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Single Assessment Framework version

All services - change

GO Online: Inspection toolkit

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Assessing needs

The CQC inspection focus will look at how you assess and review the needs of the people you support. From the initial assessment to how you monitor and adapt support, the CQC will be looking for evidence about how you maximise the effectiveness of the care you provide.

The following film provides a summary of this area of inspection. It can help you and your teams learn about what will be inspected and what is important to demonstrate to deliver good or outstanding care.

Introducing Assessing needs

Duration 01 min 42 sec

The CQC inspection will look at how you assess and review the needs of the people you support. This is an on-going process, and it is important to have robust systems in place to review and adapt people’s changing needs.

From assessing the needs of your latest client to reviewing the need of the person you have supported the longest, your processes must be effective and adaptable.

The CQC will be interested in the processes you have adopted to maximise the effectiveness of people’s care and treatment. This includes responding to their health, wellbeing, and communication needs.

Ensuring the processes you use are person-centred and shaped around the needs of the person is essential. Evidence of how you involve people and their family members in needs assessments and reviews is important, as is demonstrating consent.

Of course, undertaking an effective needs assessment and regular reviews requires good training and staff support. The CQC will want to know the systems you have in place to develop such skills and the checks that are in place to maintain high standards.

As part of the inspection, the CQC will speak to managers, your staff team, the people you support and potentially others such as family members and health professionals. They’ll also look at assessment records, policies and procedures and your compliance with Mental Capacity and Equality Act legislation.

To learn more about how you can meet this area of CQC inspection, take a look at GO Online.

Watch the film here:

Recommendations

These recommendations act as a checklist to what the CQC will be looking for. ԭζÊÓƵ has reviewed hundreds of inspection reports and identified these recommendations as recurring good practice in providers that meet CQC expectations.

The CQC is non-prescriptive, which means they don’t tell you what must be done in order to meet their Quality Statement. These recommendations are not intended to be a definitive list and some recommendations might not be relevant to your service. We hope they help you reflect on what evidence you might wish to share with the CQC.

Assessing needs

  • We always take a strengths-based approach to assessing needs that focuses on what people we support can do, not just what they can’t. Where people cannot do some things, we include this in our support plans too.
  • We can evidence how we involve people in assessing their own health and care needs. Where needed, we provide accessible information that enables them to make an informed choice.
  • Our care assessment process is holistic and looks at the whole person, including their emotional wellbeing, physical, spiritual needs etc. We use a range of assessment tools to support this process.
  • We ensure our managers and staff team are effectively trained and competent to undertake care assessment and review, a process that always involves the person we support.
  • Where any specialist support is needed to assess and review health and care needs (e.g., Trusted Assessor), we ensure this is promptly arranged and ongoing where required.
  • We ensure all initial assessments are undertaken prior to an individual receiving care from our service or – where this is not practical - as soon as is possible after commencing the care package.
  • Our managers and staff are effective in how they tailor communications (e.g., Accessible Information Standards) and check understanding about people’s health and care needs.
  • We regularly monitor and review people’s care needs, involving them in these processes and discussing associated changes that may be needed.
  • Our effective record management ensures that there is consistency across associated documentation, such as needs assessments, care plans, risk assessments etc.
  • We can provide documentation covering our decision-making process and how we involved people in these processes. Where appropriate, our evidence includes decisions around mental capacity and safeguards.
  • We regularly review the effectiveness of our needs assessments and monitoring and review processes as part of spot checks and quality assurance processes.
  • Where we identify areas for improvement, we will update and test new approaches and involve external expertise if required.

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