Monitor
Monitor, the health sector regulator, has acted after the Care Quality Commissions (CQC) Chief Inspector of Hospitals gave the trust an overall rating of inadequate earlier this month.
An inspection by the CQC identified a number of serious problems, including concerns about the safety of services, staffing levels and leadership at the trust.
To ensure improvements are made for patients, Monitor has put the trust into special measures so it can receive tailored support to address the challenges it faces. This will include appointing an Improvement Director to provide expertise and hold the trust to account, and arranging a partnership with a high-performing trust.
Norfolk and Suffolk has agreed to put in action plans to address the care quality concerns identified by the CQC, and to ensure the Board is more accountable and effective in fixing problems.
Monitor has also imposed a new condition on Norfolk and Suffolks licence, enabling the regulator to take further action, such as replacing members of the trusts leadership team, if the required improvements are not made swiftly for patients.
Katherine Cawley, Regional Director at Monitor, said:
Patients in Norfolk and Suffolk deserve to receive the highest possible care, and so the failings that the CQC has identified in the trusts services are disappointing.
We are pleased that the trust has already started to address some of the issues raised by the CQC, but much more needs to be done. Thats why we have put Norfolk and Suffolk into special measures, to ensure that it gets the extra help and support it needs to make the improvements that are required.
We will continue to work closely with the trust and monitor its progress in making the improvements that patients in Norfolk and Suffolk expect to see.