Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
Abstract Background/Aims The quality of early inflammatory arthritis (EIA) referrals from primary care can vary even with a standardised referral form leading to large numbers of non-EIA patients being seen. Poor utilisation of EIA slots places pressure on an EIA service’s ability to see suspected EIA patients within 3 weeks of referral. To overcome this challenge, a questionnaire was devised to enable enhanced EIA triage and a scoping exercise was carried out to assess clinical utility. Methods 50 patients attending the EIA clinic completed the questionnaire (Table 1) either self-administered or via telephone prior to their appointment. Early Inflammatory Arthritis Screening Questionnaire (Table 1) Positive answers were scored 1 with a maximum score of 11. Following their appointment, the patient diagnosis was collected from patient records. Results Of the 50 patients, 14 (28%) had a confirmed EIA diagnosis and the other 36 (72%) patients had a range of alternative diagnoses. In the confirmed EIA group, the scores ranged from 5-8/11 with an average mean score of 7.0 and median of 7. Further analysis showed patients with a score over 5/11 including symptom duration of 12 months and under (Q1) identified all the confirmed EIA patients. Applying the above criteria to our 50 study patients resulted in 27/50 patients qualifying for an EIA appointment slot and 14/27 (52%) would have been confirmed with EIA. After applying these cut off criteria the sensitivity of the questionnaire was 100% and the specificity was 64%. The non-EIA group scores ranged from 0 - 8/11 with an average mean score of 4.9 and median score of 5. Conclusion In our service triage of EIA referrals on a standardised form resulted in poor utilisation of EIA slots. Triage using the questionnaire improved the EIA slot allocation and increased EIA conversion rate from 28% to 50%. This questionnaire appears to be a promising tool to improve utilisation of EIA appointments. Telephone assessment could be delivered by any member of the multidisciplinary team. Disclosure J. Burton: None. R. Sathananthan: None. S. Levy: None. N. Horwood: None. T. Ahmed: None. R. Suresh: None.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Jessica Burton
Rosh Sathananthan
Croydon University Hospital
Sarah Levy
Croydon University Hospital
Lara D. Veeken
St George's, University of London
Croydon University Hospital
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Burton et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e71600b6db64358768e6e6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/keae163.246
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: