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North Street Medical Centre, Romford.

North Street Medical Centre in Romford is a Community services - Healthcare, Doctors/GP and Urgent care centre specialising in the provision of services relating to diagnostic and screening procedures, family planning services, services for everyone and treatment of disease, disorder or injury. The last inspection date here was 4th September 2018

North Street Medical Centre is managed by Havering Health Ltd who are also responsible for 1 other location

Contact Details:

Ratings:

For a guide to the ratings, click here.

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

Further Details:

Important Dates:

    Last Inspection 2018-09-04
    Last Published 2018-09-04

Local Authority:

    Havering

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.

14th August 2018 - During a routine inspection pdf icon

This service is rated as Good overall.

The key questions are rated as:

Are services safe? – Good

Are services effective? – Good

Are services caring? – Good

Are services responsive? – Good

Are services well-led? – Good

We carried out an announced comprehensive inspection at North Street Medical Centre as part of our inspection programme.

At this inspection we found:

  • The leaders of Havering Health Ltd had the experience, capacity and skills to deliver the service strategy and address risks to it.
  • Staff felt respected, supported, and valued. They were proud to work for the service.
  • The service had good systems to manage risk so that safety incidents were less likely to happen.

  • The provider had systems in place to safeguard children and vulnerable adults from abuse.

  • The service routinely reviewed the effectiveness and appropriateness of the care it provided. It ensured that care and treatment was delivered according to evidence- based guidelines.

  • Patients were able to access care and treatment from the service within an appropriate timescale for their needs.

  • Staff had the skills, knowledge and experience to carry out their roles.

  • The service had systems for sharing information with staff and other agencies to enable them to deliver safe care and treatment. However, the service did not have access to all of the patient’s medical records. The Clinical Commissioning Group confirmed that access to all patient notes was out of the services control. Although, recently more GP practices had moved to one computer software system and the service was looking at ways of funding this system.

  • The service took complaints and concerns seriously and responded to them appropriately to improve the quality of care.

The areas where the provider should make improvements are:

  • The provider should review the policies and standard operating procedures to ensure that they fully reflect the services practices and sites.

  • The provider should continue to review the computer software used to enable the service to have access to the GP practice patient notes.

  • The provider should seek written assurance from the locum GP that their medical indemnity is correct for the service.

  • The provider should have an agreement in place for locum GPs about their responsibilities whilst working for the service.

  • The provider should consider the use of interpretation services to aid staff at the call centre.

  • The provider should review the appraisal system to ensure it includes all call handlers.

Professor Steve Field (CBE FRCP FFPH FRCGP) 

Chief Inspector of General Practice

 

 

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