HealthcareClinics.org.uk

Devonshire Centre for Neuro-rehabilitation

SK2 7PZ

Contact & location

Address Cherry Tree Hospital,Stockport, SK2 7PZ
Phone 01614195678

Care & specialisms

Sensory impairments Caring for adults under 65 yrs Caring for adults over 65 yrs Physical disabilities

Registration

Registered provider Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust
Last CQC check 21 December 2018
Official record View on cqc.org.uk

Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.

About Devonshire Centre for Neuro-rehabilitation

Devonshire Centre for Neuro-rehabilitation is a CQC-registered rehabilitation service based at Cherry Tree Hospital in Stockport, within the North West region. The registered provider is Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust, the legal entity accountable to the regulator for the quality and safety of care delivered here.

Rehabilitation services help people recover function after illness or injury — stroke, brain injury, orthopaedic surgery, cardiac events, or long-term neurological conditions. Programmes are goal-based and multidisciplinary: physiotherapists, occupational therapists, speech and language therapists, rehabilitation nurses and psychologists working to a plan measured in regained abilities rather than bed-days. Devonshire Centre for Neuro-rehabilitation is CQC-registered for this work.

Evidence in rehabilitation is unambiguous on two points: earlier is better, and intensity matters. The difference between a good and a mediocre service is rarely the gym equipment — it is the number of therapy hours actually delivered each week, the specificity of goals, and how well the team plans the transition home, where gains are kept or lost.

Administratively, the service falls under Stockport, within the North West region, in a city with 250 registered healthcare providers of all types. That local footprint matters for social-care funding and community-service referrals, both of which are organised at local-authority level.

The CQC's most recent recorded check of this location took place on 21 December 2018. Inspection reports are public documents, and the official record for this location is linked in the registration section below — reading the latest report is the single most reliable way to understand how the service performs day to day.

About the Specialities

Rehabilitation providers register for the populations they serve, which shapes their therapy mix and nursing model. The register lists Devonshire Centre for Neuro-rehabilitation as caring for:

Sensory impairments

Registration for sensory impairment means the service has declared competence in supporting people with sight or hearing loss: communication adjustments (BSL access, deafblind manual, large print), environmental design, and staff awareness that prevents sensory loss being mistaken for cognitive decline.

Caring for adults under 65 yrs

Registration for working-age adults signals a service oriented around different goals than elderly care: maintaining employment and family roles, rehabilitation and independence, and care plans built around an active life rather than primarily around frailty management.

Caring for adults over 65 yrs

The service is registered to care for older adults, which carries practical expectations: staff trained in frailty, falls prevention and pressure-area care; environments that accommodate reduced mobility; and care planning that accounts for multiple long-term conditions and polypharmacy — the norm rather than the exception over 65.

Physical disabilities

The service is registered to support people with physical disabilities, implying accessible premises and equipment, moving-and-handling trained staff, and care planning that maximises independence — including aids, adaptations and coordination with occupational therapy and wheelchair services.

A practical rule when shortlisting: prefer depth over breadth. A provider registered precisely for your care group — and able to describe its training and staffing for it — usually outperforms one with a longer but shallower list of declarations. And if your needs cross two of these groups at once, make the service explain how it handles the combination; that answer predicts your experience better than any single rating.

Treat these declarations as the service's public promise — inspectors check against them, and you are entitled to ask exactly how each one shows up in staffing and daily practice.

Services You Can Expect

Exact availability varies by location — treat this as the typical scope of a rehabilitation service and confirm specific treatments directly with Devonshire Centre for Neuro-rehabilitation before attending.

Physiotherapy

Movement, strength and balance retraining — the backbone of most rehabilitation programmes, dosed by intensity and progression.

Occupational therapy

Rebuilding daily living skills — washing, dressing, kitchen tasks — and adapting home environments for safe independence.

Speech and language therapy

Communication and swallowing rehabilitation after stroke and brain injury, including modified-diet management.

Neurological rehabilitation

Specialist programmes for stroke, brain injury, MS and Parkinson's built around neuroplasticity principles: repetition, task-specificity, intensity.

Orthopaedic rehabilitation

Post-surgical protocols after joint replacement, fractures and spinal surgery that turn good operations into good outcomes.

Psychology and neuropsychology

Assessment and treatment of the cognitive and emotional consequences of illness and injury — often the gating factor for progress.

Discharge planning and home transition

Home visits, equipment provision and family training before discharge, plus community follow-up to sustain gains.

How to Book

To contact Devonshire Centre for Neuro-rehabilitation directly, call 01614195678.

Rehabilitation at Devonshire Centre for Neuro-rehabilitation is accessed through three routes: NHS referral from a hospital team or GP (ask the ward's therapy team or discharge coordinator to make the case for specialist rehab rather than generic care), privately funded self-referral after clinical screening, or through case managers and insurers in personal-injury and medico-legal contexts, where rehabilitation is funded as part of a claim.

