Letter from the Chief Inspector of General Practice
We carried out an announced comprehensive inspection at the Reepham and Aylsham Medical Practice on 19 September 2016. The practice was rated as good for providing effective and caring services, requires improvement for providing responsive and well led services and inadequate for providing safe services. Overall the practice was rated as requires improvement.
We undertook a comprehensive inspection of Reepham and Aylsham Medical Practice on 06 July 2017 under Section 60 of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 to confirm that the practice had carried out their plan to meet the legal requirements in relation to the breaches in regulations that we identified in our previous inspection on 19 September 2016. The practice was rated as good overall and requires improvement for providing safe services. The full comprehensive report following the inspection on 19 September 2016 and 06 July 2017 can be found by selecting the ‘all reports’ link for Reepham and Aylsham Medical Practice on our website at www.cqc.org.uk.
We undertook a follow up focused inspection of Reepham and Aylsham Medical Practice on 16 January 2018. This inspection was carried out to review in detail the actions taken by the practice to improve the quality of care and to confirm that the practice was now meeting legal requirements.
Overall the practice is still rated as good, and has been rated as good for providing safe services.
Our key findings were as follows:
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All equipment in the emergency bag was in date. There was a comprehensive policy and log in place to support the new checking system.
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There was a system in place to monitor the use of blank prescription stationary which was in line with relevant guidance.
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There was a system in place to record, learn from and discuss incidents such as near misses in the dispensary.
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There were two dispensaries and the system for managing uncollected scripts was uniform across both dispensaries and ensured GPs were informed when medicines were not collected.
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At the inspection on 06 July 2017, we found that exception reporting for 2015/16 for ‘the percentage of patients with cancer, diagnosed within the preceding 15 months, who had a patient review recorded as occurring within six months of the date of diagnosis’ was significantly higher than the local and national averages. (Exception reporting is the removal of patients from the Quality and Outcomes Framework calculations where, for example, the patients are unable to attend a review meeting or certain medicines cannot be prescribed because of side effects). The practice had run an audit and data from 2016/17 showed this exception reporting had reduced and was comparable to the local and national averages.
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The practice had implemented an audit calendar which ensured second audit cycles were completed in a timely manner. The practice had also implemented a system whereby each member of staff completed a yearly audit for professional development. Some of these audits included prescribing for urinary tract infections, prescribing blood thinning medicines, appointments and an audit of the practice website. The practice also completed audits on population groups to ensure audits were relevant to their practice. For example, the practice had completed an audit to ensure they had appropriately identified all patients approaching the end of life. Systems and processes were implemented and this resulted in increased staff awareness of the patient’s condition.
Professor Steve Field (CBE FRCP FFPH FRCGP)
Chief Inspector of General Practice