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Sibford Surgery, Burdrop, Sibford Gower, Banbury.

Sibford Surgery in Burdrop, Sibford Gower, Banbury 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 25th January 2017

Sibford Surgery is managed by Sibford Surgery.

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 2017-01-25
    Last Published 2017-01-25

Local Authority:

    Oxfordshire

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.

4th May 2016 - During a routine inspection pdf icon

Letter from the Chief Inspector of General Practice

We carried out a focused desktop inspection of Sibford Surgery in December 2016 to assess whether the practice had made the improvements in providing safe care and services.

We had previously carried out an announced comprehensive inspection at Sibford Surgery on 4 May 2016 when we rated the practice as good overall. The practice was rated as good for being effective, caring, responsive and well-led and requires improvement for providing safe care. This was because we found that risks to patients and staff in relation to the management and dispensing of medicines and infection control were not being fully assessed, monitored, managed and mitigated.

Following our last inspection we asked the provider to send a report of the changes they would make to comply with the regulations they were not meeting at that time, in relation to its management of medicine fridge temperatures, the checking of dispensed medicines, ensuring that medicines and vaccines were administered in accordance with directives, auditing and following infection control guidance, and ensuring that fire risks were identified and managed.

The practice was able to demonstrate that they were meeting the standards for safe care and is now rated as good for providing safe care. The overall rating for the practice remains as good.

This report should be read in conjunction with the full inspection report.

Our key findings across the areas we inspected in December 2016 were as follows:

  • There were systems in place to ensure the effective daily monitoring of medicine fridge temperatures, the checking of dispensed medicines from manually amended prescriptions, the administration of medicines and vaccines in accordance with legislations, the auditing and following of infection control guidance, and identifying and managing fire risks.

Professor Steve Field (CBE FRCP FFPH FRCGP) 

Chief Inspector of General Practice

1st January 1970 - During an inspection to make sure that the improvements required had been made pdf icon

Letter from the Chief Inspector of General Practice

We carried out a focused desktop inspection of Sibford Surgery in December 2016 to assess whether the practice had made the improvements in providing safe care and services.

We had previously carried out an announced comprehensive inspection at Sibford Surgery on 4 May 2016 when we rated the practice as good overall. The practice was rated as good for being effective, caring, responsive and well-led and requires improvement for providing safe care. This was because we found that risks to patients and staff in relation to the management and dispensing of medicines and infection control were not being fully assessed, monitored, managed and mitigated.

Following our last inspection we asked the provider to send a report of the changes they would make to comply with the regulations they were not meeting at that time, in relation to its management of medicine fridge temperatures, the checking of dispensed medicines, ensuring that medicines and vaccines were administered in accordance with directives, auditing and following infection control guidance, and ensuring that fire risks were identified and managed.

The practice was able to demonstrate that they were meeting the standards for safe care and is now rated as good for providing safe care. The overall rating for the practice remains as good.

This report should be read in conjunction with the full inspection report.

Our key findings across the areas we inspected in December 2016 were as follows:

  • There were systems in place to ensure the effective daily monitoring of medicine fridge temperatures, the checking of dispensed medicines from manually amended prescriptions, the administration of medicines and vaccines in accordance with legislations, the auditing and following of infection control guidance, and identifying and managing fire risks.

Professor Steve Field (CBE FRCP FFPH FRCGP) 

Chief Inspector of General Practice

 

 

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