• Hospital
  • Independent hospital

Basinghall Health Centre

Overall: Good read more about inspection ratings

4 Basinghall Street, London, EC2V 5BQ (020) 7460 5590

Provided and run by:
Medical Services International Limited

Important: The provider of this service changed. See old profile

Latest inspection summary

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Background to this inspection

Updated 12 August 2022

Basinghall Health Centre is a diagnostic and outpatient centre based in Central London. The service provides diagnostic appointments and consultations for further treatment at The Cromwell Hospital, which is also part of Medical Services International Limited, as well as follow-up appointments post-treatment. The service also provides focused and general health assessments.

Services offered by the provider include consultations for orthopaedics, sports and exercise medicine, physiotherapy, cardiology, rheumatology, osteopathy, pain management, spinal surgery, respiratory medicine and urology.

Facilities at the Centre include a radiology suite (offering MRI, X-ray and Ultrasound), a Treatment Suite (including a mammography room and minor procedure room) and a number of consulting rooms.

The location is open Monday to Friday. Consultants are engaged under practising privileges from The Cromwell Hospital.

What people who use the service say
Patients said staff treated them well, treated them with respect, and listened to them. They said the staff were caring and responded quickly when they needed something. They also said staff were supportive and interested in them as individuals.

Overall inspection

Good

Updated 12 August 2022

We had not previously rated this location. We rated it as good because:

  • Leaders had the skills and abilities to run the service. They understood and managed the priorities and issues the service faced. They were visible and approachable in the service for patients and staff. They supported staff to develop their skills.
  • Staff felt respected, supported and valued. They were focused on the needs of patients receiving care. The service had an open culture where patients, their families and staff could raise concerns without fear. All staff were committed to continually learning and improving services. They had a good understanding of quality improvement methods and the skills to use them.
  • Leaders and teams used systems to manage performance effectively. They identified and escalated relevant risks and issues and identified actions to reduce their impact. Leaders and staff actively and openly engaged with patients, staff, equality groups, the public and local organisations to plan and manage services.
  • The service minimised the number of times patients needed to attend the service, by ensuring patients had access to the required staff and tests on one occasion. Any diagnostic tests and the patient consultations in this pathway were completed in one visit, which the service referred to as a "one-stop shop". Patients we spoke with stated this was efficient and meant they could receive their treatment quickly.
  • Staff supported and involved patients, families and carers to understand their condition and make decisions about their care and treatment.
  • Staff treated patients with compassion and kindness, respected their privacy and dignity, and took account of their individual needs.
  • Doctors, nurses and other healthcare professionals worked together as a team to benefit patients. They supported each other to provide good care.
  • The service provided care and treatment based on national guidance and evidence-based practice.
  • The service managed patient safety incidents well. Staff recognised and reported incidents and near misses. Managers investigated incidents and shared lessons learned with the whole team and the wider service.

However:

  • On inspection we identified a risk that some patients and visitors going to the radiology suite were not being sufficiently screened for risks related to MRI machines.
  • Staff in the radiology suite stated that they performed quarterly evacuation drills for the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanners, however these drills were not being documented.