Inspection outcome: Standards met
Last inspection: 22/10/2019
Pharmacy context
This is a busy community pharmacy located on a main road on the outskirts of Burton-On-Trent town centre. The pharmacy is open extended hours over six days. People using the pharmacy are from the local community and a home delivery service is available. The pharmacy dispenses NHS prescriptions and provides other NHS funded services.
Inspection summary findings
Principle 1. Governance
The pharmacy manages the risks associated with its services to make sure people receive appropriate care. It is responsive to feedback and uses this to make improvements. Members of the pharmacy team follow written procedures to make sure they work safely. They record their mistakes so that they can learn from them. And they make changes to stop the same sort of mistakes from happening again.
Principle 2. Staff
The pharmacy has enough staff to provide its services. Pharmacy team members complete the training they need to do their jobs. But they do not have formal training plans or protected time to complete ongoing training, so they may not always keep their skills and knowledge up to date.
Principle 3. Premises
The pharmacy is clean, secure and suitable for the services provided. It has a consultation room to enable it to provide members of the public with access to an area for private and confidential discussions.
Principle 4. Services, including medicines management
The pharmacy manages its services and supplies medicines safely. It gets its medicines from licensed suppliers, and stores them securely and at the correct temperature, so they are safe to use. People receive advice about their medicines when collecting their prescriptions. And the pharmacy team supports members of the public that may forget to take their medicines by placing them into weekly multi-compartment compliance packs.
Principle 5. Equipment and facilities
The pharmacy has the equipment it needs to provide services safely. The pharmacy team uses it in a way that keeps people’s information safe.
What do the inspection outcomes mean?
After an inspection each pharmacy receives one overall outcome. This will be either Standards met or Standards not all met
The pharmacy has met all the standards for registered pharmacies | |
The pharmacy has not met one or more of the standards for registered pharmacies |
What do the summary findings for each principle mean?
The standards for registered pharmacies are made up of five principles. The pharmacy will also receive one of four possible findings for each of these principles. These are:
The pharmacy delivers an innovative service and benefits the whole community and performs well against the standards | |
The pharmacy delivers positive outcomes for patients and performs well against most of the standards | |
The pharmacy meets all the standards | |
The pharmacy has not met one or more standards |