The Care Quality Commission (CQC) inspected urgent and
emergency services run by London North
West University Healthcare NHS Trust in
July 2025. The services at Northwick Park Hospital
and Ealing Hospital have again been rated requires
improvement. Urgent and emergency services at
Central Middlesex Hospital have been rated good, which has also
raised that hospital's overall rating to good.
CQC carried out these inspections as part of ongoing
monitoring, and to follow up on improvements CQC told leaders to
make at previous inspections.
Following these inspections:
- Urgent and emergency services at Northwick Park Hospital
have been lowered from good to requires
improvement for safe. They've been
rated requires improvement again
for responsive. They've been rated good again for
caring and well-led. CQC has raised them from requires
improvement to good for effective.
- Urgent and emergency services at Ealing Hospital have
been lowered from good to requires improvement for
safe. They've been rated requires improvement
again for responsive. They've been rated good
again for caring and well-led. CQC has raised them from
requires improvement to good for effective.
- Urgent and emergency services at Central Middlesex
Hospital have been rated good for safe, effective, caring,
responsive, and well-led. Central
Middlesex Hospital runs an urgent treatment
centre for people with minor injuries or
illnesses from 8am to midnight but does not
have an accident and emergency
department. People requiring the latter were
treated at neighbouring hospitals.
This is the first inspection of these hospitals in which urgent
treatment centres were inspected as part of urgent and emergency
services.
While people were triaged promptly on arrival,
some people then waited over 12 hours in the
emergency departments at Northwick Park and Ealing
Hospitals for treatment. The
services weren't always
managing people's safety well during these
times of high
pressure, which put some people at risk of
harm. Staff couldn't always maintain people's
privacy when caring for them in temporary care areas, such
as corridors.
However, inspectors saw an honest safety culture across all
three hospitals, in which leaders knew the problems they
faced, listened to people's
concerns, and were learning from incidents to
improve people's care in future. People at all three
hospitals said staff treated them kindly.
Inspectors found:
- At Northwick Park Hospital, staff weren't always
visible in temporary care areas we visited. This could put people
in these areas at risk if their health deteriorated, as staff
might not respond quickly.
- At Northwick Park Hospital, some people had to stand or
sit on the floor of the waiting room while waiting
because there weren't enough chairs.
- At Ealing hospital, there weren't always
enough appropriately qualified staff on duty in
temporary care areas to meet people's needs
safely.
- At Ealing and Northwick Park Hospital,
staff didn't always give
people accurate information, such as waiting
times, in ways they could understand.
- While all three hospitals were clean,
staff weren't always managing infection risks
well. For example, some
equipment wasn't consistently cleaned and labelled as
such at Ealing and Central Middlesex Hospitals.
However:
- People at all three hospitals said they felt safe raising
concerns to staff.
- Staff managed people's medications safely at all three
hospitals.
- People said staff at Central Middlesex Hospital gave them
clear information, and inspectors saw they involved people in
decisions about their care.
The report will be published on CQC's website (Northwick Park Hospital)
(Ealing Hospital) (Central Middlesex
Hospital) in the coming days.