Your questions answered
Updated 7 May 2008
Get answers to frequently asked questions about quality
ratings.
- What are quality ratings?
- How are quality ratings
decided?
- What makes an Excellent (
3 star) service?
- What makes a Good (
2 star) service?
- What makes an Adequate (
1 star) service?
- What makes a Poor (
0 star) service?
- Does every service have a published
quality rating?
- What does ‘Not yet rated’
mean?
- What does ‘Suspended rating’
mean?
- How can a quality rating for a care
service change?
- What happens when a care service
disagrees with its quality rating?
- What happens to a care service rated
as Poor?
- I am a care service provider, where
can I get more information about quality ratings?
- What if I have further
questions?
1. What are quality ratings?
We have introduced quality ratings to tell people simply and
clearly how well a care home or care service is doing against
national standards.
We give a registered service stars to show how good they are.
The more stars we give them, the better we think they are.
So if we give:
- 3 stars
- this means it is
excellent
- 2 stars
- this means it is good
- 1 stars
- this means it is
adequate
- 0 stars
- this means it is
poor.
2. How are quality ratings decided?
We decide the quality rating for a care service following a
key inspection. Key inspections are major
assessments of the quality of a service.
This inspection includes information gathered from:
- interviews with the staff and the people who are using the
service
- information given to us by the care service
- surveys filled in by people using the service, their relatives
and other professionals involved in their care
- a visit to the service by our inspectors (the service does not
usually know when we are coming to visit)
- the history of the service
We use all of the evidence that we gather to work out the
quality rating for a care service.
To ensure we interpret this evidence consistently, we use
guidelines called key lines of regulatory
assessment (KLORA).
We apply these guidelines to help us form a judgment about how
well the service is meeting each of the outcome
groups in the national minimum
standards.
We use the word 'outcome' to describe what the experience is
like for the people receiving the service.
Once we have used KLORA to reach a judgment about each outcome
area of the national minimum standards, we apply a set of rules to
calculate the overall quality rating for the service.
Generally speaking, the more outcome groups that are graded as
excellent the more likely a service is to achieve
3 stars.
The more outcome groups that are graded as poor
the more likely a service is to be rated as 1 or zero
stars.
However, in awarding a quality rating we take particular account
of how safe and how well managed a care service is.
As they are especially important to quality we have
stricter rules for those outcomes relating
to safety and management. Services can only be as good as
their 'poorest' rating in these areas.
3. What makes an Excellent (
3 star)
service?
We award an excellent quality rating to particularly good
services, well managed, and with a sustained track record of
delivering good performance and managing improvement.
A service is excellent if:
- No outcome group is scored as being poor
- All outcomes relating to safety and management are good or
better and at least one of them is excellent
- At least half of the outcome groups must be judged as either
good or excellent
A brand new service cannot be excellent at the first key
inspection following registration, as it would lack a track record
of performance over time.
4. What makes a Good (
2 star)
service?
We award a good quality rating to a service where:
- At least half the outcome groups are good or better
- No outcome group is poor
- All outcomes relating to safety and management are good or
better
A service awarded a good quality rating may have some excellent
outcomes.
5. What makes an Adequate (
1 star)
service?
We award an adequate quality rating to a service where:
- At least half the outcome groups are adequate or better
- All outcomes relating to safety and management are adequate or
better
A service awarded an adequate quality rating may have some
outcomes that are good, even excellent.
6. What makes a Poor (
0 star)
service?
We award a poor quality rating to a service where any of the
outcome groups that focus on safety and management are judged poor
or it does not meet the rules for an adequate
service.
A poor service may have some good or even excellent outcomes, or
it may be a generally low performing service. The key issue is that
it does not perform as a safe service.
7. Does every service have a published quality rating?
Every care home or care service will have a
published quality rating following their key inspection.
However, some services will be classed as not yet
rated or having a suspended rating.
8. What does ‘not yet rated’ mean?
Some care services will not yet have a published quality rating.
This is because of the following reasons:
- Some care services are newly registered and will not receive
their first key inspection and quality rating until six months
after their registration. Usually, care services without any
inspection reports on the website are newly registered.
- We have not carried out a key inspection this year. Some
services have told us that they would like us to publish the rating
that we gave them prior to 2008. Other services have not agreed to
this and so we will not publish their quality rating until after
their next key inspection. All care services will have a quality
rating within three years.
9. What does ‘suspended rating’ mean?
These are services that are not meeting the required standards
for a regulated service. We have sent them a legal notice stating
that we propose to cancel their registration. Services have the
right to make an appeal against our proposals to the Care Standards
Tribunal. If the tribunal uphold our decision, then the care
service will close and we will remove all the service details
(name, address etc) from our website.
10. How can
a quality rating for a care service change?
A rating can only be changed following the next key inspection
of a care home or care service.
If we get information that suggests that a current quality
rating is wrong we may bring forward the next key inspection to an
earlier date.
11. What happens when a care service disagrees with its quality
rating?
We have set up our new quality rating review service (QRRS) to
let providers bring any concerns about their quality rating to our
attention.
12. What happens to a care service rated as poor?
If a care home or care service is rated as
poor, we ask them to fill in an
improvement plan.
They must use the improvement plan to tell us what action they
will take to improve the quality of their service.
If a care home or care service is rated as
adequate, we may also ask them to fill in an
improvement plan.
13. I am a care service provider, where can I get more
information about quality ratings?
Go to our
quality ratings for care services page on CSCI
Professional.
14. What if I have further questions?
Contact the customer services team:
Telephone: 0845 015 0120 or email enquiries@csci.gsi.gov.uk