30 March 2017
During a routine inspection
Letter from the Chief Inspector of General Practice
We first inspected Church Road surgery on 6 May 2016 as part of our comprehensive inspection programme. The overall rating for the practice was requires improvement, with well led rated as inadequate. The full comprehensive report on the May 2016 inspection can be found by selecting the ‘all reports’ link for Church Road surgery on our website at www.cqc.org.uk. During the inspection in May 2016 we found the practice required improvements in a number of areas. The areas which required improvement related to appropriate processes which were not in place to mitigate risks in relation to the safety and quality of the services. Feedback had not been sought from service users to demonstrate improvement to services. Following the inspection the practice wrote to us to say what they would do to meet the regulations.
We undertook this planned comprehensive inspection on 30 March 2017 to check that the practice had followed their action plan and to confirm that they had made the required improvements. Overall we found some improvements had been made to the concerns raised at the previous inspection. However, concerns relating to effective processes to manage risk and monitor patient outcomes had not been established. As a result of the inspection findings the practice is rated as requires improvement.
Our key findings were as follows:
- The practice had no system in place to receive alerts from the Medical and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) alerts.
- On the day of inspection, the practice did not have an effective system in place for the recall of patients on high risk medicines.
- There was no system in place to ensure clinical staff were up to date with NICE guidelines.
- The practice did not have an effective system in place to monitor expiry dates of medicines carried by GPs.
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Emergency medicines were easily accessible to staff in a secure area of the practice, but we found that some staff were not aware of their location.
- Staff we spoke with did not know the process for reporting significant events. We found that no events had been recorded in the significant events log since May 2016.
- Quality performance data showed patient outcomes was lower than local and national averages in 2015/16. Unverified data provided by the practice for 2016/17 showed some improvement, but the recall system to review patients with long term conditions was not effective in monitoring patients.
- At the previous inspection in May 2016, 1% of the practice list were registered as carers. The practice attributed the low numbers to coding errors.
- Complaints were actioned by the practice; however we were unable to evidence any learning or improvements made following patient feedback.
- At the previous inspection the provider did not have risk assessments or disclosure and barring checks (DBS) for reception staff who acted as chaperones. We found this had been acted on and the appropriate DBS checks were now in place.
- Staff immunisation status identified as not being in place at the inspection in May 2016 had been recorded and we saw evidence to confirm that the practice had ensured all staff were up to date with the recommended immunisations for working in general practice.
- At the inspection in May 2016 we found staff had not had appraisals and communication with all staff was identified as an area for improvement. At this inspection we found staff had received appraisals and departmental meetings were now taking place on a regular basis.
- Patient Specific Directions (PSD) were found not to be in place at the inspection in May 2016. These had been implemented for the administration of vaccines by the health care assistant.
However, there were also areas of practice where the provider needs to make improvements.
Importantly, the provider must:
- Have an embedded system in place to act on safety alerts and national guidance.
- Monitor quality and outcome framework (QOF) indicators and national targets to ensure patient reviews are up to date and completed.
- Ensure processes are in place for handling complaints and patient feedback is acted on. Implement a system to share learning of actions taken and lessons learnt with the staff.
In addition the provider should:
- Continue to review appointment access to increase availability of appointments.
Professor Steve Field (CBE FRCP FFPH FRCGP)
Chief Inspector of General Practice