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Healthcare Clinics in Buckinghamshire, Slough

35 CQC-registered providers in the Buckinghamshire area of Slough, covering 3 postcode districts (SL1, SL2, SL3). Every listing is drawn from the official regulator's register.

By service in Buckinghamshire

1a The Clock House

SL2 3PQ

1a, Clock House,1 The Broadway, Farnham Common,Slough

07983163630

Admire Care Limited

SL3 6NT

1a Winterbourne,Wexham Street, Stoke Poges,Slough

01628604555

Appleberry Care

SL1 7JP

Dorney House, 46-48 High Street,Burnham,Slough

01628662123

Bluebird Care Burnham, Gerrards Cross & High Wycombe

SL1 7EP

31 Summers Road,Burnham,Slough

01628605797

Burnham Health Centre

SL1 7DE

Minniecroft Road,Burnham,Slough

08444773580

Carling Dental Practice

SL2 3PQ

1 Ashley House,The Broadway, Farnham Common,Slough

Chandos Lodge Nursing Home

SL2 3ED

Blackpond Lane,Farnham Common,Slough

01753643224

Collaborative Care Solutions

SL1 7JP

The Burnham Business Centre Dorney House,46-48 High Street Burnham,Slough

Collaborative Healthcare Ltd

SL1 7JP

Dorney house, Suite 6,46-48 High Street, Burnham,Slough

07877040650

Cosmetic Skin Clinic

SL2 4LF

84 Rogers Lane,Stoke Poges,Slough

03332204501

Cure Healthcare Services Limited

SL1 7JZ

Burnham House,93 High Street, Burnham,Slough

01628298977

Dr Skin Surgery Ltd

SL2 3ER

Southmead House,Blackpond Lane, Farnham Common,Slough

07752555869

Hand of Hope Homecare Services Ltd

SL1 7JT

64 High Street,Burnham,Slough

Jasmine Supported Living

SL1 7DS

11 Pepler Way,Burnham,Slough

07712242422

Lent Rise House

SL1 7NL

Coulson Way,Burnham,Slough

01628550750

Mydentist - High Street - Burnham

SL1 7JZ

91a High Street,Burnham,Slough

01628604287

Mydentist - High Street - Burnham

SL1 7JZ

91a,High Street, Burnham,Slough

01628604287

Nuffield Health Stoke Poges Fitness and Wellbeing Centre

SL3 6NB

Wexham Street,Stoke Poges,Slough

01753663666

Oxford House Community Care

SL2 3AU

1-2 Park Parade,Park Road, Farnham Royal,Slough

01753645112

Radfield Home Care Slough Maidenhead and Windsor

SL1 7LW

The Priory,Stomp Road, Burnham,Slough

01753428175

Healthcare in Buckinghamshire: The Local Picture

Buckinghamshire, Slough is home to 35 CQC-registered healthcare providers — a market shaped, like every local healthcare market in England, by the register that governs it. The three largest service types locally are home care (12), gp practices (8), nursing homes (4), and the mix tells you something real about the area: what is abundant here can be compared and negotiated; what is scarce is worth travelling for.

Administratively the area sits within the South East region under the Buckinghamshire local authority. That boundary matters practically: social-care funding assessments, community health services and many referral pathways are organised along it, so knowing your local authority is not trivia — it decides which front doors are yours.

One service type — home care — accounts for roughly 34% of local provision, so most residents' first healthcare interactions here run through it.

Buckinghamshire by the Numbers

Drill below the area level and the pattern sharpens: 3 postcode districts share the 35 providers, led decisively by SL1 (46% of the total). The top five by density:

  • SL1 — 16 providers
  • SL2 — 11 providers
  • SL3 — 8 providers

Treat the density map as a negotiating asset — where providers cluster, appointments come easier and prices face competition; where they thin out, book further ahead and confirm travel logistics before committing.

How Care in Buckinghamshire Is Organised

A useful way to read the listings below: healthcare provision divides into four layers, each with its own access route. In Buckinghamshire the split looks like this:

  • Care at home & residential (21) — home care agencies, care and nursing homes, supported living and hospice care — services chosen less often but for longer, where comparison matters most.
  • Primary care (12) — the GP practices and dental surgeries that handle everyday medical need and control referral into everything else.
  • Specialist & hospital care (3) — consultant-led clinics, hospitals, diagnostics and rehabilitation — the layer you usually reach by referral or by paying privately.
  • Community & specialist support (1) — community health teams, mental health services, substance-misuse support and other specialist provision, mostly reached through referral.

