HealthcareClinics.org.uk

Pulselink-Healthcare Ltd

SW12 0JN

Contact & location

Address 3 Parkthorne Road,London, SW12 0JN
Phone 07919986273

Care & specialisms

Caring for adults under 65 yrs Dementia Caring for adults over 65 yrs Physical disabilities

Registration

Registered provider PulseLink-Healthcare Ltd
Official record View on cqc.org.uk

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

About Pulselink-Healthcare Ltd

Pulselink-Healthcare Ltd is a CQC-registered home care agency based at 3 Parkthorne Road in London, within the London region. The registered provider is PulseLink-Healthcare Ltd, the legal entity accountable to the regulator for the quality and safety of care delivered here.

A home care (domiciliary care) agency sends trained care workers into people's own homes to help with the practical tasks that make independent life possible — washing and dressing, medication prompts, meal preparation, continence care, and companionship. Pulselink-Healthcare Ltd is registered with the Care Quality Commission for the regulated activity of personal care, which means its recruitment (including DBS checks), training, care planning and complaints handling are all subject to inspection.

Home care ranges from a single 30-minute visit each week to several visits a day, overnight support, or full live-in care. The defining principle is that care is built around your routine rather than an institution's: a good agency will assess you at home, write a care plan with you and your family, and review it as needs change. For many people home care is what makes the difference between staying in a familiar home and moving into residential care.

For funding and referral purposes the location sits in the Lambeth local authority area of the London region, in a city with 5,528 registered healthcare providers of all types — relevant because needs assessments, social-care budgets and many community services are organised along these boundaries.

The CQC publishes inspection reports for registered locations as they are completed; the official record for this location is linked in the registration section below and is the most reliable public account of how the service performs.

About the Specialities

Home care agencies declare to the CQC which groups of people they are trained and organised to support. This matters practically — dementia care and end-of-life care, for example, require distinct training and rostering. The register lists Pulselink-Healthcare Ltd as providing care for:

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.

Dementia

A dementia registration means the provider has declared — and is inspected on — specific competence in dementia care: staff trained in communication and distress-reduction techniques, environments designed to reduce confusion, consistent staffing to preserve familiarity, and lawful use of the Mental Capacity Act when decisions must be made for someone who cannot make them alone.

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.

Use these declarations actively: they tell you which providers are even eligible for your situation, and they give you the vocabulary for sharper questions. Needs that span more than one group deserve special attention — ask any prospective service how the care plan will address both together, and listen for specifics rather than reassurance.

Declared specialisms are commitments, not decorations: the CQC inspects against them, and they are a fair basis for direct questions when you contact the service.

Services You Can Expect

Exact availability varies by location — treat this as the typical scope of a home care agency and confirm specific treatments directly with Pulselink-Healthcare Ltd before attending.

Personal care

Support with bathing, dressing, grooming, toileting and continence — delivered with dignity in your own home, at times that fit your routine.

Medication support

Prompting, assisting with or administering medicines according to the level agreed in your care plan, with records kept for every visit.

Meal preparation and nutrition

Shopping, cooking and support at mealtimes, including monitoring for weight loss or swallowing difficulties that need escalation.

Domestic support

Housekeeping, laundry and shopping — the tasks that keep a household running safely when mobility or energy declines.

Companionship and social support

Regular visits that reduce isolation: conversation, accompanying you to appointments or activities, and keeping family informed.

Respite for family carers

Planned cover that lets an unpaid family carer rest, work or travel, from a few hours to full temporary care packages.

Dementia care at home

Care workers trained in dementia support, consistent rostering to preserve familiarity, and structured communication with families.

Live-in and overnight care

A care worker present in the home overnight or around the clock — the main alternative to a care home for people with high needs.

End-of-life care at home

Palliative support coordinated with district nurses and hospice teams so people can remain at home in their final weeks.

How to Book

To contact Pulselink-Healthcare Ltd directly, call 07919986273.

Arranging home care with Pulselink-Healthcare Ltd starts with a phone call and leads to a home assessment: a senior member of staff visits, discusses what support is needed, checks the home environment, and produces a care plan and weekly cost. Reputable agencies never quote a final price without assessing in person, so treat the first call as a conversation about needs, availability in your postcode, and timescales rather than a booking.

If council funding may be involved, the sequence matters: ask your local authority's adult social care team for a needs assessment first. If you qualify, the council either arranges care itself or gives you a personal budget/direct payment you can spend with an agency of your choice, such as Pulselink-Healthcare Ltd. A financial assessment (means test) determines what you contribute. If you fund care yourself you can approach the agency directly and start as soon as they have capacity.

Ask three questions before signing: Will we have a consistent small team of care workers? What happens if a care worker is off sick or running late? And how quickly can the care plan change if needs increase? The answers reveal more about an agency's quality than any brochure.

