Achievement of NICE Quality Standards for patients with new presentation of inflammatory arthritis: observations from the National Clinical Audit for Rheumatoid and Early Inflammatory Arthritis
Achievement of NICE Quality Standards for patients with new presentation of inflammatory arthritis: observations from the National Clinical Audit for Rheumatoid and Early Inflammatory Arthritis
Objectives. A national audit was performed assessing the early management of suspected inflammatory arthritis by English and Welsh rheumatology units. The aim of this audit was to measure the performance of rheumatology services against National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) quality standards (QSs) for the management of early inflammatory arthritis benchmarked to regional and national comparators for the first time in the UK.
Methods. All individuals >16 years of age presenting to rheumatology services in England and Wales with suspected new-onset inflammatory arthritis were included in the audit. Information was collected against six NICE QSs that pertain to early inflammatory arthritis management.
Results. We present national data for the 6354 patients recruited from 1 February 2014 to 31 January 2015; 97% of trusts and health boards in England and Wales participated in this audit. Only 17% of patients were referred by their general practitioner within 3 days of first presentation. Specialist rheumatology assessment occurred within 3 weeks of referral in 38% of patients. The target of DMARD initiation within 6 weeks of referral was achieved in 53% of RA patients; 36% were treated with combination DMARDs and 82% with steroids within the first 3 months of specialist care. Fifty-nine per cent of patients received structured education on their arthritis within 1 month of diagnosis. In total, 91% of patients had a treatment target set; the agreed target was achieved within 3 months of specialist review in only 27% of patients. Access to urgent advice via a telephone helpline was reported to be available in 96% of trusts.
Conclusion. The audit has highlighted gaps between NICE standards and delivery of care, as well as substantial geographic variability.
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Ledingham, J.M.
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Snowden, N.
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Rivett, A.
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J, Galloway
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Ide, Z.
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Firth, J.
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MacPhie, E.
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Kandala, N.
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Dennison, E.M.
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Rowe, I.
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February 2017
Ledingham, J.M.
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Snowden, N.
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Rivett, A.
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J, Galloway
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Ide, Z.
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Firth, J.
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MacPhie, E.
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Kandala, N.
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Dennison, E.M.
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Rowe, I.
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Ledingham, J.M., Snowden, N., Rivett, A., J, Galloway, Ide, Z., Firth, J., MacPhie, E., Kandala, N., Dennison, E.M. and Rowe, I.
(2017)
Achievement of NICE Quality Standards for patients with new presentation of inflammatory arthritis: observations from the National Clinical Audit for Rheumatoid and Early Inflammatory Arthritis.
Rheumatology, 56 (2), .
(doi:10.1093/rheumatology/kew308).
Abstract
Objectives. A national audit was performed assessing the early management of suspected inflammatory arthritis by English and Welsh rheumatology units. The aim of this audit was to measure the performance of rheumatology services against National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) quality standards (QSs) for the management of early inflammatory arthritis benchmarked to regional and national comparators for the first time in the UK.
Methods. All individuals >16 years of age presenting to rheumatology services in England and Wales with suspected new-onset inflammatory arthritis were included in the audit. Information was collected against six NICE QSs that pertain to early inflammatory arthritis management.
Results. We present national data for the 6354 patients recruited from 1 February 2014 to 31 January 2015; 97% of trusts and health boards in England and Wales participated in this audit. Only 17% of patients were referred by their general practitioner within 3 days of first presentation. Specialist rheumatology assessment occurred within 3 weeks of referral in 38% of patients. The target of DMARD initiation within 6 weeks of referral was achieved in 53% of RA patients; 36% were treated with combination DMARDs and 82% with steroids within the first 3 months of specialist care. Fifty-nine per cent of patients received structured education on their arthritis within 1 month of diagnosis. In total, 91% of patients had a treatment target set; the agreed target was achieved within 3 months of specialist review in only 27% of patients. Access to urgent advice via a telephone helpline was reported to be available in 96% of trusts.
Conclusion. The audit has highlighted gaps between NICE standards and delivery of care, as well as substantial geographic variability.
Text
NICE QS paper - final draft accepted for publication
- Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 15 July 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 October 2016
Published date: February 2017
Organisations:
Human Development & Health
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Local EPrints ID: 407385
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/407385
ISSN: 1462-0324
PURE UUID: f2a68c25-df22-4ee9-9990-80880ad7fa19
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Date deposited: 05 Apr 2017 01:06
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:12
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Contributors
Author:
J.M. Ledingham
Author:
N. Snowden
Author:
A. Rivett
Author:
Galloway J
Author:
Z. Ide
Author:
J. Firth
Author:
E. MacPhie
Author:
N. Kandala
Author:
I. Rowe
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