Letter from the Chief Inspector of General Practice
At our previous comprehensive inspection at Harbour Medical Practice on 18 January 2017 we found breaches of regulation relating to the safe care and treatment and good governance. The overall rating for the practice was requires improvement and specifically we found the practice to require improvement for the provision of safe and effective services. It was good for providing, caring, responsive and well-led services. Consequently we rated all population groups as requires improvement. The previous inspection reports can be found by selecting the ‘all reports’ link for Harbour Medical Practice on our website at www.cqc.org.uk.
This inspection was an announced desktop inspection carried out on 16 August 2017 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 on 18 January 2017. This report covers our findings in relation to those requirements and improvements made since our last inspection.
We found the practice had made the required improvements since our last inspection and was meeting the regulations 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. Overall the practice is rated as good.
Our key findings were as follows:
- There had been improved monitoring of training and staff had access and received the training required to support them in their specific roles.
- Improved risk assessment and action plans were in place.
- Medicine review monitoring had improved to ensure safer prescribing of high risk medicines.
- There had been action taken to improve the management of patients with long term conditions.
The provider had taken action on areas we suggested they should make improvements:
- A new appointment system had been implemented for patients to stagger the availability of appointments. When urgent appointments were not available, GPs called back a patient to undertake an assessment of how urgent their need was to either offer advice or an appointment. The practice informed us the new system had received positive comments. The practice informed us that patients who ‘do not attend’ appointments had fallen from 79 appointments in December 2016 to 55 in June 2017.
- The practice implemented a new carers’ protocol. There was a carers’ champion in place at the practice to help support the needs of carers.
Professor Steve Field CBE FRCP FFPH FRCGP
Chief Inspector of General Practice