E, Marsland D, Oakes P. The identification
of environments and cultures that promote the abuse of people with intellectual
disabilities: a review of the literature. Journal of Applied Research in
Intellectual Disabilities 2003; 16, 1-9.