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GO Online: Inspection toolkit

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Planning for the future

The focus of the CQC inspection will vary here depending on the type of service you provide. For some services, the CQC inspection focus may primarily focus on end of life care, but for other services it might be around how you manage complex care needs, support younger people’s transition into adult care services or assist them into work.

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 Planning for the future

Duration 02 min 08 sec

What the CQC choose to focus on in this area of inspection might vary depending on the type of care you provide.

For some services, the CQC inspection focus may primarily focus on End of life care but for other services it might be around how you manage complex care needs, support younger people’s transition into adult care services or assist them into work.

Whatever way you support people to plan for their future, the CQC will expect those individuals are at the centre of this process. They should also be given the time to consider the options and make informed decisions.

If you support people at the end of their life, the CQC inspectors will expect that your teams are effectively trained and experienced in providing such person-centred support.

It’s vital you and your team are aware of appropriate end-of-life pathways, DNACPR and how best to meet people’s personal choice, spiritual and cultural needs. People's wishes should be regularly reviewed and acted upon as their preferences may change over time.

It is important that people are protected from pain, and so your service will be expected to effectively manage this and monitor symptoms towards the end of their life, accessing medication and specialist palliative care professionals where needed.

Documented evidence may include Advanced care plans, assessments, reviews and daily monitoring, Staff training records and plans and notifications.

For other services, the CQC may at how you support people transition from children to adult services, which in some situations may include supporting them into work or meeting other long-term care needs. Again, inspectors will be keen to explore in their interviews, observations, or review of documented evidence how your service meets such needs.

GO Online brings together resources, practical examples and recommendations to support you. 

Watch the film here: https://vimeo.com/788208823

Practical examples

The examples below provide insight into how other Good or Outstanding rated services are succeeding in this area of inspection. Use the filter to choose different types of examples or select based on related prompt.

If you have an example you would like to share, please e-mail employer.engagement@skillsforcare.org.uk.

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1 example(s) found

Using assisted technology to implement an end of life programme

This project used assistive technology to support learning and development that was mapped to the St Luke's Hospice ‘saying it without words’ programme.

The project helped to highlight a need for effective communication skills in supporting end of life care, including those with dementia, learning disabilities and other specific communication needs.

Click here to watch the video exploring how this project was carried out and what it achieved.

Care provider: St Luke’s Hospice

  • Film

Date published: January 2014



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