Transforming transnasal endoscopy services: A multicentre service evaluation pilot project

Objectives: To assess the impact of pilot transnasal endoscopy (TNE) services on workforce efficiency, allocated procedure times and patient tolerance of procedures. The aim was to also understand the challenges of setting up a TNE service. Methods: Six-month data were collected from ten sites. Data...

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Main Authors: Mohamed Hussein, Jason Dunn, Farhana Sultana-Miah, Sami Hoque, Ahmed Albusoda, Esra Asilmaz, Laura Marelli, Regina Raymond, Mohsen Eldragini, Michael Grimes, Shraddha Gulati, Juriese Saramosing, Mayur Kumar, Eleanor Knights, Vinay Sehgal, Paul Maxwell, Arun Rajendran, Shamima Padaruth, Sophie Stevens, Sergio Coda, Edward Despott, Saswata Banerjee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-05-01
Series:Clinical Medicine
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470211825000181
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Summary:Objectives: To assess the impact of pilot transnasal endoscopy (TNE) services on workforce efficiency, allocated procedure times and patient tolerance of procedures. The aim was to also understand the challenges of setting up a TNE service. Methods: Six-month data were collected from ten sites. Data captured included productivity, performance, workforce numbers, facilities and quality metrics.A patient survey was done to capture patients’ experience. An eight Likert-style and open question survey was designed and used. Pilot sites were visited using a semi-structured interview process. Results: About 30% of the pilot sites carried out the TNE service outside of the endoscopy unit. There is an overall 25% improvement in workforce efficiency with TNE.Of those patients who had both a TNE and an oesophagogastroduodenoscopy, 78% reported that having the TNE procedure was a better experience.All sites reported that they will continue providing TNE beyond the pilot period. Sites carrying out TNE reported a high satisfaction with the services. Overall satisfaction with the quality of TNE imaging was very high. Conclusions: This multicentre pilot project shows evidence that the integration of TNE services has a positive impact in increasing capacity and patient satisfaction. This should set the scene for scaling this up on a wider capacity. TNE services, particularly with an introduction into outpatients, will improve service capacity in endoscopy, patients will tolerate the procedures more, national 2-week wait and Faster Diagnosis Standard targets will improve, and it is potentially more cost efficient overall.
ISSN:1470-2118