The access routes differ by layer: primary care you register with or book directly; the specialist layer usually wants a referral (or a private booking); the care layer starts with a needs assessment; and community services flow through your GP or council. Matching the route to the layer saves weeks.

Most households eventually touch all four layers — often in the same year. Registering with a well-run GP practice, knowing which diagnostics are available locally, and understanding the care layer before a crisis forces the question: that combination is what turns this listing from a phone book into a plan.

Service-by-Service Guide

The area's main service types, briefly and honestly — with the local depth of choice for each:

Home Care in Buckinghamshire

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. a local provider 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. In Buckinghamshire the register lists 12 home cares — enough for genuine comparison before you commit. Browse home care in Buckinghamshire →

GP Practices in Buckinghamshire

A GP practice is the front door of the NHS: general practitioners diagnose and treat the full range of physical and mental health conditions, manage long-term illnesses such as diabetes, asthma and hypertension, and act as the gateway to specialist hospital care through the referral system. a local provider operates within this system, with every GP registered and revalidated by the General Medical Council and the practice itself inspected by the Care Quality Commission. Buckinghamshire currently offers 8 gp practices on the register — a workable shortlist, worth comparing alongside neighbouring areas. Browse gp practices in Buckinghamshire →

Nursing homes in Buckinghamshire

A nursing home (care home with nursing) provides everything a residential home does — 24-hour accommodation and personal care — plus registered nurses on duty at all times. That nursing presence is what allows the home to care for people with complex medical needs: PEG feeding, tracheostomy care, complex wound management, advanced Parkinson's or multiple sclerosis, and dementia with significant health complications. a local provider is registered with the CQC for nursing care, and its nurses are individually registered with the Nursing and Midwifery Council. Buckinghamshire currently offers 4 nursing homes on the register — a workable shortlist, worth comparing alongside neighbouring areas. Browse nursing homes in Buckinghamshire →

Dentists in Buckinghamshire

A dental practice provides the full spectrum of oral healthcare — from routine check-ups, hygiene appointments and fillings through to root canal treatment, extractions, crowns and dentures. Practices in England are regulated twice over: the Care Quality Commission registers and inspects the practice itself, while every dentist, hygienist and dental nurse must individually register with the General Dental Council (GDC). a local provider holds this dual accountability, which covers everything from decontamination standards in the surgery to the qualifications of the person treating you. Local depth: 4 dentists registered in Buckinghamshire — a workable shortlist, worth comparing alongside neighbouring areas. Browse dentists in Buckinghamshire →

Supported Living in Buckinghamshire

Supported living enables adults with learning disabilities, autism, mental health needs or physical disabilities to live in their own homes — usually a rented flat or shared house — with care and support workers visiting or on site for anywhere from a few hours a week to 24 hours a day. Unlike a care home, the person holds their own tenancy: they choose who supports them, and housing and care are legally separate. a local provider is CQC-registered for the personal-care element of this support. In Buckinghamshire the register lists 3 supported livings — limited local supply, so include nearby areas in your search. Browse supported living in Buckinghamshire →

Residential homes in Buckinghamshire

A residential care home provides accommodation and personal care for people who can no longer live safely at home — help with washing, dressing, medication and meals, with staff on site around the clock. Unlike a nursing home, a residential home does not have registered nurses on shift; healthcare is provided by visiting GPs, district nurses and community teams. a local provider is registered with the Care Quality Commission, which inspects everything from staffing levels and safeguarding to food, dignity and activities. Local depth: 2 residential homes registered in Buckinghamshire — limited local supply, so include nearby areas in your search.

Diagnostics & Imaging in Buckinghamshire

A diagnostic and screening service carries out the tests that answer clinical questions: imaging such as X-ray, ultrasound, CT and MRI; physiological measurement such as ECGs and echocardiograms; and screening programmes from blood tests to endoscopy. a local provider operates under CQC registration, with imaging additionally governed by IR(ME)R — the regulations controlling every use of ionising radiation on patients in the UK. Buckinghamshire currently offers 2 diagnostics & imagings on the register — limited local supply, so include nearby areas in your search.

