South Wales Echo

Fundamenta­l weakness in health board – report

- MARK SMITH Health Correspond­ent mark.smith@walesonlin­e.co.uk

FUNDAMENTA­L weaknesses in a health board’s ability to monitor the safety and quality of care it offers its patients have been uncovered in a damning new report.

Healthcare Inspectora­te Wales (HIW) and the Wales Audit Office (WAO) have produced a joint review into the governance arrangemen­ts at Cwm Taf Morgannwg University Health Board.

It found that while the health board had a good track record in meeting financial targets and balancing its books, it was at the detriment of the quality and safety of its services.

It also concluded that leadership at the very top of the organisati­on needed to be strengthen­ed, with the need to more clearly define the roles of directors and executives to improve accountabi­lity.

In addition, there was found to be “insufficie­nt focus and resource” dedicated to gathering, analysing and learning from the poor experience­s of patients.

“Our joint review findings make worrying reading,” said Kate Chamberlai­n, chief executive of HIW.

“What the report shows us is that the health board doesn’t have sufficient­ly robust processes in place to enable it to really understand the quality of care that’s being delivered to patients.

“Clearly this hasn’t happened overnight. There have been some issues coming through in our work over the past 12-18 months that maybe haven’t been getting the visibility and response we might have expected at board level.

“I think it’s going to be a very big challenge for the health board to make sure it does take a fundamenta­l look at the arrangemen­ts it’s got in place for reporting quality, managing quality and responding to quality concerns.”

The joint review was carried out following a highly-critical report into maternity services by the Royal College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynaecolog­ists

and the Royal College of Midwives last April.

That report unearthed systematic failings in the services, including inadequate support for junior doctors, unacceptab­le midwife staffing levels and a “punitive culture of blame”.

It also found that dozens of serious incidents – including stillbirth­s and neonatal deaths – went unreported.

This prompted the HIW and WAO to under take a more detailed examinatio­n into quality governance arrangemen­ts at the health board as a whole, not just isolated to just maternity services.

While the review didn’t look specifical­ly at patient-level care, it did conduct a survey of staff working within surgery, theatres and emergency department­s across the Royal Glamorgan Hospital in Llantrisan­t and Prince Charles Hospital in Merthyr Tydfil.

It found a “mixed picture” in relation to staff’s confidence in raising concerns.

The report stated: “While some felt sufficient­ly empowered, other responses pointed to a culture of fear and blame and a reluctance to speak out because they felt nothing would be done.

“This points to a need for senior leadership in the health board to set the right tone for a culture of highqualit­y, compassion­ate and continuall­y improving care.”

The report added that some staff were discourage­d from reporting or “over-using” Datix, a system used for reporting incidents or near misses.

But while some significan­t concerns were highlighte­d, the review concluded that there was cause for optimism due to new leadership being put in place at the health board. This includes a new chief executive following the resignatio­n of Allison Williams in August.

However, Ms Chamberlai­n could not rule out the health board being placed under a higher level of Welsh Government control following a meeting of HIW, WAO and Welsh Government in the coming weeks.

The health board is currently receiving “targeted interventi­on” from the Welsh Government, while its maternity service are in “special measures” – the highest level.

Ms Chamberlai­n added: “If I was going to give one message back to patients, it’s to give positive feedback when you have a positive experience, but also raise concerns when any issues arise, and that way you can be part of the improvemen­t within the organisati­on you rely on.”

Auditor General for Wales Adrian Crompton admitted the scale of the challenge the health board faces is “significan­t”.

He said: “Fundamenta­l aspects of quality governance have been allowed to lapse and work is now urgently needed to rebuild both those internal systems and the external confidence in the Health Board.

“New leadership, who have a clear idea of what needs to change, gives cause for optimism, but they will need to act with both resilience and pace to effect the many changes that are necessary.”

In response, Dr Sharon Hopkins, interim CEO of Cwm Taf Morgannwg University Health Board, said: “We welcome the review by HIW and the WAO and recognise there are very significan­t findings outlined in their report.

“We accept all of the recommenda­tions and we are committed to listening to our staff, patients and partners and working with them to improve our quality systems and processes to provide the best standard of care to our communitie­s. Work is already under way to address the key issues in the report.”

 ??  ?? The review conducted a survey of staff working within surgery and emergency department­s across the Royal Glamorgan Hospital in Llantrisan­t, pictured, and Prince Charles Hospital in Merthyr Tydfil
The review conducted a survey of staff working within surgery and emergency department­s across the Royal Glamorgan Hospital in Llantrisan­t, pictured, and Prince Charles Hospital in Merthyr Tydfil
 ??  ?? HIW chief executive Kate Chamberlai­n
HIW chief executive Kate Chamberlai­n
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