Letter from the Chief Inspector of General Practice
In October 2015, during an announced comprehensive inspection of Montgomery-House Surgery, we found issues relating to the monitoring of patient care and treatment, indicated by a high level of exception reporting in the Quality Outcomes Framework (QOF) data. QOF is a system intended to improve the quality of general practice and reward good practice by monitoring outcomes for patients. Exception reporting is the removal of patients from QOF calculations where, for example, the patients are unable to attend a review meeting, or certain medicines cannot be prescribed because of side effects.. This was assessed as being in breach of Health and Social Care Act 2008 Regulations.
Following the inspection the provider sent us an action plan detailing how they would review the monitoring of patient care to ensure that patients were included in data to evidence that appropriate care and treatment was being received.
We carried out a desktop review of Montgomery-House Surgery in July 2016 to ensure these changes had been implemented and that the service was meeting Regulations.
We found the practice had made improvements since our last inspection in October 2015 and that it was meeting the Regulation relating to monitoring patient care that had previously been breached.
Specifically, the practice was found to have undertaken work to address its previously high QOF exception reporting rate in a number of clinical domains, by:
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Undertaking an audit into exception reporting for all QOF clinical domains.
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Undertaking an audit focussed on QOF exception reporting for patients with asthma.
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Undertaking actions identified by these audits, including amending coding practices on patient records and encouraging patients to attend annual reviews for long-term conditions.
Although QOF data for 2015/16 has not yet been validated and published, the practice has submitted its figures for the period which evidence that improvements to exception reporting rates have been made.
The ratings for the practice have been updated to reflect our findings.
Professor Steve Field (CBE FRCP FFPH FRCGP)
Chief Inspector of General Practice