6 November 2015
During a routine inspection
Letter from the Chief Inspector of General Practice
We carried out an announced comprehensive inspection at The Practice Loxford on 6 November 2015. Overall the practice is rated as inadequate.
Our key findings across all the areas we inspected were as follows:
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Staff understood and fulfilled their responsibilities to raise concerns, and to report incidents and near misses. But local clinical staff did not have regular meetings to learn from incidents and other safety information.
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The practice did not have systems in place to manage some key risks, for example in relation to repeat prescribing.
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Patients’ clinical needs were assessed and care was planned in line with national guidance. The practice had prioritised long-term care for improvement and had introduced condition-specific clinics, for example for diabetic care to improve patient outcomes.
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Patients we spoke with described doctors, nurses and reception staff as caring. However, the practice scored consistently below average in the 2015 national GP patient satisfaction survey for questions on care and patient involvement.
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The practice provided information about its services in the form of a practice leaflet and a website. Information about how to complain was available at the practice. The practice employed a complaints officer who met with patients as soon as they raised a concern and the practice had seen a reduction in complaints.
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Appointment systems were not working well. We spoke with patients who said they were queueing before 8.00am in the morning to make an appointment because of difficulty getting through on the telephone.
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The practice had suitable treatment facilities but some of the shared facilities such as the furniture and television screens in reception were damaged or not working and had been in this condition for months. The practice had raised issues with the relevant agencies but the problems had not been addressed.
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Staff told us they had access to the training they needed to develop in their role. Appraisals for non-clinical staff had recently been reintroduced.
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The practice had not addressed longstanding issues with quality and safety. The practice had not acted on some of the failures identified at our previous inspection of April 2014 and had not complied with a warning notice issued at that time.
The areas where the provider must make improvements are:
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The practice must ensure that facilities, including shared facilities used by their patients, are safe and take immediate action when a safety risk has been identified.
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Fire marshals must receive appropriate training. The practice must have sight of all relevant health and safety risk assessments and obtain assurance that any recommendations have been carried out by the responsible agency.
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The practice must ensure that repeat prescriptions are processed in line with its repeat prescribing policy and patients receive medicines on time.
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The practice must make sure the service is accessible to registered patients. The telephone appointment system must be fit for purpose.
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Local management arrangements must be sufficiently robust to ensure that safety and quality concerns are addressed without undue delay.
In addition the provider should:
- Provide regular opportunities for clinical staff to meet to discuss and review their practice, including significant events, safeguarding cases, learning and improvement.
- Review and monitor clinical staffing, skill mix and systems for routing patients to the most appropriate clinician to ensure that patient needs are being met in a safe and timely way.
- Carry out staff appraisals annually and provide structured opportunities for staff to review their performance with their manager.
- Explore ways of improving the patient experience. The practice was consistently scoring below average on indicators of compassionate care as measured by the 2015 national GP patient survey.
- Increase the information and support available for carers.
I am placing this practice in special measures. Practices placed in special measures will be inspected again within six months. If insufficient improvements have been made so a rating of inadequate remains for any population group, key question or overall, we will take action in line with our enforcement procedures to begin the process of preventing the provider from operating the service. This will lead to cancelling their registration or to varying the terms of their registration within six months if they do not improve. The practice will be kept under review and if needed could be escalated to urgent enforcement action. Where necessary, another inspection will be conducted within a further six months, and if there is not enough improvement we will move to close the service. Special measures will give people who use the practice the reassurance that the care they get should improve.
Professor Steve Field (CBE FRCP FFPH FRCGP)
Chief Inspector of General Practice