Letter from the Chief Inspector of General Practice
On 17 February 2016 we carried out a comprehensive inspection at Dr Butler and Partners. The practice was rated as requires improvement overall. The practice was rated as requires improvement for safe and effective and good for caring, responsive and well led.
The practice were issued with a requirement notice for improvement for medicine management. As the practice pharmacy team were unable to demonstrate they had the competence, skills and experience to undertake their roles. Patient alerts had not been appropriately actioned and patient records reviewed to ensure safe prescribing practices and medicines reviews were not conducted in accordance with national guidance.
We also recommended the practice;
- maintained cleaning records to demonstrate when, where and how rooms had last been cleaned. Where improvements have been identified provide an audit trail to reflect they have been actioned.
- Recorded written patient consent for surgical procedures.
- Ensured staff receive training on infection and prevention control.
As a result of this inspection the practice sent us an action plan outlining the steps they had taken to improve.
We then carried out an announced follow up inspection at Dr Butler and Partners also referred to as Deal Tree Health Centre, on 3 June 2016 to check that the improvements had been made. We found that the practice had made the necessary improvements. Overall the practice is rated as good.
Our key findings across all the areas we inspected were as follows:
- The practice had introduced a medicine management lead GP who oversaw the actioning and review of medicine alerts to ensure safe prescribing.
- The medicine management lead GP had protected time allocated to be accessible to the dispensing team and undertake training and supervision.
- The dispensary staff had undertaken update training in accurate dispensing or the management of control drugs.
- The practice were members of the Dispensary Doctors Association and were surveying their patients to obtain their views and experience of their dispensary.
- The practice maintained cleaning records to demonstrate when, where and how rooms had last been cleaned. Where improvements had been identified they provided an audit trail to reflect they have been actioned.
- Written patient consent was obtained for procedures such as surgical procedures and muscle injection.
- Staff were scheduled to attend infection prevention control training in June. This was promoting awareness for hand hygiene, how to manage body spillage, safe disposal of clinical items.
- Staff reported a more transparent and supportive culture following the last inspection. Where their expertise was acknowledged and being utilised such as delivering inhouse training in infection prevention control and medicine management updates in chronic diseases.
However there was an area of practice where the provider should make improvements:
- Ensure the quality of the dispensary service through audit of the dispensing process and review of near misses and significant incidents.
Professor Steve Field (CBE FRCP FFPH FRCGP)
Chief Inspector of General Practice