Open Access Accessibility and quality of secondary care rheumatology services for people with inflammatory arthritis: a regional survey

Authors: Sandhu, R.S.; Treharne, G.J.; Justice, E.A.; Jordan, A.C.; Saravana, S.; Obrenovic, K.; Erb, N.; Kitas, G.D.; West Midlands Rheumatology Services Training Committee,

Source: Clinical Medicine, Journal of the Royal College of Physicians, Volume 7, Number 6, December 2007 , pp. 579-584(6)

Publisher: Royal College of Physicians

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Abstract:

Secondary care rheumatology services for patients with inflammatory arthritis (IA) in the West Midlands were audited using Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Alliance (ARMA) standards of care. Questionnaires were analysed from 1,715 patients in 11 rheumatology departments. ARMA standards recommend full multidisciplinary team assessment; referral rates to nurse specialists (52.3%), physiotherapists (48.7%) and occupational therapists (36.5%) were, however, lower than expected. Attendance at existing hospital-led education groups was rare (8.9%), awareness of existing helplines was moderate (59.2%) but the proportion of patients reporting satisfaction with advice about their disease was high (80.5%). Significant variations were found between departments. For patients with IA <2 years (n=236), 84.5% were seen by a rheumatologist within the ARMA standard of 12 weeks of referral; diagnosis of a type of IA was made at the first rheumatology appointment in 66.4%; 82.8% of rheumatoid arthritis patients had commenced disease-modifying drugs, although time to commencement varied across departments. This study raises issues regarding provision of rheumatology services, prioritisation of patient referral and patient education.

Keywords: INFLAMMATORY ARTHRITIS; REFERRAL; REGIONAL AUDIT; STANDARDS OF CARE

Document Type: Research article

Publication date: 2007-12-01

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  • Clinical Medicine is published six times a year and circulated to 20,000 Fellows and Members of the Royal College of Physicians. The journal is read by physicians both established and in training in hospitals across the world. It features a wide range of articles including original papers, professional issues, clinical guidance, medical humanities, ethics and clinical governance. The journal publishes the key features from the College lectures and conferences. Each issue has a CME section which reviews the latest advances in a chosen specialty.
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