Letter from the Chief Inspector of General Practice
Our previous comprehensive inspection at Observatory Medical Practice on 16 August 2016 found breaches of regulations relating to the safe care and treatment. The overall rating for the practice was good. However, they were rated requires improvement in the safe domain. The full comprehensive report from the August 2016 inspection can be found by selecting the ‘all reports’ link for Observatory Medical Practice on our website at www.cqc.org.uk.
This inspection was an announced focused desktop inspection (we have not visited the practice but requested information to be sent to us) carried out on in March 2017. It was conducted 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. This report covers our findings in relation to those requirements and improvements made since our last inspection.
We found the practice had made improvements since our last inspection. The information requested in March 2017 identified that the practice was meeting the regulation that had previously been breached. We have amended the rating for this practice to reflect these changes. The practice is now rated good for the provision of safe, effective, caring, responsive and well led services. In addition the practice made improvements to its services where we suggested this could improve services for patients.
Our key findings were as follows:
- Improvements had been made in the storage of medicines and procedures for when vaccines were potentially compromised.
- Liquid nitrogen storage had been reviewed and improvements made.
- Child immunisations had been reviewed, training provided to staff and a review of children who had not attended undertaken.
- A change to medicine review processes had been implemented to improve uptake within required timescales.
- The practice undertook its own survey to identify whether patient feedback was accurately portrayed in the national survey and this found positive feedback on the areas which had been of concern.
In addition to the areas where we told the provider they must make improvements, there were also actions where we suggested the provider should make improvements. In response they undertook the following actions.
- A review of child immunisations had been undertaken and action to improve uptake.
- The process for medicine reviews had been changed to increase uptake for timely reviews.
- The practice undertook their own survey in October 2016 to focus on areas where the national survey had identified less positive feedback from patients when compared to local and national averages. The practice’s own survey of 453 patients showed patient feedback was significantly better in the practices own survey in these specific areas.
Professor Steve Field (CBE FRCP FFPH FRCGP)
Chief Inspector of General Practice