Background to this inspection
Updated
12 March 2020
Northern Health GPPO Limited provides the primary care access to Extended Hours requirements for the North region of Manchester. They operate out of five locations within North Manchester. The service headquarters is located at Victoria Mill, 10 Lower Vickers Street, Miles Platting, Manchester, M40 7LH.
The Manchester Primary Care Partnership Ltd (MPCP) was formed in February 2015, is a not for profit organisation run by the three Manchester GP Federations. These are Northern Health GPPO (North Manchester), Primary Care Manchester (Central Manchester) and South Manchester GP Federation (South Manchester).
The MPCP, through its member Federations, is in a privileged and unique position of having the backing of all 90 independent local GP Practices across the Manchester local authority area, covering a total patient population of over 600,000. The MPCP provides a second-tier governance structure to the three Manchester Federations, in which sharing learning and incidents and peer discussions are raised in the meetings.
Northern Health GPPO Limited’s mission is to protect, develop and innovate general practice. The aim is to put patients and practices at the heart of local, integrated community services. They say they will operate in a transparent way through working in partnership with patients, practices, commissioners and other providers.
Appointments can be booked through the receptionist at the patients local GP practice, where a time and location will be provided. The services operate out of five community hubs throughout North Manchester seven days per week.
The service operates using GPs, practice nurses and health care assistants (HCA) to offer patient appointments and administration staff offer support during their operation at each hub location.
Cheetham Hill Primary Care Centre is located in the North Manchester area and is open from 6pm until 8pm, Monday to Friday.
The premises have full disabled entrance access with a large seated reception area, with a second waiting area, which hold nurses’ treatment rooms. The GP consulting rooms are all located on the ground floor and there is a lift to access treatment rooms on the second floor. There are disabled toilets on both levels and the ground floor having baby changing facilities and a breast-feeding room. Car parking and disabled parking is available.
Northern Health GPPO Limited is registered with the Care Quality Commission (CQC) to provide the regulated activities diagnostic and treatment of disease, disorder or injury and diagnostic and screening at Cheetham Hill Primary Care Centre.
Regulated activities are delivered to the patient population from the following address:
244 Cheetham Hill Road
Cheetham Hill
Manchester
M8 8UP
The service has a website that contains information about what they do to support their patient population: http:// https://www.nhgppo.co.uk.
The service does not accommodate walk-in patients or attend home visits.
Updated
12 March 2020
This service is rated as Good overall.
The key questions are rated as:
Are services safe? – Good
Are services effective? – Good
Are services caring? – Good
Are services responsive? – Good
Are services well-led? – Outstanding
We carried out an announced comprehensive inspection at Cheetham Hill Primary Care Centre on 10 December 2019. The inspection was carried out as part of or inspection programme.
The service is an extended hours GP service and is part of a network of alliance locations which offer extended GP cover across North Manchester.
At this inspection we found:
- There was an open culture in which all safety concerns raised by staff and people who used the service were highly valued and integrated into learning with improvements made.
- The service routinely reviewed the effectiveness and appropriateness of the care it provided. It ensured that care and treatment was delivered according to evidence- based guidelines.
- There was a clear vision which had quality and safety as its top priority. The strategy to deliver this vision had been produced with stakeholders and staff, which was regularly reviewed and discussed
- There were clearly defined and bespoke embedded systems, processes and practices in place to keep staff and patients safe.
- The service had strong and visible clinical and managerial leadership and governance arrangements.
- Patients were able to access care and treatment from the service within an appropriate timescale for their needs.
- A clear system was in place for patients accessing appointments, with a choice to be added to a cancellation waiting list.
- Staff involved and treated people with compassion, kindness, dignity and respect.
We saw several outstanding areas
- On the 22nd May 2017 Manchester Arena was bombed. The Federation provided Managerial and GP support and were the first responders on site at the “Help Centre” set up at the Etihad Football Stadium in the hours directly following the bombing. Clinical and non-clinical staff were dealing with and assisting the injured, traumatised and bereaved, whilst providing medical consultations, examination and emergency medication. The NHGPPO continued to provide additional appointments in all five Hubs to help alleviate the pressure on the hospitals for the duration of that week. As a result of this, the clinical chair of the NHGPPO was invited to the Town Hall to meet Prince Charles on behalf of the Federation and all Directors to receive thank you letters.
- Within weeks of the Manchester Bombing, a major fire at a Cash and Carry Wholesalers saw residents displaced from their homes for many hours, whilst the fire was brought under control. NHGPPO Ltd liaised with local pharmacies to support patients who needed access to essential medications. Additional GP appointments were provided at the Local Hub site and on call arrangements were increased.
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The Federation, Five Oaks Medical Practice, Manchester Active and a Premier league football club have worked together to improve the uptake of preventative health checks, whilst trying to promote activity to improve people’s wellbeing. Using the world class facilities and treatment room at the football stadium (as an incentive) the Federation staff and access to technology, all local North Manchester residents were invited for a free health check. Once attended the patient was followed up with an activity programme for those with a higher than average Qrisk (cardiovascular risk) and provided with a free Fitbit and weekly report. The programme had been running since August 2019 and at the time of the inspection had seen over 100 patients attend for a health check.