Harmoni HS Ltd was founded in September 1996 by two doctors as a GP co-operative in Harrow. As of November 2012, Harmoni is a wholly owned subsidiary of Care UK with the core business being the delivery of out of hours care and NHS 111 services. Harmoni employs more than 1,700 clinical and non-clinical staff members.
The location inspected was based in the Suffolk local authority area and is registered to provide two of the six regulated activities which are: transport services, triage and medical advice provided remotely and treatment of disease, disorder or injury. The Harmoni – Suffolk out-of-hours base location reports to the NHS Ipswich and East Suffolk Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG).
The central administration and coordinating centre has eight satellite locations which provide services to people in and around the Ipswich area. The main base location is also the call handling and triage centre for National Health Service (NHS) 111 telephone calls across the Suffolk region. We visited the main central base in Ipswich where patients are not seen, and two other locations where patients attended for consultation and treatments. The two other locations visited were at Bury St Edmunds and Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust. Three of the remaining six location do not all open during the week on a regular daily basis and are opened on an ad hoc basis when required to provide a service.
The provider was chosen as part of the new wave inspection programme project and the visit was announced. The team was made up of five specialist advisors and a compliance inspector and the visit was conducted whilst the provider was working operationally.
During our inspection we spoke with six patients who were using the out-of-hours emergency GP service, and approximately 20 members of staff. Staff members included the regional medical director, director of operations / registered manager, doctors, lead nurse and operational staff such as call handlers and drivers.
The provider had satisfactory governance systems in place to protect patients from the risk of abuse and ensure that they received the appropriate safe emergency care and treatment. Medicines kept on the premises were stored appropriately and securely and staff received the training in the safeguarding of children and adults.
We found that the service had systems in place to ensure that the provider could effectively respond to the needs of the patients accessing the out-of-hours service safely. The provider monitored the call handlers to ensure that information was recorded and used effectively to prioritise patients appropriately according to how urgently they required care. Information regarding the care received by patients was shared with the people’s usual GP in a timely manner to ensure continuity of care between the different service providers.
Patients received a caring service. Patients told us that they were happy with the care they received and that they were involved in the decisions about their care. We were told that staff were polite and respectful and we observed this to be the case. There was opportunity for people to provide feedback as Care Quality Commission questionnaires had been made available in the waiting area prior to our visit. The provider also carried out regular satisfaction surveys to capture people’s views. The provider had a strategy in place for capturing the views of the GPs and ethnic minority groups within the area. There was easy access to the locations we visited with car parking availability at both sites.
The service was responsive to patients’ needs. Staff had access to the appropriate equipment, training and support. Although there was an expectation that medical staff would provide some of their own equipment. The provider carried out the appropriate employment checks on new and temporary staff to ensure that they were able and safe to carry out their roles.
The organisation was well led. There was a clear governance structure in place and a process for disseminating information to all members of staff. There was a complaints policy and procedure in place as well as a process for escalating incidents to senior managers by the duty coordinators. All complaints and incidents are reviewed through the Clinical Governance Committee. Staff told us that they felt supported and that the service was well-led. There were regular team meetings to ensure that information was cascaded to all staff team members; this included learning from incidents and any changes to practice across the organisation as well as locally.
The inspection did not highlight any non-compliance with the current Health & Social Care Act (2008) regulations.