Dorset HealthCare University NHS Foundation Trust

Dorset HealthCare University NHS Foundation Trust provides community and mental health services across Dorset. It serves a population of almost 700,000 people, employing around 5,000 staff. The Trust’s income is approximately £242.5 million.

Estate

The Trust has a large and geographically broad estate, operating from over 200 sites ranging from community hospitals to single rooms within premises of other NHS providers. It includes a wide range of different properties, from small to medium sized mental health in-patient hospitals to single ward community hospitals located in market towns. The Trust participated in an Enhancing the Healing Environment project with the King's Fund to encourage greater use of dining, social and garden areas in St Brelades Ward, Alderney Hospital, Poole.[1]

The trust runs 12 community hospitals and minor injuries units - as well as providing adult and children's community and mental health services, healthcare in Dorset's four prisons, specialist learning disability services, community brain injury services, addiction services and community dental services. Its community health services encompass: district nurses, health visitors, school nursing, end of life care, sexual health promotion, safeguarding children, diabetes education, audiology, speech and language therapy, dermatology, podiatry, orthopaedic, wheelchair services and breastfeeding support services. As well as services in Dorset, the Trust also provides some services in Devon and the city of Southampton. Most are provided in local communities, people's homes, local centres and community hospitals. It also provides specialist assessment and treatment inpatient centres.

Regulation

It became a foundation trust on 1 April 2007 and is regulated by Monitor. The Trust is also registered with the Care Quality Commission.

Monitor found the trust to be in breach of its licence for taking too long to make legally binding changes agreed in April 2013 to properly address quality of care issues raised by the Care Quality Commission and for failing to ensure appropriate staffing levels. In July 2014 Monitor reported that its concerns had been addressed.[2]

In January 2014 the Trust admitted that it has been failing standards on same sex accommodation for more than two years, despite reporting compliance.[3]

Leadership

The director of nursing, Paul Lumsden, resigned in March 2014 after less than three months in the post. The chair and chief executive also resigned after intervention by Monitor (NHS) and were replaced on an interim basis by Sir David Henshaw and Ron Shields respectively. Former parliamentary health service ombudsman Ann Abraham was appointed as permanent chair from 7 April.[4]

The Trust spent nearly £650,000 om an external PR and marketing firm, Southampton-based Grayling PR from 2008 to 2014. In 2014/5 the trust will spend more than £104,000 on services provided by the firm. Its total PR and marketing budget for the current year is £177,000, but that does not take into account the salaries of its own communications staff. Nicola Plumb, director for organisational development, participation and corporate affairs at the trust, is in charge of communications and is paid nearly £100,000 a year.[5]

See also

References

  1. "Dorset HealthCare University NHS Foundation Trust". Enhancing the Healing Environment. Kings Fund. Retrieved 12 January 2014.
  2. "NHS healthcare trust shows improvement after breaching licence". Bournemouth Echo. 5 July 2014. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  3. "Trust admits it wrongly reported same sex compliance". Health Service Journal. 10 January 2014. Retrieved 12 January 2014.
  4. "New chair for Dorset Healthcare but director of nursing resigns". Health Service Journal. 4 March 2014. Retrieved 14 March 2014.
  5. "Dorset NHS Trust director defends use of public cash for £650K PR bill". Dorset Echo. 6 December 2014. Retrieved 21 December 2014.

External links