The healthcare regulator has rated the two maternity services run by County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust as inadequate following an inspection in March.
The inspection was carried out as part of the Care Quality Commission’s (CQC) national maternity inspection programme.
Inspectors looked at the areas of safety and leadership in the maternity services. Following the inspection, the services were rated:
These ratings changes also mean that the overall ratings for University Hospital of North Durham and Darlington Memorial Hospital have gone down from good to requires improvement. The overall trust rating remains as good.
Following the inspection, CQC issued a warning notice to focus the trust’s attention on rapidly making the necessary improvements to how they were managing each maternity service.
Carolyn Jenkinson, deputy director of secondary and specialist healthcare at the CQC, said: ‘When we inspected maternity services at County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust, it was concerning to see such a deterioration in the level of care being provided to women, people using the service and their babies.
‘Across both maternity services, leaders urgently need to mitigate the negative impact of understaffing. We saw that staff had reported delayed inductions of labour, including babies categorised as high risk, due to understaffing. Midwives had told managers they found the unit was unsafe, but no improvement had been made and staff continued to work late, miss breaks, and take sick leave due to stress which is totally unacceptable.
‘We were concerned that women and people using the service weren’t being observed or risk assessed appropriately which increased the risk of a delay in recognising when their condition deteriorated and that their care could be delayed. Following the inspection, however, trust leaders provided information on the action they had taken to improve this, including risk assessment on arrival, the provision of additional staff and the creation of a waiting area with call bells.
‘We found multiple examples where screening tests hadn’t been carried out to safely manage the pregnancies of women and people using the service. There had been over 70 incidents over the past year where national screening standards or internal policies hadn’t been followed which could place women, people using the service and their babies at risk.
‘It was positive, however, that staff were kind and worked well together, often under pressure, to benefit those in their care.
‘We will continue to monitor the trust, including through future inspections, to ensure the necessary and rapid improvements are made so people using the service and their babies can receive safe and appropriate care.’
Inspectors found the following at both services:
Image: Ryan Franco
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