
Halifax care service upgraded to 'good' after inspection
A care agency providing residential support for people with complex needs which was branded "inadequate" has improved to a "good" rating after a new inspection.Lifeways Community Care in Halifax, which supports 26 people with mental health issues, autism and learning disabilities, was also removed from special measures, said watchdog Care Quality Commission (CQC). One of the main improvements was helping residents to "maximise their independence" which included going on holiday abroad, finding a job, taking control of their finances and even getting a tattoo. A CQC spokesperson said: "People using the service were excited to tell us about the support they received from staff and how they'd been empowered to make decisions about their lives."
'Felt safe'
The inspection took place in November and December 2024 and involved 11 different supported-living houses in Halifax. Previously the service was said to be poorly managed and the care was not "person-centred" but after a new manager was installed the rating for being "safe and responsive" was upgraded to "good". Linda Hirst, CQC deputy director of operations in the north, said: "When we inspected the service, we were very pleased to see significant improvements to people's safety and quality of life."People told us they felt safe and listened to, and one person compared their home and support to a family." She also said one resident had built the confidence to go out into the community for the first time in several years and another was able to go on holiday abroad for the first time since they were aged two.
Inspectors also found staff and leaders knew how to protect people from risks of abuse or avoidable harm and residents reported they were able to do the activities they wanted, such as theatre trips, discos and barge trips.People were also successfully matched to staff with similar interests to support relationship-building, they said.A Lifeways Community Care spokesperson said: "This is a fantastic achievement by a dedicated team who've worked tirelessly to deliver on an intensive improvement plan."Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

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'I've reported three Leicestershire care homes in four years'
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The Guardian
a day ago
- The Guardian
‘How did it get to this?' What happens when care in a residential home breaks down
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One person who was receiving palliative care died within hours of the move. Soon after, the home in Lowdham – which housed 11 people with dementia and physical disabilities – went into liquidation. Staff lost their jobs and have been left with wages unpaid, and many residents are owed thousands of pounds in fees – people paid from £1,250 a week to live there. 'People must be held accountable for this. I don't think anyone who can run a home like this should be allowed to work in the care sector ever again,' said Gillespie, a corporate investigator more accustomed to turning his hand to international cases of public office bribery and fraud than care homes. He is compiling a dossier of evidence on what went wrong at The Firs and why it took so long to act on whistleblowing complaints, which he plans to submit to his local MP and the health secretary. 'I won't be letting the matter go, not just for my own relative and the staff who lost their jobs, but out of principle, because no one's loved ones or their families should have to go through this,' he said. 'I think this situation is so unique and appalling it needs to be looked at a higher level.' Emma Locking's 87-year-old grandfather, Tim, who has dementia, lived at the home. She said her family were shocked when they received a call at 5.30pm on a Friday saying the home was being shut down with immediate effect. 'Obviously my nan, at 85, was panicking, thinking: 'Oh my God, now he's homeless,'' she said. 'It was really stressful. It's awful for all the residents. These are people in their 80s and 90s. Some of them didn't even have family to help. I just think the way it was all handled was disgusting.' They had held concerns about the home for a while, particularly after Tim was left for 15 hours with an open wound on his wrist after a fall in December. His family said they were not informed of the seriousness of the injury until the next morning, when staff asked them to take him to hospital for stitches. When they arrived to pick him up, one staff member said the wound had been 'like a bloodbath'. 'I said: 'Why the hell did no one tell us this last night?' I would have taken him in. The wound was horrific,' she said. 'He's diabetic. He's on blood thinners. He's 87 years old. He could have died from that cut because he could have got sepsis. It makes you think: would he have been better off at home?' She said her grandfather's medication was not stored correctly and was often out of date, and he suffered two other falls at the home due to faulty or missing equipment. Her family considered raising concerns with the CQC, but worried about the repercussions for Tim while he lived there. The CQC report on the failures at The Firs found a number of serious safety breaches. A fridge used to store medicine, including insulin and antibiotics, had been switched off for five days with no one noticing, meaning the medicine may have become ineffective. Errors and a lack of training led to frequent overdoses – three residents received above the maximum dose of their pain relief, putting them at 'serious risk of harm'. Others weren't receiving medication regularly, including one person on end-of-life care. People with dementia had unsupervised access to unlocked doors, leading outside to a busy road and to a retaining wall that had been taped off as it was at risk of collapse. Fire exits were blocked, and there was no equipment to transport two people living upstairs with mobility issues down in an emergency. The home's manager was absent for long periods of time. The findings didn't come as a surprise to many of the staff at The Firs, some of whom had been raising concerns for months. 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BBC News
2 days ago
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