Timing is clinical: for stroke and brain injury, specialist rehabilitation should follow the acute phase without a gap, so families should push for referral decisions before discharge rather than after. Ask the service directly about admission criteria, current waiting times and — crucially — how many therapy hours per week your programme would actually contain.

For privately funded programmes, request a written proposal after assessment: goals, disciplines involved, weekly therapy hours, expected duration, and how progress is measured and reported. Serious providers produce this as a matter of course.

Opening Hours & Contact Times

Published opening hours for Devonshire Centre for Neuro-rehabilitation are not yet held on this profile — the register does not record them, and hours appear here once the provider claims and completes its listing. A quick phone call (01614195678) remains the definitive check, and it is worth making even where hours are published, since bank holidays and staffing can change a given day.

If you have flexibility, avoid calling first thing on Monday, when demand across healthcare peaks; a Tuesday-to-Thursday mid-morning call usually gets answered quickest and gives reception the most room to help.

What to Expect at Your First Visit

First visits run more smoothly when you arrive prepared, and preparation for a rehabilitation service follows a predictable shape.

Bring the paperwork that saves repeating yourself: a list of current medications with doses (a photo of the boxes works), any relevant hospital letters or test results, your NHS number if you know it, and glasses or hearing aids if you use them. If the appointment concerns someone you care for, bring evidence of any legal authority you hold — power of attorney documents change what staff can lawfully discuss with you.

Expect the first appointment to include identity and history checks, a discussion of what you need, and an examination or assessment appropriate to the service. Be direct about two things in particular: everything you are taking (including over-the-counter and herbal products), and what outcome you actually want — clinicians plan differently for "I want to be seen quickly" versus "I want the most thorough option".

Before you leave, make sure three questions have answers: what happens next, who does it, and when. Vague follow-up arrangements are where care most often goes adrift; a specific next step — a booked review, a named referral, a results date with a way to chase it — is the mark of a well-run service, and it is entirely reasonable to ask for it explicitly.

Costs & Funding

NHS rehabilitation is free but capacity-limited, and intensity varies by area. Private inpatient neuro-rehabilitation is charged weekly and represents a significant investment — insurers, personal-injury funds and NHS personal health budgets all pay for it in different circumstances, so establish the funding route before comparing providers.

For outpatient therapy, private sessions are charged per discipline per session; block bookings and home-visit programmes are usually negotiable. If your need follows an accident that was someone else's fault, speak to your solicitor before self-funding — rehabilitation costs are recoverable and the Rehabilitation Code encourages early insurer funding.

How to Get There

You will find Devonshire Centre for Neuro-rehabilitation at Cherry Tree Hospital,Stockport. The SK2 7PZ postcode places it in the SK2 district of Stockport, and entering the full postcode into a sat-nav or maps app will route you precisely.

For public transport, enter the full postcode into a journey planner (National Rail, Traveline or your maps app) rather than searching the service name. Drivers should ask about parking at the point of booking — availability differs sharply between town-centre and residential locations, and knowing before you travel removes the most common source of appointment-day stress.

Distance deserves honest weighting in your decision. For one-off appointments, travelling across Stockport — or beyond it — for the right provider is usually worth it; for care involving weekly or daily contact, the calculus reverses, and the SK2 area's own options deserve first look before you commit to a longer journey.

If you use a wheelchair, travel with a carer, or need any adjustment — a quieter waiting area, longer appointment, or interpreter — raise it when booking rather than on arrival. CQC-registered providers are expected to make reasonable adjustments under the Equality Act, and almost all handle them smoothly given notice.

Questions Worth Asking

The right questions do more than fill an appointment — they reveal how a rehabilitation service thinks. These are the ones that earn their place:

  1. Who exactly will provide my care, and what is their professional registration?
  2. What are the realistic timescales — first appointment, results, and treatment?
  3. What will this cost in total, and what could add to that figure later?
  4. What are the alternatives, including doing nothing for now?
  5. How do you handle problems out of hours, and who do I contact?
  6. What should I expect to feel or notice afterwards, and what would be a warning sign?
  7. How will you keep my GP informed, and what gets written to my record?
  8. If my needs change, how quickly can the plan change with them?

Write the answers down during the conversation — comparing them across two or three providers turns an anxious choice into an informed one.

CQC Registration & Quality

CQC registration is the legal baseline for operating a service like this one; the value for you sits in the public record built on top of it — inspection reports, ratings and enforcement history.

The CQC inspects against five questions — is the service safe, effective, caring, responsive and well-led — and publishes its findings. For Devonshire Centre for Neuro-rehabilitation, the registered provider is Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust. The most recent recorded check took place on 21 December 2018. The official CQC record for this location carries the current registration status, ratings where awarded, and every published inspection report.

