• Doctor
  • Out of hours GP service

Archived: Nicholstown Surgery

Overall: Good read more about inspection ratings

Brintons Terrace, Southampton, Hampshire, SO14 0YG

Provided and run by:
Southampton Primary Care Limited

Latest inspection summary

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Background to this inspection

Updated 11 February 2020

Nicholstown Surgery is one of eight registered locations of the provider Southampton Primary Care Limited (SPCL). SPCL is a GP federation delivering primary healthcare services to approximately 283,000 patients across the city of Southampton. Of the 26 GP practices in Southampton, 24 are member practices and are shareholders in the federation. The member practices are:

  • Aldermoor Surgery
  • Alma Medical Centre
  • Atherley House Surgery
  • Bath Lodge Surgery
  • Brook House Surgery
  • Cheviot Road Surgery
  • Highfield Health
  • Hill Lane Surgery
  • Living Well Partnership
  • Lordshill Health Centre
  • Mulberry Surgery
  • Old Fire Station Surgery
  • Raymond Road Surgery
  • Shirley Health Partnership
  • St Mary’s Surgery
  • St Peters Surgery
  • Stoneham Lane Surgery
  • Townhill Surgery
  • University Health Service
  • Victor Street Surgery
  • Walnut Tree Surgery
  • West End Road Surgery
  • Woolston Lodge Surgery

SPCL has eight registered locations which act as hub sites for patients to access the services it delivers.

The registered hub sites are:

  • Aldermoor Surgery
  • Chessel Branch Surgery
  • Lordshill Health Centre
  • Nicholstown Surgery
  • Shirley Health Partnership
  • Southampton Primary Care Ltd
  • St Mary’s Surgery
  • Woolston Lodge.

Locations have been chosen to provide the best spread of access for patients across the city. There are three hub sites open across the city at any one time.

Southampton Primary Care Limited provides the following services to the public (not all services are operational from hub sites):

Enhanced access

If a patient cannot get an appointment with their own GP patients can have access to the enhanced access service offered by SPCL. There are a range of clinicians available including Health care assistants, nurse practitioners and GPs. Patients can access this service by contacting their main GP practice and requesting a hub appointment. Appointments are run city wide from any of the hub locations. Hub locations opening days and times alternate to provide the best possible spread of services and access across the city.

Physiotherapy

Patients can refer directly into this service to see a physiotherapist for a ‘see and treat’ appointment for musculoskeletal issues. At the time of this inspection, CQC did not regulate physiotherapy and as such this element was not inspected.

Long Acting Reversible Contraception

Patients GP practices can refer a patient for a contraceptive appointment. SPCL will receive the referral and arrange directly with the patient a convenient time for an appointment.

Acute visiting service

This service is available for all patients registered with GPs in Southampton and provides a service for those who are unable to attend GP practices for appointments. The acute visiting service operates in addition to the home visits undertaken by GP practices. Home visits through this service are booked in the same way as through the enhanced access route. GPs attending home visits use the location Southampton Primary Care Ltd as a base for these visits.

Enhanced health in care homes

This service is a multi-disciplinary team approach to providing enhanced care in care homes across Southampton City. The team work closely with the residents’ usual GPs to provide additional support and services.

We only inspected some services provided to the public as not all services offered were in scope for CQC registration for regulated activities. We did not inspect the Physiotherapy services as currently this is out of scope. We did not inspect the acute visiting service or enhanced health in care homes as the base location for these was the head office location (Southampton Primary Care Ltd) which had a separate CQC inspection and report.

The registered location Nicholstown Surgery operates from the following address:

Royal South Hants Hospital

Brintons Terrace

Southampton

SO14 0GY

The service is registered to provide the following regulated activities:

Diagnostic and screening services

Family Planning

Surgical Procedures

Treatment of disease disorder and injury

For this inspection, we visited the registered location Nicholstown Surgery. This location acts as one of the hub sites which delivers extended and enhanced services to the population of Southampton. Patients across Southampton access appointments at this hub location if they are unable to get an appointment at their own practice during core GP hours or extended access provisions through their GP. The SPCL hub service is staffed by clinicians who work across the hub locations. Types of clinicians working at the hubs and opening days of the hubs varied in order to provide the best spread of treatment options for patients across the city. Therefore, staffing at Nicholstown Surgery by SPCL varies on a daily basis. On the evening of our inspection, a GP and nurse practitioner were supported by a member of the reception team and a member of the administration team. Nicholstown hub site acts slightly differently to the other hub sites as it sees a larger portion of NHS 111 patients due to the central location of the hub.

Nicholstown Surgery as a hub site for SPCL is located in the GP practice Nicholstown Surgery, which itself is located with the grounds of the Royal South Hants Hospital. This GP practice holds its own registration with CQC for providing core GP services and has been rated separately by CQC.

On the day of our inspection the extended access hub was open 6.15pm to 10.15pm.

How we inspected this service

During our visit we:

  • Reviewed information held about this service.
  • Spoke with a range of staff working on shift including a GP, nurse, administrator and receptionist.
  • Reviewed provider documents and policies.
  • Reviewed feedback from staff and patients as obtained from survey results and public data.

Both before and after the evening of our inspection we spoke with an additional range of staff including a range of different clinicians, receptionists, managers and members of the board that worked across locations in order to establish a wider understanding of the organisation and hub level working. We also reviewed all recruitment and training documents as part of our head office inspection undertaken on a different day.

To get to the heart of patients’ experiences of care and treatment, we always ask the following five questions:

  • Is it safe?
  • Is it effective?
  • Is it caring?
  • Is it responsive to people’s needs?
  • Is it well-led?

These questions therefore formed the framework for the areas we looked at during the inspection.

Overall inspection

Good

Updated 11 February 2020

We carried out an announced comprehensive inspection at Nicholstown Surgery on 20 November 2019 as part of our inspection programme.

This service is registered with Care Quality Commission (CQC) under the Health and Social Care Act 2008 in respect of some, but not all, of the services it provides. There are some general exemptions from regulation by CQC which relate to particular types of service and these are set out in The Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014.

The chief executive officer is the registered manager. A registered manager is a person who is registered with the Care Quality Commission to manage the service. Like registered providers, they are ‘registered persons’. Registered persons have legal responsibility for meeting the requirements in the Health and Social Care Act 2008 and associated Regulations about how the service is run.

Our key findings were:

  • Staff had the information they needed to deliver safe, effective and holistic support to patients.
  • Patients received coordinated and person-centred care.
  • Patients had timely access to appointments through the enhanced access to services system.
  • Staff treated patients with kindness, respect and compassion.
  • We received 64 comment cards specific to Nicholstown Surgery. All comments were positive about the care they received and access to the service for treatment.
  • The provider organised and delivered services to meet patients’ needs.
  • There were clear responsibilities, roles and systems of accountability to support good governance and management.
  • Staff felt supported to engage in further training as required in order to successfully undertake their role.
  • There were clear systems and processes in place to keep people safe and safeguarded from abuse.
  • Staff had the information they required in order to deliver safe holistic care to patients even when the clinician had not seen the patient previously.
  • There were clear documented processes in place to record significant events and share learning from these.
  • The culture of the practice and the way it was led and managed drove the delivery and improvement of high-quality, person-centred care.

The areas where the provider should make improvements were:

  • Consider including all staff in quality improvement activities.

Dr Rosie Benneyworth BM BS BMedSci MRCGP
Chief Inspector of Primary Medical Services and Integrated Care