Post-Tonsillectomy Advice: the UK patient experience

Author(s):  
Mark Gabrawi ◽  
Adam Haymes ◽  
Jeremy Davis
Keyword(s):  
2017 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. e12670 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. J. Hulbert-Williams ◽  
C.O. Plumpton ◽  
P. Flowers ◽  
R. McHugh ◽  
R.D. Neal ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 287-295
Author(s):  
Nandini Chakraborty

SUMMARYPsychiatrists live and work in complex, clinically challenging times. Their paperwork is geared increasingly towards defensive practice, key performance indicators and risk assessment forms. Somewhere in the process, detailed understanding of patient experience and clinical formulation based on key psychiatric expertise and skill in mental state examination have taken a backseat. I review the history behind the Present State Examination, the realisation in the 1980s of the need for a common psychiatric language internationally and the current position on phenomenology in psychiatry curricula in the UK. I conclude that it is time to think seriously about a return to basics in psychiatric phenomenology and psychopathology.


2020 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 251-258 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tanya McCance ◽  
Brighide M Lynch ◽  
Christine Boomer ◽  
Donna Brown ◽  
Christopher Nugent ◽  
...  

Abstract Objective The aim of the study was to evaluate a technological solution in the form of an App to implement and measure person-centredness in nursing. The focus was to enhance the knowledge transfer of a set of person-centred key performance indicators and the corresponding measurement framework used to inform improvements in the experience of care. Design The study used an evaluation approach derived from the work of the Medical Research Council to assess the feasibility of the App and establish the degree to which the App was meeting the aims set out in the development phase. Evaluation data were collected using focus groups (n = 7) and semi-structured interviews (n = 7) to capture the impact of processes experienced by participating sites. Setting The study was conducted in the UK and Australia in two organizations, across 11 participating sites. Participants 22 nurses from 11 sites in two large health care organizations were recruited on a voluntary basis. Intervention Implementing the KPIs and measurement framework via the APP through two cycles of data collection. Main Outcome Measures The main outcome was to establish feasibility in the use of the App. Results The majority of nurse/midwife participants found the App easy to use. There was broad consensus that the App was an effective method to measure the patient experience and generated clear, concise reports in real time. Conclusions The implementation of the person-centred key performance indicators using the App enhanced the generation of meaningful data to evidence patient experience across a range of different clinical settings.


Lung Cancer ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 156 ◽  
pp. S52
Author(s):  
Vanessa Beattie ◽  
Merel Hennink ◽  
Kevin O’Hagan ◽  
Winfield Boerckel ◽  
Maureen Rigney ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Helen T Allan

In this article I discuss the effects on the patient experience of isolation nursing during the CoronaVirus Disease (COVID)-19 pandemic. An unintended consequence of isolation nursing has been to distance patients from nurses and emphasise the technical side of nursing while at the same time reducing the relational or affective potential of nursing. Such distanced forms of nursing normalise the distal patient in hospital. I consider ways in which this new form of distanced nursing has unwittingly contributed to the continued commodification of nursing care in the British NHS. Autoethnography is used to describe and reflect on the illness experience, the experiences of caregivers and the sociocultural organisation of health care. The findings discuss three areas of the illness experience: intimate nursing care; communication; the ‘distanced’ patient experience.


2021 ◽  
Vol 20 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
S Harrison ◽  
J Bellchambers ◽  
S Deane ◽  
N Dent ◽  
N Mackay ◽  
...  

Abstract Funding Acknowledgements None Background Patients undergoing angiography and percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) were historically reviewed post procedure by a member of the medical team who assesses the patient’s suitability for discharge and completes the discharge letter. Over the past 10 years, the number of patients admitted for these procedures as day cases has increased significantly. In addition, there has been an expansion in nursing roles in the UK with the development of a variety of clinical nurse specialist (CNS) posts which have taken over many of the traditional medical roles. The majority of patients undergoing elective angiography and PCI are admitted to a day case unit at this tertiary cardiac centre. There is no designated medical cover for the unit and medical staff from the acute cardiac unit are called to review patients and complete their discharge paperwork in addition to their other duties. This frequently results in delayed discharge and patients going home without a discharge summary. It was therefore proposed that suitably qualified CNSs could be trained to discharge these patients and others undergoing day case cardiology procedures.  From June 2017, the CNS team took over the role of reviewing patients post procedure and completing the discharge letter. Purpose The aim of the study was to evaluate if CNSs were able to discharge patients and provide a timely and effective service following elective cardiology procedures and to obtain patient feedback. Method Data on the number of patients reviewed by the CNSs from June 2017 to the end of December 2019, were prospectively collected in a dedicated database. A pilot study of patient experience was carried out in January 2020. Patients were given a questionnaire which asked about the explanation they received from the CNS regarding the procedure they had undergone, if their medication was reviewed and discussed with them, and if they received a discharge summary to take home. Results 1287 patients were reviewed by the CNS team during the above period. 811 (63.0%) patients had undergone angiography and 423 (32.9%) PCI.  Informal feedback from the staff working on the day case unit included that patients were discharged earlier, had improved knowledge about their procedure and that the discharge letter was more detailed when completed by the CNS team. Eight patients completed the pilot questionnaire. Six were discharged by one of the CNS team, one by a doctor and one patient was not sure who did their discharge. All patients were very satisfied with the process and the information they were given. Conclusion Experienced CNSs can deliver high-quality, timely discharge of patients following cardiology procedures.  This process is being used as a template to expand nurse-led discharge to other areas in cardiology. Patient experience will continue to be audited with a larger sample size in 2020.


