07 July 2021
During an inspection looking at part of the service
This service is rated as Good overall. (Previous inspection April 2019 – Requires improvement)
The key questions are rated as:
Are services safe? – Good
Are services effective? – Good
Are services caring? – Good
Are services responsive? – Good
Are services well-led? – Good
We carried out an announced focused inspection at The Frater Clinic, to follow up on previous breaches of regulations. During this inspection we inspected safe, effective and well led.
CQC inspected the service in April 2019. We rated the service as requires improvement overall due to concerns with, limited quality improvement activity in relation to the clinical outcomes for patients. At the time of inspection there was no evidence of a process in place to follow-up on patients that were referred for secondary care. The minutes of meetings attended by the consultants granted practising privileges could not be used as a record that could be referred back to and used for follow-up purposes because they did not capture the detail of the meeting or agreed outcomes.
We checked these areas as part of this focused inspection and found the concerns had been resolved.
The Frater Clinic is registered with CQC under the Health and Social Care Act 2008 in respect of some, but not all, of the private medical services it provides. There are some exemptions from regulation by CQC which relate to particular types of service and these are set out in Schedule 2 of The Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014. The Frater Clinic provides corporate health screening and pre-employment screening programmes to some employers. These types of arrangements are exempt by law from CQC regulation. Therefore, we did not inspect these. The service is registered with the CQC for the regulated activity of treatment of disorder, disease and injury.
The provider is the registered manager. A registered manager is a person who is registered with the Care Quality Commission to manage the service. Like registered providers, they are ‘registered persons’. Registered persons have legal responsibility for meeting the requirements in the Health and Social Care Act 2008 and associated Regulations about how the service is run.
Our key findings were:
- The service made improvements to their policies and protocols since the last inspection.
- The audits we reviewed demonstrated quality improvement for patients.
- Processes for patients to access a chaperone within the clinic had been reviewed.
- The practice was now using an electronic recording system to support quality improvement.
- Governance arrangements had improved to ensure oversight of risk.
- Risks to patients were assessed and well managed.
The areas where the provider should make improvements are:
- Continue to embed the programme of planned quality improvement activity and consider ways to broaden its scope.
- Review clinical staff safeguarding training levels.
- Consider reviewing/updating regulated activates to include Diagnostic and screening procedures, and Maternity and midwifery services.
Dr Rosie Benneyworth BM BS BMedSci MRCGP
Chief Inspector of Primary Medical Services and Integrated Care improvement)