Date of assessment: 3 June to 4 July 2025 Active Care Group Supported Services is registered to provide personal care in supported living services for people living with mental health conditions, physical disabilities, sensory impairments and for people with a learning disability and/or autistic people. CQC only inspects where people receive personal care. This is help with tasks related to personal hygiene and eating. Where they do, we also consider any wider social care provided. At the time of the assessment site visit, there were 23 people receiving a regulated activity across 4 supported living services. We carried out this assessment because we did not assess all quality statements the last time we assessed this service (report published 10 October 2024) following which the service was rated good in the key areas of safe, caring and responsive and requires improvement in effective and well-led, resulting in an overall rating of requires improvement. We therefore undertook this latest assessment of a limited number of quality statements in the safe, effective, responsive and well-led key areas. Following our first site visit on 4 June 2025 to 1 of the supported living services, we identified concerns with the culture of that service and therefore expanded the scope of the assessment to include further quality statements in relation to risk management, medicines optimisation and kindness. The provider was already aware of some of the concerns we identified and had started to address these areas. We have commented on this in the well-led key area of this report. We expect health and social care providers to guarantee people with a learning disability and autistic people respect, equality, dignity, choices and independence and good access to local communities that most people take for granted. ‘Right support, right care, right culture’ (RSRCRC) is the guidance CQC follows to make assessments and judgements about services supporting people with a learning disability and autistic people and providers must have regard to it. During this latest assessment, we found the service was generally able to demonstrate how they were meeting the underpinning principles of RSRCRC. We visited 4 supported living services between 4 and 26 June 2025. The site visits were undertaken by 5 inspectors who visited the services and an expert by experience who carried out telephone calls to relatives to find out about their experience of the care. An expert by experience is a person who has personal experience of using or caring for someone who uses this type of care service. As part of this assessment, we spoke with 14 people who used the service and 12 relatives. We spoke with 26 members of staff and reviewed documentation including policies, care records, medication administration records, training records, governance records and procedures.
npm run etl:reports -- --location 1-11976602853.Date of assessment 29 February 2024 and 03 April 2024. Active Care Group is a service providing personal care to people who have care needs, such as deteriorating mobility, autism, learning disabilities, complex epilepsy, mental health issues and acquired brain injury. On-site assessments were conducted at Woodland Court and Clareville Lodge while off-site assessments were conducted at Byron Road, Cedars Road, Liberty Court and Prospect Court. The service has improved since the previous assessment. We found at this assessment that risk assessments were conducted, updated and risks were mitigated effectively. There were now sufficient staff deployed, however, the deployment was not always effective to ensure that people were kept safe. Staff were now able to recognise the signs of abuse and the process to follow if they suspected abuse was taking place. However, they were not always reporting incidents appropriately or in a timely way. Measures were in place to ensure people were protected from abuse. Medication management was effective, with trained staff, regular competency checks, and monthly audits. There was evidence of good relationships between staff and people. Staff now offered people choices and supported them to remain independent. The provision of care was now done in a person-centred manner. There was a robust staff recruitment procedure in place. There were activities organised by staff, however they were not always person-centred and offered enough variety of experiences. We expect health and social care providers to guarantee people with a learning disability and autistic people respect, equality, dignity, choices and independence and good access to local communities that most people take for granted. ‘Right support, right care, right culture’ is the guidance CQC follows to make assessments and judgements about services supporting people with a learning disability and autistic people and providers must have regard to it.
npm run etl:reports -- --location 1-11976602853.Active Care Group Supported Services received Requires Improvement ratings across all five key questions at its first inspection under the new provider, with regulatory breaches identified in person-centred care, safeguarding, medicines management, staffing, and good governance. The new registered manager and senior leadership team were actively implementing improvements, but significant inconsistencies in care quality across the six supported living settings placed people at risk of harm.