By enabling consultant dermatologists to advise GPs before referral, patients not needing urgent review could be removed from the ‘two week wait’ pathway, freeing time to focus on urgent cases.
Outpatient services were impacted heavily by the pandemic, with patients themselves delaying making GP appointments. As restrictions began to lift and appointments increase, the Ipswich Hospital Dermatology Service was experiencing significant pressure on the 2WW pathway due to the sheer volume of cases.
Of the 10,000 urgent referrals reviewed by consultants in person, only 40% were subsequently kept on the 2WW pathway. The remaining 60% were reduced in severity to routine referrals. Finding a way to separate these groups ahead of hospital attendance would therefore help to identify the more urgent cases.
They asked the Vantage team to develop a robust solution that would enable earlier triage, keep the final referral decision with the GP and stay compliant with the Cancer Waiting Times Guidance.
To ensure the solution met the national requirements for triaging 2WW cases, the team worked in close collaboration with the CCG’s Teledermatology Steering Group, including a GP, a lead consultant dermatologist, operational and IT staff and transformation lead to develop a new triage process, enabled by the integration of Rego with eRS:
The impact is clear. From January to May 2021, 93% of the 96 cases were triaged in one day and 50% of the total number were downgraded to either a routine referral or not requiring hospital treatment.
A survey found that 78% of respondents felt the system supported earlier detection and intervention for previously undetected cancerous lesions.
As well as reducing the need to travel to an appointment, this new process has reduced patient anxiety as they get a decision sooner without needing to make repeat calls to their GP.
Since going live, the team has helped to streamline the 2WW pathway further by auto-populating the correct eRS service for GPs.