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Brinnington Surgery, Brinnington Road, Brinnington, Stockport.

Brinnington Surgery in Brinnington Road, Brinnington, Stockport is a Doctors/GP specialising in the provision of services relating to diagnostic and screening procedures, family planning services, maternity and midwifery services, services for everyone, surgical procedures and treatment of disease, disorder or injury. The last inspection date here was 22nd November 2016

Brinnington Surgery is managed by Brinnington Surgery.

Contact Details:

Ratings:

For a guide to the ratings, click here.

Safe: Good
Effective: Outstanding
Caring: Good
Responsive: Outstanding
Well-Led: Good
Overall: Outstanding

Further Details:

Important Dates:

    Last Inspection 2016-11-22
    Last Published 2016-11-22

Local Authority:

    Stockport

Link to this page:

    HTML   BBCode

Inspection Reports:

Click the title bar on any of the report introductions below to read the full entry. If there is a PDF icon, click it to download the full report.

6th October 2016 - During a routine inspection pdf icon

Letter from the Chief Inspector of General Practice

We carried out an announced comprehensive inspection at Brinnington Surgery on 6 October 2016. Overall the practice is rated as outstanding.

Our key findings across all the areas we inspected were as follows:

  • Staff understood and fulfilled their responsibilities to raise concerns and report incidents and near misses. All opportunities for learning from internal and external incidents were maximised.
  • The practice had a strong vision, which put quality, effective care and treatment as its top priority. The partnership was structured with distinct roles and responsibilities, utilising the experience and skills of partners to the full. As a result, all business and clinical matters were delivered effectively at the practice.
  • The strategy to deliver this vision had been produced with stakeholders and was regularly reviewed and discussed with staff.
  • Patients described the GP practice as excellent; staff were described as caring and professional.
  • The practice worked closely with other organisations and with the local community in planning how services were provided to ensure that they met patients’ needs.
  • The practice implemented suggestions for improvements and made changes to the way it delivered services in response to feedback from patients. For example, the appointment system following a review in 2015 was changed to provide a minimum of 12 minutes per appointment and schedule a GP telephone appointment for every fifth appointment.
  • The practice had good facilities and was well equipped to treat patients and meet their needs. Information about how to complain was available and easy to understand.

We saw some areas of outstanding practice including:

  • The practice was committed to safeguarding children and vulnerable adults. Safeguarding referrals were reviewed as significant events and learning from these shared within the Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) and the local NHS trust. For example, one child safeguarding incident resulted in changes to the practice’s postnatal baby check template to include more information about the family situation. The adapted template was shared with the CCG. The changes to the postnatal template enabled the practice to identify two incidents where young children were considered at potential risk and safeguarding procedures were implemented.
  • The practice sent out ‘case finding’ questionnaires to patients over 65 years to identify any unmet health care needs.
  • The practice had a designated ‘Speaking Up Guardian’ who was independent of the practice partnership. This provided staff with someone they could raise concerns to under the practice whistleblowing policy.

The areas where the provider should make improvement are:

  • Implement a system to ensure patient medicine reviews that are undertaken are recorded in the patient records as being completed.
  • To support the current risk assessment and to further mitigate any potential risk to patients, staff undertaking the role of chaperone should have a Disclosure and Barring Service (DBS) check.
  • Extend patient participation at the practice by implementing ways for patients who do not have access to the internet or social media applications to contribute to the development of the practice.

Professor Steve Field (CBE FRCP FFPH FRCGP) 

Chief Inspector of General Practice

1st January 1970 - During an annual regulatory review

We reviewed the information available to us about Brinnington Surgery on 1 June 2019. We did not find evidence of significant changes to the quality of service being provided since the last inspection. As a result, we decided not to inspect the surgery at this time. We will continue to monitor this information about this service throughout the year and may inspect the surgery when we see evidence of potential changes.

 

 

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