The rating scale runs Outstanding, Good, Requires Improvement, Inadequate — and context matters when reading it. Good is the expected standard, not a consolation prize; Outstanding is genuinely rare and usually reflects exceptional leadership culture rather than better equipment. A Requires Improvement rating deserves a closer look at which of the five questions dragged it down: a responsive shortfall (waiting times, complaint handling) is a different risk from a safe shortfall (medicines, staffing). Some location types are inspected without ratings at all, so an unrated service is not a warning sign in itself.

Reading a report efficiently: start with the well-led section (it predicts everything else), then safe. Look at the direction of travel across the last two inspections rather than a single snapshot, and treat "requires improvement" with a credible action plan differently from the same rating with repeated findings. If anything in a report concerns you, raising it with the service directly is both fair and revealing — well-run providers answer plainly.

Your Rights, Complaints & Advocacy

Every patient of a CQC-registered service holds a set of enforceable rights, and knowing them changes how confidently you can act when something is not right.

You are entitled to informed consent — a genuine explanation of options, risks and alternatives before treatment, in language you understand, with interpreters provided where needed. You have a right of access to your own records under UK GDPR, free of charge in most cases, within a month of asking. And under the Equality Act, providers must make reasonable adjustments for disability — from step-free access to communication formats — as a legal duty, not a favour.

If care falls short, complain in stages: first to the provider itself (every registered service must operate an accessible complaints procedure and respond within a defined timescale); then, for NHS-funded care, to the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman — or for privately funded care, to the Independent Sector Complaints Adjudication Service where the provider subscribes. Local authority-funded social care complaints escalate to the Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman.

Two further channels matter. The CQC does not investigate individual complaints, but it wants to hear about poor care — reports feed directly into inspection planning, and you can tell it anything in confidence via its website. And if you need help making a complaint about NHS care, every area has a statutory independent advocacy service that is free to use; your council can point you to the current provider.

Choosing a Rehabilitation Service in Stockport

Stockport has 250 CQC-registered healthcare providers in total, of which 8 are rehabilitation services — so genuine comparison is possible before you commit. The full Stockport directory and the local rehabilitation listing let you shortlist alongside this profile.

Comparing the 8 rehabilitation providers around Stockport, ask the intensity question first: how many hours of each therapy per week, delivered by whom? Then ask for outcome data — good services measure with standard tools and will share anonymised results. Specialism fit matters: a stroke unit for stroke, a brain-injury service for brain injury. The CQC report's effective domain tells you whether the multidisciplinary machinery genuinely works.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is Devonshire Centre for Neuro-rehabilitation located?

Devonshire Centre for Neuro-rehabilitation is at Cherry Tree Hospital,Stockport, SK2 7PZ, in Stockport (North West region). The full postcode works in any sat-nav or journey planner.

How do I contact Devonshire Centre for Neuro-rehabilitation?

Call 01614195678 during opening hours. For funding-route questions (NHS availability, fees), asking directly by phone gets the current position.

Is Devonshire Centre for Neuro-rehabilitation regulated?

Yes — it is registered with the Care Quality Commission (location ID RM3001) under the registered provider Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust. Registration is a legal requirement for delivering this type of care in England and brings ongoing inspection.

When was Devonshire Centre for Neuro-rehabilitation last checked by the CQC?

The most recent check recorded on the register took place on 21 December 2018. The full inspection history is on the official CQC record linked from this page.

How soon after a stroke should rehabilitation start?

Almost immediately — guidelines call for early mobilisation within days and structured rehabilitation to continue seamlessly after the acute phase. If a gap between hospital and rehab is proposed, challenge it: early intensity drives long-term outcome.

How many therapy hours should a programme include?

Specialist inpatient programmes commonly target a substantial daily dose across disciplines (guidelines reference multiple therapy hours per day for those who can tolerate it). Ask any provider for their actual delivered hours, not the timetabled aspiration.

Can rehabilitation help years after the injury?

Yes — meaningful gains are documented long after injury, particularly for specific goals (walking distance, arm function, communication). Progress is slower than in early recovery, so goal-specific, time-limited programmes with measurement are the honest approach.

Does Devonshire Centre for Neuro-rehabilitation treat NHS or private patients?

The public register does not record funding routes, and many providers serve both. Phone the service for the current position — NHS availability in particular changes as capacity fills and reopens, so today's answer beats anything a directory can cache.

Where does the information on this page come from?

Core details — name, address, registration, provider and specialisms — come from the Care Quality Commission register (Open Government Licence v3.0) and are refreshed monthly. Guidance sections reflect how services of this type work across the UK. Always confirm time-sensitive details such as opening hours directly with the provider.