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National variation in the composition of rheumatology multidisciplinary teams: a cross-sectional study

National variation in the composition of rheumatology multidisciplinary teams: a cross-sectional study
National variation in the composition of rheumatology multidisciplinary teams: a cross-sectional study
The objective of this study is to describe the composition of multidisciplinary teams (MDT) working within rheumatology departments across the UK. All rheumatology departments in the United Kingdom (UK) were invited to participate in a national electronic survey between February 2014 and April 2015 as a part of a national audit for the management of rheumatoid and early inflammatory arthritis commissioned by Healthcare Quality Improvement Partnership. Rheumatology departments were asked to report their MDT composition; defined as a rheumatologist (consultant or specialist trainee), specialist nurse, occupational therapist physiotherapist, and podiatrist. The data were collected as Whole Time Equivalent (WTE) of each professional group at each department adjusted to 100,000 population. The data were grouped according to British Society for Rheumatology regions to study regional variations. The survey was completed by 164/167 departments (98% response rate). All departments reported an MDT comprising a rheumatologist (consultant or specialist trainee) and almost all included a specialist nurse but only 28 (17%) of the departments had MDTs comprising all the professional groups. There was a high degree of regional variation in the provision of Allied Health Professionals (physiotherapists, occupational therapists, and podiatrists) in the UK. MDT care is recommended for the management of inflammatory arthritis, but few UK rheumatology departments have a full complement of healthcare professionals within their MDT. There is a high degree of regional variation in the composition and staffing levels of the rheumatology MDT across the UK; the impact of which warrants further investigation.
0172-8172
1453-1459
Ndosi, Mwidimi
3e15efa8-8da5-4032-a267-3b26c7c7b1da
Ferguson, Rachel
9b78c5f4-843b-428e-969c-3f871056d538
Backhouse, Michael R
72fb5052-1ea0-4b54-b363-f82db479e15d
Bearne, Lindsay
7bfa3d9e-87f3-47b5-8403-cdfba70d019f
Ainsworth, Phillip
458cedff-fa13-4bc5-a61b-d4cec22f99c6
Roach, Alan
e6e800b4-4431-4639-8389-cd69417f6543
Dennison, Elaine
ee647287-edb4-4392-8361-e59fd505b1d1
Cherry, Lindsey
95256156-ce8c-4e7c-b04d-b6e459232441
Ndosi, Mwidimi
3e15efa8-8da5-4032-a267-3b26c7c7b1da
Ferguson, Rachel
9b78c5f4-843b-428e-969c-3f871056d538
Backhouse, Michael R
72fb5052-1ea0-4b54-b363-f82db479e15d
Bearne, Lindsay
7bfa3d9e-87f3-47b5-8403-cdfba70d019f
Ainsworth, Phillip
458cedff-fa13-4bc5-a61b-d4cec22f99c6
Roach, Alan
e6e800b4-4431-4639-8389-cd69417f6543
Dennison, Elaine
ee647287-edb4-4392-8361-e59fd505b1d1
Cherry, Lindsey
95256156-ce8c-4e7c-b04d-b6e459232441

Ndosi, Mwidimi, Ferguson, Rachel, Backhouse, Michael R, Bearne, Lindsay, Ainsworth, Phillip, Roach, Alan, Dennison, Elaine and Cherry, Lindsey (2017) National variation in the composition of rheumatology multidisciplinary teams: a cross-sectional study. Rheumatology International, 37 (9), 1453-1459. (doi:10.1007/s00296-017-3751-0).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The objective of this study is to describe the composition of multidisciplinary teams (MDT) working within rheumatology departments across the UK. All rheumatology departments in the United Kingdom (UK) were invited to participate in a national electronic survey between February 2014 and April 2015 as a part of a national audit for the management of rheumatoid and early inflammatory arthritis commissioned by Healthcare Quality Improvement Partnership. Rheumatology departments were asked to report their MDT composition; defined as a rheumatologist (consultant or specialist trainee), specialist nurse, occupational therapist physiotherapist, and podiatrist. The data were collected as Whole Time Equivalent (WTE) of each professional group at each department adjusted to 100,000 population. The data were grouped according to British Society for Rheumatology regions to study regional variations. The survey was completed by 164/167 departments (98% response rate). All departments reported an MDT comprising a rheumatologist (consultant or specialist trainee) and almost all included a specialist nurse but only 28 (17%) of the departments had MDTs comprising all the professional groups. There was a high degree of regional variation in the provision of Allied Health Professionals (physiotherapists, occupational therapists, and podiatrists) in the UK. MDT care is recommended for the management of inflammatory arthritis, but few UK rheumatology departments have a full complement of healthcare professionals within their MDT. There is a high degree of regional variation in the composition and staffing levels of the rheumatology MDT across the UK; the impact of which warrants further investigation.

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Accepted/In Press date: 18 May 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 May 2017
Published date: 1 September 2017
Organisations: Physical & Rehabilitation Health, Human Development & Health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 410557
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/410557
ISSN: 0172-8172
PURE UUID: 65a5cede-dc43-47fa-87aa-18563e0d64f7
ORCID for Elaine Dennison: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3048-4961
ORCID for Lindsey Cherry: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3165-1004

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Date deposited: 09 Jun 2017 09:05
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:22

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Contributors

Author: Mwidimi Ndosi
Author: Rachel Ferguson
Author: Michael R Backhouse
Author: Lindsay Bearne
Author: Phillip Ainsworth
Author: Alan Roach
Author: Elaine Dennison ORCID iD
Author: Lindsey Cherry ORCID iD

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