Inspection outcome: Standards met
Last inspection: 22/08/2024
Pharmacy context
The pharmacy is on a busy high street in a town centre in a largely residential area. It provides NHS dispensing services, the New Medicine Service, the Pharmacy First service, and blood pressure checks. And it uses patient group directions for its contraception service, and its flu and COVID vaccination services. The pharmacy supplies medicines in multi-compartment compliance packs to a small number of people who live in their own homes and need this support.
Inspection summary findings
Principle 1. Governance
The pharmacy identifies and manages the risks associated with its services to help provide them safely. It records and regularly reviews any mistakes that happen during the dispensing process. And it protects people’s personal information well. People can provide feedback about the pharmacy’s services. And team members understand their role in protecting vulnerable people. The pharmacy largely keeps its records up to date and accurate.
Principle 2. Staff
Team members do the right training for their roles, and they are provided with some ongoing training to help maintain their knowledge and skills. They can raise concerns to do with the pharmacy or other issues affecting people’s safety. There are enough team members to provide the pharmacy's services safely. And team members can take professional decisions to ensure people taking medicines are safe. These are not affected by the pharmacy’s targets.
Principle 3. Premises
The premises provide a safe, secure, and clean environment for the pharmacy's services. People can have a conversation with a team member in a private area.
Principle 4. Services, including medicines management
Overall, the pharmacy provides its services safely and manages them well. And people with a range of needs can access the pharmacy’s services. It responds appropriately to drug alerts and product recalls, so that people get medicines and medical devices that are safe to use. And it gets its medicines from reputable suppliers and stores them properly.
Principle 5. Equipment and facilities
The pharmacy has the equipment it needs to provide its services safely. It uses its equipment to help protect people’s personal information.
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 |