Ambulances in Buckinghamshire

As a CQC-registered healthcare provider, a local provider operates under the regulatory framework that governs health and social care in England. Registration is not a formality: it means the provider has satisfied the Care Quality Commission that its premises, staffing, clinical governance and safeguarding arrangements meet the fundamental standards of safe care. Providers must nominate a registered manager who is legally accountable for the quality of the service, and they remain subject to inspection and enforcement for as long as they trade. Buckinghamshire currently offers 1 ambulances on the register — limited local supply, so include nearby areas in your search.

Who Runs Care in Buckinghamshire

Behind every registered location stands a legal entity — the "registered provider" accountable to the CQC — and in Buckinghamshire several providers operate more than one location:

  • Rehabilitation Education And Community Homes Limited — 2 registered locations locally

Neither independence nor group membership predicts quality by itself. What the multi-site picture gives you is a research shortcut: sister locations share leadership, so their inspection histories read together — and a provider whose other sites rate well earns some benefit of the doubt, while one with repeated findings across sites deserves sharper questions.

Choosing a Provider in Buckinghamshire

The method that works in Buckinghamshire is the method that works everywhere, applied locally. Define the need precisely before searching — "a dentist taking NHS patients within 15 minutes" filters better than "a dentist". Check every shortlisted provider's registration and read its latest inspection report, concentrating on the well-led and safe sections; every profile on this site links to the official record. Then ring, and judge the phone call as evidence: how a provider handles a first enquiry predicts how it handles patients.

Compare at least two options before committing — a single quote is a price, two quotes are a market — and for anything ongoing, weight geography honestly: the section above shows where provision clusters, and repeat visits multiply every extra mile.

Timing sharpens the same method. NHS capacity — dental lists especially — opens and closes month to month, so a "no" in spring can be a "yes" in autumn, and asking to join a waiting list costs nothing. For care services, start comparing before the need is urgent: the families who choose best are almost always the ones who visited providers while the decision could still wait a month, not the ones choosing from a hospital corridor on discharge day.

Widen the net when supply is thin: nearby, Windsor and Maidenhead (6) all carry their own registers of providers, each one listed on this site with the same detail.

NHS or Private in Buckinghamshire?

Before contacting any provider in Buckinghamshire, decide which funding route you are shopping on — the same organisation can behave like two different services depending on whether you arrive as an NHS or a private patient.

Three practical rules keep the comparison honest. First, ask every provider which routes it actually offers — many serve both, and NHS capacity opens and closes month to month. Second, when comparing private quotes, compare totals rather than headline consultation fees: follow-ups, diagnostics and aftercare are where quotes diverge. Third, remember the hybrid path — an NHS referral for diagnosis with private treatment, or the reverse, is legitimate and common; you can switch routes between stages of care.

One right worth exercising: for most planned NHS care in England you can choose which provider your GP referral goes to, including independent providers holding NHS contracts. Waiting lists vary dramatically between organisations, so asking your GP to compare waits before the referral is sent can save months without spending a pound.

Reading the Register: Ratings & Reports

The Care Quality Commission register is the spine of this page, and it repays a closer look: for Buckinghamshire it holds not just who operates, but how well.

The CQC inspects providers against five questions — safe, effective, caring, responsive, well-led — and publishes both ratings and full inspection reports. Reading one efficiently: start with well-led (it predicts everything else), then safe; look at the direction 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. Every profile on this site links to the provider's official record, one click from the listing.

The register also updates continuously: providers open, close, merge and change ownership every month, which is why this directory refreshes from the official data monthly and why any shortlist older than a few weeks deserves a quick re-check. If a provider you remember is missing from the listings here, it has usually deregistered — worth knowing before you ring a number from an old bookmark.

What to Expect at Your First Visit

A first appointment at a provider in Buckinghamshire is part assessment, part administration — and you control how productive the assessment half is.

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

Costs depend on how you access the service. NHS-commissioned care is free at the point of use, though waiting times vary by area and specialty. Private care is paid either directly (self-pay) or through medical insurance — if you hold a policy, contact your insurer for pre-authorisation before booking, as most insurers require an authorisation number and some restrict which providers you can use.