Opening Hours & Contact Times

Opening hours are one detail the CQC register does not record, so none are shown for Pulselink-Healthcare Ltd yet — providers add them when claiming their profile. Until then, phone (07919986273) before you set off, particularly on Mondays, Fridays and around public holidays when hours most often flex.

Timing your contact helps: midweek, mid-morning calls typically reach a human fastest, while Monday mornings — when the weekend's queries land all at once — are the hardest time to get through to any healthcare service.

What to Expect at Your First Visit

Whatever brings you to a home care agency, the first appointment covers similar ground — and ten minutes of preparation makes it substantially more useful.

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

Home care in the UK is typically charged by the hour, with regional variation — and shorter visits cost proportionally more per hour. Live-in care is priced weekly. Councils publish the rates they pay, but self-funders often pay somewhat more; always get the full rate card including evening, weekend and bank-holiday uplifts, travel charges, and the notice period for ending care.

Funding help exists on several routes: local-authority funding after a means test (savings thresholds apply in England), NHS Continuing Healthcare for people whose needs are primarily health-driven (fully funded, no means test), and Attendance Allowance or Personal Independence Payment, which are non-means-tested benefits that can offset care costs. Age UK and Citizens Advice both provide free help navigating these systems.

How to Get There

You will find Pulselink-Healthcare Ltd at 3 Parkthorne Road,London. The SW12 0JN postcode places it in the SW12 district of London, and entering the full postcode into a sat-nav or maps app will route you precisely — or use the Google Maps link for this exact location.

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.

Think about journey frequency before fixating on any single provider: a one-off assessment justifies travel, but ongoing care multiplies every mile. With 5,528 providers of all types across London, most neighbourhoods — including SW12 — have credible options within a short journey.

Accessibility needs are best flagged in advance: step-free access, hearing loops, interpreters and longer appointments are all reasonable adjustments providers are expected to accommodate under the Equality Act, and a note on your booking makes the visit run as it should.

If this location is not convenient, the nearest comparable alternative is McDavied Care Limited, roughly 0.3 miles away — the nearby providers section below lists more options with distances.

Questions Worth Asking

Take a written list. For a home care agency, these questions surface the information that matters most:

  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?

A good service treats this list as routine; defensiveness anywhere on it tells you something the inspection report may not.

CQC Registration & Quality

Every provider on this site is registered with the Care Quality Commission — but registration is the floor, not the ceiling, and the public record lets you judge far more than the badge.

The CQC inspects against five questions — is the service safe, effective, caring, responsive and well-led — and publishes its findings. For Pulselink-Healthcare Ltd, the registered provider is PulseLink-Healthcare Ltd. 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 Home Care Agency in London

London has 5,528 CQC-registered healthcare providers in total, of which 1,152 are home care agencies — so genuine comparison is possible before you commit. The full London directory and the local home care listing let you shortlist alongside this profile.

There are 1,152 home care agencies serving London, and the practical differences between them are large. Shortlist by CQC report first — read the safe and well-led sections, which cover recruitment checks and missed-visit handling. Then interrogate logistics: does the agency actually have capacity on your street at the times you need, will visits be delivered by a small consistent team, and how does the office communicate with families? Finally, check the contract for minimum visit lengths and cancellation terms before committing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is Pulselink-Healthcare Ltd located?

Pulselink-Healthcare Ltd is at 3 Parkthorne Road,London, SW12 0JN, in London (London region). The full postcode works in any sat-nav or journey planner.

How do I contact Pulselink-Healthcare Ltd?

Call 07919986273 during opening hours. For funding-route questions (NHS availability, fees), asking directly by phone gets the current position.

Is Pulselink-Healthcare Ltd regulated?

Yes — it is registered with the Care Quality Commission (location ID 1-27015818200) under the registered provider PulseLink-Healthcare Ltd. Registration is a legal requirement for delivering this type of care in England and brings ongoing inspection.

What are the nearest alternatives to Pulselink-Healthcare Ltd?

The closest comparable providers are McDavied Care Limited (0.3 miles), Dirie Care LTD (0.4 miles), Brockwell Care (0.4 miles). Each has a full profile on this site with contact details and registration information.

How quickly can home care start?

For self-funders, care can often begin within days of the home assessment if the agency has capacity in your area. Council-funded packages take longer because a needs assessment and financial assessment come first — ask your local adult social care team for current timescales.

Will the same care worker come each time?

Good agencies roster a small, consistent team rather than a single individual (to cover leave and sickness) — ask how large that team will be and how often it changes. Consistency should be written into the care plan for dementia care.

Can home care replace a care home?

Often, yes — multiple daily visits, overnight support or live-in care can support high levels of need at home. The tipping point is usually night-time needs and safety; an honest agency will tell you when residential care would serve you better.

Does Pulselink-Healthcare Ltd 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.

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