Clinical scientist led transoesophageal echocardiography (TOE) - using extended roles to improve the service
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Published version
Author(s)
Kaye, Nikki
Purdon, Michael
Schofield, Rebecca
Antonacci, Grazia
Proudlove, Nathan
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
At the North West Anglia NHS Foundation Trust we perform transoesophageal echocardiography (TOE), a semi-invasive diagnostic test using ultrasound for high-quality heart imaging. TOE allows accurate diagnosis of serious heart problems to support high-quality clinical decision-making about treatment pathways. The procedure can be lengthy and is traditionally performed by a consultant cardiologist, who typically has multiple commitments. This constrains patient access to TOE, leading to waits from referral to test, delaying treatment decisions.
In this quality improvement project, we improved access by redesigning workforce roles. The clinical scientist, who had been supporting the consultant during TOE clinics, took on performing the procedure as the main operator. We used the Model for Improvement to develop this clinical-scientist-led service-delivery model, and then test and refine it. This increased capacity and frequency of TOE clinics, reducing waits and releasing around 2 days per month of consultant time.
Over 5 plan-do-study-act cycles, we tested 6 changes/refinements. Our targets were to reduce the maximum waiting time for TOE to 3 working days for inpatients and to 14 working days for outpatients. We succeeded, achieving reductions in mean waiting times from 7.7 days to 3.0 days for inpatients and from 33.2 days to 8.3 days for outpatients.
TOE requires intubation; when this fails, TOE is abandoned. We believe light (rather than heavy) sedation is helpful for this intubation. We reduced sedation levels (from a median of 3mg of Midazolam to 1.5mg) and, as a secondary outcome of this project, reduced the intubation failure rate from 13% to 0% (over 32 post-change patients).
Following this project, our TOE service is usually performed by a clinical scientist in echocardiography who has British Society of Echocardiography TOE accreditation and advanced training. We have sustained the improved performance and demonstrated the value of enhanced roles for clinical scientists.
In this quality improvement project, we improved access by redesigning workforce roles. The clinical scientist, who had been supporting the consultant during TOE clinics, took on performing the procedure as the main operator. We used the Model for Improvement to develop this clinical-scientist-led service-delivery model, and then test and refine it. This increased capacity and frequency of TOE clinics, reducing waits and releasing around 2 days per month of consultant time.
Over 5 plan-do-study-act cycles, we tested 6 changes/refinements. Our targets were to reduce the maximum waiting time for TOE to 3 working days for inpatients and to 14 working days for outpatients. We succeeded, achieving reductions in mean waiting times from 7.7 days to 3.0 days for inpatients and from 33.2 days to 8.3 days for outpatients.
TOE requires intubation; when this fails, TOE is abandoned. We believe light (rather than heavy) sedation is helpful for this intubation. We reduced sedation levels (from a median of 3mg of Midazolam to 1.5mg) and, as a secondary outcome of this project, reduced the intubation failure rate from 13% to 0% (over 32 post-change patients).
Following this project, our TOE service is usually performed by a clinical scientist in echocardiography who has British Society of Echocardiography TOE accreditation and advanced training. We have sustained the improved performance and demonstrated the value of enhanced roles for clinical scientists.
Date Issued
2023-07
Date Acceptance
2023-08-07
Citation
BMJ Open Quality, 2023, 12 (3)
ISSN
2399-6641
Publisher
BMJ Publishing Group
Journal / Book Title
BMJ Open Quality
Volume
12
Issue
3
Copyright Statement
© Author(s) (or their
employer(s)) 2023. Re-use
permitted under CC BY.
Published by BMJ.
employer(s)) 2023. Re-use
permitted under CC BY.
Published by BMJ.
License URL
Identifier
https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/12/3/e002268
Publication Status
Published
Article Number
e002268
Date Publish Online
2023-09-25