15 Apr 2025
Press release embargoed until 00.01hrs on Wednesday 16 April
Links to the embargoed inspection reports are at the very end of this email
The Care Quality Commission (CQC) has published reports on urgent and emergency care and medical care (including older peoples care) at Peterborough City Hospital, run by North West Anglia NHS Foundation Trust following unannounced inspections in July last year.
The inspection of medical care was carried out in response to concerns about access and flow, delayed discharges, staffing shortages, and culture. The inspection of urgent and emergency care was carried out in response to concerns regarding waiting times, complaints about staff and quality of care, poor discharges, and management of care of people with mental health conditions.
Following this inspection urgent and emergency care has been re-rated as requires improvement as have the ratings for safe and responsive. Well-led has improved from requires improvement to good. Effective has been re-rated as good. Caring was not looked at during this inspection and retains its previous rating of good.
The overall rating for medical care following this inspection remains unchanged and is re-rated as good, as are the ratings for effective, responsive and well-led. Safe dropped from good to requires improvement. Caring was not looked at during this inspection and it retain the previous rating of good.
The overall ratings of Peterborough City Hospital and the trust remain unchanged as requires improvement.
Stuart Dunn, CQC deputy director of operations in the East of England, said:
“When we inspected urgent and emergency care and medical care services at Peterborough City Hospital, we found effective care across both services, and caring staff who worked well together to secure good outcomes for people using the services. We were encouraged by how the leadership is driving positive change. Leaders listened to people who had concerns or complaints and sought ways to improve the service. However, people were still facing long waits for treatment and a lack of continuity in care.
“In urgent and emergency care services, although we found leadership had improved, people were waiting too long to be seen, more than 12 hours in some cases, and quite often due to staff shortages. Leaders need to focus their attention on addressing the root cause of these staff shortages which was impacting young people’s care in the children’s emergency department. Despite the shortages, staff worked well together under pressure to manage these delays as best they could.
“Staff shortages also meant the service didn't always identify people who attended the emergency department whose health was at risk of deterioration quickly enough. Only 54% of people arriving in the department underwent safety screening to receive proper monitoring while awaiting treatment and only 73% of eligible people were screened for sepsis.
“Leaders told us staff shortages and capacity issues were also behind someone absconding from the urgent and emergency department during our inspection, without being seen in a timely way by the psychiatric liaison team. Leaders added capacity problems were behind the issue of managing risks related to people admitted with acute mental health problems.
“In medical care, we found staff worked well together to provide effective care and make continuous improvements. Staff worked hard to remove any barriers for people to access care. There was a strong culture to prevent discrimination and inequalities. The service worked closely with external organisations to identify barriers to people's experience and discuss improvements.
“Staff felt confident to raise concerns and used risks as opportunities to learn and improve, and incidents were appropriately investigated. People told us staff were very caring and sympathetic to them.
“However, we remain concerned about ongoing issues with people movement and corridor care. Over 250 people were moved to other wards in the middle of the night in just one month, disrupting people's sleep and slowing their recovery. Additionally, some people were moved at least four times during their stay, with some moved as frequently as 11 to 15 times. Frequent moves can impact the continuity of people’s care and can lengthen their hospital stays.
“We’ve shared our findings with the trust, so they know where improvements must be made and where there is good practice to build on. We will continue to monitor these services closely, to ensure improvements are being made, and to keep people safe while this happens.”
Inspectors found in medical care services (including older people’s care):
However:
Inspectors found in urgent and emergency services:
However:
Due to a large-scale transformation programme at CQC, these reports have not published as soon after the inspection as they should have done. The programme involved changes to the technology CQC uses but resulted in problems with the systems and processes rather than the intended benefits. The amount of time taken to publish the reports falls far short of what people using services and the trust should be able to expect and CQC apologises for this.
While publication of some reports has been delayed, any immediate action that CQC needed to take to protect people using services was not affected and was carried out in a timely way. CQC is taking urgent steps to ensure that inspection reports are published in a timelier way.
The reports will be published on CQC’s website in the coming days.
Contact
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CQC uses feedback from people using services, their loved ones, and staff to help detect any changes in care. CQC also uses this information to help it decide when and where to inspect. If there is evidence people are at immediate risk of harm, CQC can and will take action to ensure that people are being kept safe.
CQC encourages people to give feedback about their care to via the details below.