South East Coast Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust (SECAmb)
 has warmly welcomed the Care Quality Commission (CQC) report on
 it’s services, published today (15 August 2019), which sees the
 Trust rated as ‘Good’ overall and it’s Urgent & Emergency Care
 service rated as ‘Outstanding’ overall, including ‘Outstanding’ for
 Caring. 
The report, which follows planned inspections of the Trust’s
 services in June and July, sees the Trust rated as ‘Good’ overall
 in each of the inspection areas – safe, effective, caring,
 responsive and well-led. The Trust is pleased that the NHS 111
 service has retained its overall rating of ‘Good’. 
SECAmb also welcomes the announcement by NHS Improvement today
 that, following the CQC’s recommendation, the Trust should exit
 Special Measures. 
Acting Chief Executive Dr Fionna Moore said: “This positive
 report is testament to the huge amount of work that has been
 ongoing at SECAmb for the past couple of years. I am delighted, but
 not surprised, that staff have been recognised for the fantastic
 care they provide to patients and pleased that the big improvements
 we have made as a Trust during the past couple of years have been
 acknowledged.” 
Across emergency and urgent care, several areas were highlighted
 as ‘Outstanding’ including work to reduce hospital handover times
 and improve services for mental health patients, with staff
 receiving particular praise. Inspectors also commended the
 introduction of Joint Response Units with police services and the
 Trust’s Wellbeing Hub, which provides a range of resources to
 assist staff with their physical and mental health. 
Throughout the report, the CQC spoke positively about a number
 of aspects of the Trust’s service including: 
- Staff treating patients with compassion and kindness,
respecting their privacy and dignity and taking account of
individual needs - A strong, visible person-centred culture and that staff were
highly motivated - The service treated concerns and complaints seriously,
investigated them and shared lessons learned with all
staff - There were clear systems and processes to safely prescribe,
administer, record and store medicines. Inspectors observed
outstanding practice in the management of controlled
drugs. - Staff were supported following traumatic experiences and
events - Trust leaders, new to the organisation at the last inspection,
had now embedded into their roles. The changes had had a positive
impact on the organisation. - Staff told inspectors they felt respected, supported and
valued. They were focused on the needs of patients receiving
care. - The service promoted equality and diversity in daily work and
provided opportunities for career development. 
While the Trust is pleased that the CQC has evidenced such
 significant improvements, it is aware that there are areas where
 further work is required. 
The Trust is working hard to improve its response times to less
 seriously ill and injured patients. While SECAmb is performing well
 against the national average in responding to the most serious call
 categories (category one and two), at times of high demand patients
 in lower priority categories can sometimes wait longer than they
 should. Recent weeks have seen an improvement in the Trust’s
 response times to these patients and it is committed to further
 improvements. 
It is also committed to improving staffing levels across the
 Trust, including in its Emergency Operations Centres. 
Acting Chief Executive Dr Fionna Moore added “I would like to
 thank everyone at SECAmb for the dedication and commitment they
 show, day-in, day-out and hope they take a moment to celebrate how
 much we have achieved. 
“I am very aware that there remains work to be done to ensure we
 meet the high standards rightly expected. I am, however, very
 confident that we are on the right path to deliver further
 progress.” 
Trust Chair, David Astley added: “I would like to thank everyone
 who has worked so hard to get SECAmb to where it is today. Every
 single member of staff and our volunteers contribute to the
 assessment made by the CQC and everyone should be very proud of
 what has been achieved. 
We are very aware that there remains a lot of hard work ahead
 and we will expect to deliver even higher standards in the years
 ahead.” 
Read the full report
 here.