Date of Assessment: 31 July 2025 to 31 August 2025. Yanah Care is a supported living service providing personal care to 3 people across 3 separate buildings. We assessed the service against ‘Right support, right care, right culture’ guidance to make judgements about whether the provider guaranteed people with a learning disability and autistic people respect, equality, dignity, choices, independence and good access to local communities that most people take for granted. Right Support: People were encouraged to lead their lives in their chosen way and took control of decisions about their care. Independence was encouraged and supported. People felt able to discuss their care and support needs with staff. People were supported to have maximum choice and control of their lives and staff supported them in the least restrictive way possible and in their best interests; the policies and systems in the service supported this practice. Right Care: People received dignified care that respected their privacy and human rights. Care and support was person-centred. Individualised care and support plans were in place that enabled staff to provide appropriate and safe care for each person. Right Culture: The ethos, values, attitudes and behaviours of leaders and care staff ensure people using services lead confident, inclusive, and empowered lives. People told us they liked the staff who supported them, they liked living where they lived, and they led happy and fulfilling lives. The provider was previously in breach of the legal regulation in relation to good governance. Improvements were found at this assessment and the provider was no longer in breach of this regulation. People's care and support records and risk assessments had improved. They now reflected people's needs and were more person-centred. Quality assurance processes were now effective in highlighting areas of concern and improvement. People’s medicines were well managed, and the provider acted on safeguarding concerns, accidents, and incidents. Guidance and assessments provided by other health and social care professionals were used to form meaningful care and support plans. Staff were well trained. This included training to support younger people and adults and those with a learning disability. This helped to improve people’s experiences and reduced the risk of harm. People were protected from harm and kept safe. Staff understood, managed, and acted on risks. Where able, people were involved in the assessments of their needs. Where required, advocates, relatives and professionals were also involved to ensure people’s voices could be heard. Staff monitored people’s health to support healthy living. Staff supported people to understand their care and support needs to enable them to give informed consent. Staff involved those important to people to assist them with making decisions should they have reduced or no capacity. People were treated with kindness and compassion. Staff supported people’s independence and encouraged and supported them to maintain relationships with family and friends. There was a particular focus on supporting people to feel part of their local community. Staff provided information to people in a way that they could understand. This included information provided in accessible formats. Management had effective governance processes in place that identified risks and encouraged development and continued improvement across the service.
npm run etl:reports -- --location 1-15261036415.Date of Assessment: 1 May 2025 to 30 June 2025. The service is a care at home service providing support to people under and over the age of 65, some of whom may be living with dementia. The service also cared and supported people with a learning disability; although this was not their primary reason for receiving care at home. A small number of people were under the age of 18. We have taken all of this into account when making our assessment of this service. We inspected this service to follow up on concerns we identified during our assessment in March 2023. The provider was previously in breach of legal regulations in relation to management and governance. Improvements were found at this assessment and the provider was no longer in breach of these regulations. People's care records and risk assessments had improved. They now reflected people's care needs and were person-centred. Quality assurance processes were now effective in highlighting areas of concern and improvement. People’s medicines were well managed, and the provider acted on safeguarding concerns, accidents and incidents. Guidance and assessments provided by other health and social care professionals were used to form meaningful care plans. Staff were well trained. This included training to support younger people and those with a learning disability. This helped to improve people’s experiences and reduced the risk of harm. People were protected and kept safe. Staff understood, managed and acted on risks. People were involved in assessments of their needs. Staff monitored people’s health to support healthy living. Staff made sure people understood their care needs to enable them to give informed consent. Staff involved those important to people to assist them with making decisions should they have reduced or no capacity. People were treated with kindness and compassion. Staff supported people’s independence and encouraged and supported them to maintain relationships with family and friends. Staff provided information to people in a way that they could understand. This included information provided in accessible formats. People knew how to give feedback and were confident the provider took it seriously and acted on it. Management had effective governance processes in place that identified risks and encouraged development and continued improvement across the service.
npm run etl:reports -- --location 1-15261036415.Yanah Care remains Requires Improvement overall due to an ongoing breach of Regulation 17 (Good Governance), with quality monitoring failing to identify gaps in care plans and recruitment records. Significant progress was made since the previous inspection, with breaches of Regulations 12, 13, and 19 all resolved, and people and relatives reporting consistently positive experiences of kind, reliable, and flexible care.