Letter from the Chief Inspector of General Practice
On 8 September 2015 we carried out a comprehensive inspection of Oak Tree Partnership and found concerns relating to the review of care and treatment for patients with long term medical conditions. The practice performance against national indicators was lower than average and offering patients identified as smokers advice on smoking cessation was lower than average. Following the inspection the provider sent us an action plan detailing how they would make the required improvements.
We carried out a desktop review of Oak Tree Partnership on 17 May 2016 to ensure these changes had been implemented and that the service was meeting regulations. Our previous inspection in September 2015 had found a breach of regulations relating to the delivery of safe care and treatment. The rating for the provision of effective services has been updated to reflect our findings. Based on the information received we have also updated the ratings for the population groups of Older People, People with Long-term conditions and People experiencing poor mental health (including people with dementia).
We found the practice had made significant improvements since our last inspection on 8 September 2015 and they were now meeting the regulation, relating to identifying and assessing risk of not completing annual health reviews and taking action to address identified risks.
Specifically the practice had:
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Significantly improved the number of annual health assessments and reviews that took place.
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Improved performance in the national indicators for care of patients with long term conditions.
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The practice had increased the number of patients with a smoking status recorded and had offered an increased number of these patients advice on smoking cessation.
The practice also sent us evidence to confirm they had implemented revised cleaning regimes and staff reported an improvement in standards. The most recent friends and family recommendation results showed that patients who gave a positive response to whether they would recommend the practice was 81%. Those who did not give a negative or positive response were excluded from the calculation of satisfaction.
We have changed the rating for this practice to reflect these improvements. The practice is now rated good for the provision of safe, effective, caring, responsive and well led services.
Professor Steve Field (CBE FRCP FFPH FRCGP)
Chief Inspector of General Practice