Ipsen - November 2021 - case study 1
Neuroendocrine Tumour (NET) Dietitian Service Redesign Project delivers significant cuts to waiting times
Previous dietetic resource at Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham (QEHB) was limited resulting in inequitable access for patients who needed specialist dietary management to help with their symptoms, somatostatin analogue (SSA) related side effects as well as optimising their fitness to allow for other treatments and surgery. A dedicated NET specialist dietetic service was required to maximise access and deliver an improved standard of care.
The trust (UHB) required a pilot to provide a proof of concept before committing to longer term funding. The NET dept lead recognised Ipsen’s heritage in NETs and approached us to discuss a patient centric 2-year Joint Working Initiative ending in 2022 to develop, implement and measure a specialist dietetic service for all patients who need it.
develop and implement a new dedicated service to Improve NET patients’ symptom control, nutritional status and outcomes through increased and equitable access to expertise delivered by a specialist dietitian.
The objectives are to:
- Deliver a high-quality patient experience by ensuring that the management and review process for NET patients is clear, concise and provides equity of care to all patients.
- Capture service data that will demonstrate the value of a new model of care to patients and NHS e.g. patient satisfaction, reduced waiting times/reduced number of hospital appointments, prudent resource allocation.
- Share the patient benefits of this Joint Working Initiative to allow others to access and potentially replicate this service.
Despite COVID-19 significantly impacting access to care in 2020/21, the following outcomes have already been delivered:
Benefits for Patients:
- Significant increase in appointment availability along with a cut in waiting times.
- Patients seen by a dietitian had a full nutritional assessment including weight, BMI and handgrip strength.
Benefits for NHS:
All known NET inpatients admitted with carcinoid heart disease requiring surgery assessed by a specialist dietitian.
Last modified: 29 May 2024
Last reviewed: 29 May 2024