2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mirza Lalani ◽  
Jane Fernandes ◽  
Richard Fradgley ◽  
Caroline Ogunsola ◽  
Martin Marshall

Abstract Background Buurtzorg, a model of community nursing conceived in the Netherlands, is widely cited as a promising and evidence-based approach to improving the delivery of integrated nursing and social care in community settings. The model is characterised by high levels of patient and staff satisfaction, professional autonomy exercised through self-managing nursing teams, client empowerment and holistic, patient centred care. This study aimed to examine the extent to which some of the principles of the Buurtzorg model could be adapted for community nursing in the United Kingdom. Methods A community nursing model based on the Buurtzorg approach was piloted from June 2017–August 2018 with a team of nurses co-located in a single general practice in the Borough of Tower Hamlets, East London, UK. The initiative was evaluated using a participatory methodology known as the Researcher-in-Residence model. Qualitative data were collected using participant observation of meetings and semi-structured interviews with nurse team members, senior managers, patients/carers and other local stakeholders such as General Practitioners (GP) and social workers. A thematic framework analysis of the data was carried out. Results Implementation of a community nursing model based on the Buurtzorg approach in East London had mixed success when assessed against its key principles. Patient experience of the service was positive because of the better access, improved continuity of care and longer appointment times in comparison with traditional community nursing provision. The model also provided important learning for developing service integration in community care, in particular, how to form effective collaborations across the care system with other health and social care professionals. However, some of the core features of the Buurtzorg model were difficult to put into practice in the National Health Service (NHS) because of significant cultural and regulatory differences between The Netherlands and the UK, especially the nurses’ ability to exercise professional autonomy. Conclusions Whilst many of the principles of the Buurtzorg model are applicable and transferable to the UK, in particular promoting independence among patients, improving patient experience and empowering frontline staff, the successful embedding of these aims as normalised ways of working will require a significant cultural shift at all levels of the NHS.


2018 ◽  
Vol 68 (672) ◽  
pp. e469-e477 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas E Cowling ◽  
Azeem Majeed ◽  
Matthew J Harris

BackgroundThe UK government aims to improve the accessibility of general practices in England, particularly by extending opening hours in the evenings and at weekends. It is unclear how important these factors are to patients’ overall experiences of general practice.AimTo examine associations between overall experience of general practice and patient experience of making appointments and satisfaction with opening hours.Design and settingAnalysis of repeated cross-sectional data from the General Practice Patient Surveys conducted from 2011–2012 until 2013–2014. These covered 8289 general practice surgeries in England.MethodData from a national survey conducted three times over consecutive years were analysed. The outcome measure was overall experience, rated on a five-level interval scale. Associations were estimated as standardised regression coefficients, adjusted for responder characteristics and clustering within practices using multilevel linear regression.ResultsIn total, there were 2 912 535 responders from all practices in England (n = 8289). Experience of making appointments (β 0.24, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.24 to 0.25) and satisfaction with opening hours (β 0.15, 95% CI = 0.15 to 0.16) were modestly associated with overall experience. Overall experience was most strongly associated with GP interpersonal quality of care (β 0.34, 95% CI = 0.34 to 0.35) and receptionist helpfulness was positively associated with overall experience (β 0.16, 95% CI = 0.16 to 0.17). Other patient experience measures had minimal associations (β≤0.06). Models explained ≥90% of variation in overall experience between practices.ConclusionPatient experience of making appointments and satisfaction with opening hours were only modestly associated with overall experience. Policymakers in England should not assume that recent policies to improve access will result in large improvements in patients’ overall experience of general practice.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 235 ◽  
Author(s):  
Penny Campling

The concept of ‘intelligent kindness’ is important at all levels of healthcare from the personal, through teams and work organisations to the political. A virtuous circle is envisaged, based on what motivates and assures compassionate practice, affecting patient experience and linking to staff morale, effectiveness, efficiency and outcome. The UK NHS is a system that invites Society to value and attend to its deepest common interests; a vital expression of kinship that can improve if Society, patients and, especially, staff can reconnect to the powerful motivation and attentiveness inherent in such connectedness.The healthcare task, however, puts us in touch with deep-seated, largely unconscious existential anxieties that can undermine the work and the organization. Not only are hospitals organized in a defensive structure against such anxieties - as described by Isobel Menzies Lyth, over 50 years ago - but these same anxieties drive the constant re-structurings that are so disruptive to the service and distracting from patient care. The forces at work in Society that threaten to undermine and fragment an ethical healthcare system are also described in relation to Susan Long’s thesis on the ‘perverse organisation’ - particularly the tendency to ‘turn a blind eye’ to the dangers of unmitigated market forces and industrialization.It is argued within this article that a focus on intelligent kindness in healthcare is more urgent than ever and that such a focus could act as an integrating force, minimizing the potential for harmful fragmentation. Models of good practice are described and an active refocussing on kindness within healthcare professions is encouraged.


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