Chan S Y, Berry M G, Engledow A H, Perry N M, Wells C A, Carpenter R
Department of Surgery, St Bartholomew's Hospital, West Smithfield, London, EC1A 7BE, UK.
Breast Cancer. 2000;7(3):191-4. doi: 10.1007/BF02967459.
A one-stop diagnostic service has been available for women with symptomatic breast disease at St Bartholomew's Hospital for 5 years and was originally audited in May 1993. In re-auditing the one-stop service our aim was to see if our practice had improved following the original audit and to look at the impact which these changes in practice had made to the service offered to the patient.
A prospective audit of 4 consecutive clinics was undertaken in November 1997. A total of 300 patients (59 new and 241 follow up) were seen in clinic in this time. The primary outcome measure concerned the completeness of triple assessment in the 40 patients who required one stop investigations, including mammography, ultrasonography and fine-needle aspiration cytology. In addition, mean time to initial consultation and level of awareness of the one-stop facility and its attendant time delay were measured.
Of the 300 clinic attendees 40 (38 new, 2 follow-up) had one-stop investigations. As a result of the one-stop service being in practice, 36 patients (90%) had a definitive management decision made at their first outpatient visit. Of these 2 were symptomatic cancers, forming 5% of the workload. A total of 86% of the workload was benign. Four patients (10%) had equivocal results. The mean waiting time from designated appointment until surgical consultation was 36.7 minutes and was disappointingly unchanged from that of the previous audit. However this does not take into account the significant reduction in staffing levels which has occurred between the two periods of assessment.
The initial audit identified a significant problem with time constraints, necessitating that a large number of patients with carcinomas return at a later date for further investigations. Booking only new patients at the beginning of clinic has provided a solution. Disappointingly, our figures do not show a significant improvement in mean waiting time compared with the previous audit, despite allowing GPs greater access of referral. Encouragingly, we have been able to maintain a similar standard of provision of care despite lower staffing levels and to implement the changes suggested by the original audit (thereby closing the audit loop).
圣巴塞洛缪医院为有症状的乳腺疾病女性提供一站式诊断服务已有5年,最初于1993年5月进行了审核。在对一站式服务进行重新审核时,我们的目的是查看在最初审核之后我们的做法是否有所改进,并研究这些做法的改变对为患者提供的服务产生了哪些影响。
1997年11月对连续4个诊所进行了前瞻性审核。在此期间,诊所共接待了300名患者(59名新患者和241名复诊患者)。主要结局指标涉及40名需要一站式检查的患者的三联评估完整性,包括乳房X线摄影、超声检查和细针穿刺细胞学检查。此外,还测量了初次咨询的平均时间、对一站式设施的知晓程度及其伴随的时间延迟。
在300名就诊患者中,40名(38名新患者,2名复诊患者)进行了一站式检查。由于一站式服务的实施,36名患者(90%)在首次门诊就诊时就做出了明确的治疗决定。其中2例为有症状的癌症,占工作量的5%。总工作量的86%为良性。4名患者(10%)结果不明确。从指定预约到手术咨询的平均等待时间为36.7分钟,与上次审核相比令人失望地没有变化。然而,这没有考虑到两个评估期之间人员配备水平的显著下降。
最初的审核发现了时间限制方面的重大问题,这使得大量癌症患者需要日后再来进行进一步检查。仅在诊所开始时为新患者预约提供了解决方案。令人失望的是,尽管让全科医生有更多的转诊途径,但与上次审核相比,我们的数据并未显示平均等待时间有显著改善。令人鼓舞的是,尽管人员配备水平较低,我们仍能够维持类似的护理标准,并实施了最初审核建议的改变(从而完成了审核循环)。