BMC Rheumatology (Nov 2022)

Development of a patient-led clinic visit framework: a case study navigating a patient’s journey for rheumatology outpatient clinic consultations in England and Wales

  • Sarah Oyebanjo,
  • Paul Amlani-Hatcher,
  • Ruth Williams,
  • Roger Stevens,
  • Tom Esterine,
  • Kate Wilkins,
  • Clare Jacklin,
  • Jill Hamilton,
  • Rosie Fairfax,
  • Heidi Lempp

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s41927-022-00318-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background Involving patients and members of the public in healthcare planning is beneficial for many reasons including that the outcomes focus on topics relevant to service users. The National Early Inflammatory Arthritis Audit (NEIAA) aims to improve care quality for patients with inflammatory arthritis. Case study This paper presents a case study detailing how the NEIAA Patient Panel worked with NEIAA governance groups, the National Rheumatoid Arthritis Society and the National Axial Spondyloarthritis Society to co-create an outpatient clinic visit framework for rheumatology professionals. A framework was co-created, divided into nine sections: pre-appointment preparation, waiting area (face-to-face appointments), face-to-face consultations, physical examination, establishing a forward plan, post consultation, annual holistic reviews, virtual appointments and key considerations. Providing insight into how the multi-disciplinary team can meet the diverse needs of patients with inflammatory arthritis, this framework now informs the teaching content about people who live with physical and mental disability for Year 3 and 4 undergraduate medical students at King’s College London. Conclusion Patients play an important role in helping to address gaps in health service provision in England/Wales. The co-production of a clinic visit framework, informed by their own lived experience and their own expectations can lead to improved and relevant outcomes for the benefit of patients and raises awareness to medical students what matters to patients with physical disabilities when attending outpatient care.

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