For self-pay patients, reputable providers publish or supply on request a clear fee schedule covering the initial consultation, follow-ups and common procedures. Ask specifically about what is included: some quotes cover the consultation only, while others bundle diagnostics or aftercare. UK consumer law entitles you to transparent pricing before you commit to treatment.

For care services — home care, residential and nursing homes — the funding landscape is its own subject: local-authority support after a means test, NHS Continuing Healthcare for primarily health-driven needs (fully funded, no means test), and non-means-tested benefits such as Attendance Allowance that offset costs for self-funders. Anyone facing long-term care fees in Buckinghamshire, Slough should ask the council for a needs assessment before signing anything, and treat independent financial advice as money well spent.

Getting to Appointments

How you travel matters as much as where you go — especially for care that involves repeat visits.

Providers here span the SL1, SL2, SL3 postcode districts — the by-the-numbers section above shows how they cluster, and each profile carries the exact postcode plus a map link.

For one-off consultations, travelling further for the right provider is usually worth it; for weekly physiotherapy, daily home-care visits or a course of treatment, every extra mile multiplies. Use the full postcode of any provider in a journey planner rather than its name — postcodes resolve reliably, names often do not — and ask about parking or the nearest step-free access point when you book rather than on arrival.

If you have mobility or sensory needs, say so at booking: CQC-registered providers are expected to make reasonable adjustments under the Equality Act — from accessible parking guidance to longer appointments and interpreters — and nearly all handle them smoothly when given notice.

Two scheduling habits pay off locally as everywhere. Book the day's first appointment when running on time matters most — delays accumulate through a clinic day, not at its start. And cluster errands around healthcare trips deliberately: for ongoing treatment, matching appointment times to existing routines is what keeps attendance from eroding when life gets busy.

Questions Worth Asking

Experienced patients ask better questions. For a provider in Buckinghamshire, this shortlist reliably separates strong services from average ones:

  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.

Your Rights, Complaints & Advocacy

Your relationship with any registered provider sits on a legal foundation worth knowing before you ever need it.

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.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many healthcare providers are there in Buckinghamshire, Slough?
There are 35 CQC-registered healthcare providers in Buckinghamshire, Slough, spanning 9 service types and covering postcode districts including SL1, SL2, SL3.
What is the most common type of healthcare provider in Buckinghamshire?
Home Care — 12 registered locally, making it the area's largest service type. The full service-by-service breakdown is on this page.
Are all these providers in Buckinghamshire regulated?
Yes. Every provider listed is registered with the Care Quality Commission (CQC), the independent regulator of health and social care in England, and remains subject to ongoing inspection. Each profile links to the official register entry.
How do I check a specific provider in Buckinghamshire?
Open its profile on this site and follow the link to the official CQC record — read the latest inspection report, concentrating on the "well-led" and "safe" sections. Individual clinicians can be verified free on the GMC, GDC, NMC or HCPC registers.
Is healthcare in Buckinghamshire free?
NHS-funded care is free at the point of use (prescription and dental charges apply in England, with wide exemptions). Private care is self-funded or insured. Many local providers serve both routes — ask which apply when you contact them, as NHS capacity changes month to month.
Which areas near Buckinghamshire should I also consider?
The neighbouring areas with their own listings are Windsor and Maidenhead (6 providers). For scarce services, widening the search one area outward usually multiplies the shortlist.
Which part of Buckinghamshire has the most healthcare providers?
The SL1 postcode district leads with 16 providers. The full density breakdown is in the "by the numbers" section of this page.
How do I complain about a healthcare provider in Buckinghamshire?
Start with the provider's own complaints procedure — every registered service must operate one. NHS-funded care escalates to the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman; council-funded social care to the Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman; and subscribing private providers to the Independent Sector Complaints Adjudication Service. You can also report any concern to the CQC, which feeds inspection planning.
Where does this information come from?
Provider details are drawn from the Care Quality Commission register (Open Government Licence v3.0) and refreshed monthly. Counts and coverage figures on this page are computed from that register. Always confirm time-sensitive details, such as opening hours and NHS availability, directly with the provider.

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