This website uses cookies to help you make the most of your visit.
By continuing to browse without changing your settings, you agree to our use of cookies.
Give me more information
x
-->

Pharmacy inspections

Inspection reports and learning from inspections

Skip to Content (Press Enter)

Norbury Pharmacy (1041173)

Inspection outcome: Standards met

Last inspection: 14/11/2023

Pharmacy context

This NHS community pharmacy is set on a main road in Norbury. The pharmacy opens six days a week. It sells medicines over the counter. It dispenses people’s prescriptions. And it delivers medicines to people who have difficulty in leaving their homes. The pharmacy supplies multi-compartment compliance packs (compliance packs) to people who need help managing their medicines. It delivers the Community Pharmacist Consultation Scheme (CPCS) to help people who have a minor illness or need an urgent supply of a medicine. Its pharmacist can check a person’s blood pressure. And people can get their flu jabs from the pharmacy too.

Inspection summary findings

Principle 1. Governance

Standards met

The pharmacy manages its risks appropriately. It has written instructions to help its team members work safely. It mostly keeps the records it needs to by law. It has the insurance it needs to protect people if things do go wrong. And people can share their experiences of using the pharmacy and its services to help it do things better. People who work in the pharmacy write down and review the mistakes they make to try to stop the same sort of things happening again. They can explain what they do, what they are responsible for and when they might seek help. They usually keep people’s private information safe. And they understand their role in protecting vulnerable people.

Principle 2. Staff

Standards met

The pharmacy has enough people in its team to deliver safe and effective care. Members of the pharmacy team work well together and use their judgement to make decisions about what is right for the people they care for. They know how to raise a concern if they have one. And they can give feedback to help the pharmacy do things better.

Principle 3. Premises

Standards met

The pharmacy provides an adequate environment to deliver it services from. And people can receive services in private when they need to. But members of the pharmacy team don’t always have the space they need to work in when the pharmacy is busy.

Principle 4. Services, including medicines management

Standards met

The pharmacy has working practices that are safe and effective. Its team is friendly and helps people access the services they need. And it keeps appropriate records for its vaccination service to show that it has given the right vaccine to the right person. The pharmacy gets its medicines from reputable sources. And it stores most of them appropriately and securely. Members of the pharmacy team usually dispose of people’s unwanted medicines properly. And they largely carry out checks to make sure the pharmacy’s medicines are safe and fit for purpose.

Principle 5. Equipment and facilities

Standards met

The pharmacy generally has the equipment and the facilities it needs to provide its services safely. It uses its equipment to make sure people’s data is kept secure. And its team makes sure the equipment it uses is clean.

Pharmacy details

1102 London Road
Norbury
LONDON
SW164DT
England

Find nearby pharmacies

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

Met The pharmacy has met all the standards for registered pharmacies
Not all met 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:

Excellent practice The pharmacy delivers an innovative service and benefits the whole community and performs well against the standards
Good practice The pharmacy delivers positive outcomes for patients and performs well against most of the standards
Standards met The pharmacy meets all the standards
Standards not all met The pharmacy has not met one or more standards