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Announcements and latest updates

Welcome to the Right Decision Service (RDS) newsletter for August 2024.

  1. Contingency planning for RDS outages

Following the recent RDS outages, Tactuum and the RDS team have been reviewing the learning from these incidents. We are committed to doing all we can to ensure a positive outcome by strengthening the RDS to make it fully robust and clinically resilient for the future.

We would like to invite you to a webinar on 26th September 3-4 pm on national and local contingency planning for future RDS outages.  Tactuum and the RDS team will speak about our business continuity plans and the national contingency arrangements we are putting in place. This will also be a space to share local contingency plans, ideas and existing good practice. We would also like to gather your views on who we should send communications to in the event of future outages.

I have sent a meeting request for this date to all editors – please accept or decline to indicate attendance, and please forward on to relevant contacts. You can also contact Olivia.graham@nhs.scot directly to register your interest in participating.

 

2.National  IV fluid prescribing  calculator

This UK CA marked calculator is now live at https://righdecisions.scot.nhs.uk/ivfluids  . It has been developed by a multiprofessional steering group of leads in IV fluids management, as part of the wider Modernising Patient Pathways Programme within the Centre for Sustainable Delivery.  It aims to address a known cause of clinical error in hospital settings, and we hope it will be especially useful to the new junior doctors who started in August.

Please do spread the word about this new calculator and get in touch with any questions.

 

  1. New toolkits

The following toolkits are now live;

  1. Updated guidance on current and future Medical Device Regulations

We have updated and simplified this guidance within our standard operating procedures. We have clarified the guidance on how to determine whether an RDS tool is a medical device, and have provided an interactive powerpoint slideset to steer you through the process.

 

  1. Guide to six stages of RDS toolkit development

We have developed a guide to support editors and toolkit leads through the process of scoping, designing, delivering, quality assuring and implementing a new RDS toolkit.  We hope this will help in project planning and in building shared understanding of responsibilities throughout the full development process.  The guide emphasises that the project does not end with launch of the new toolkit. Implementation, communication and evaluation are ongoing activities throughout the lifetime of the toolkit.

 

  1. Training sessions for new editors (also serve as refresher sessions for existing editors) will take place on the following dates:
  • Thursday 5 September 1-2 pm
  • Wednesday 24 September 4-5 pm
  • Friday 27 September 12-1 pm

To book a place, please contact Olivia.graham@nhs.scot, providing your name, organisation, job role, and level of experience with RDS editing (none, a little, moderate, extensive.)

7 Evaluation projects

Dr Stephen Biggart from NHS Lothian has kindly shared with us the results of a recent survey of use of the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh Anaesthesia toolkit. This shows that the majority of consultants are using it weekly or monthly, mainly to access clinical protocols, with a secondary purpose being education and training purposes. They tend to find information by navigating by specialty rather than keyword searching, and had some useful recommendations for future development, such as access to quick reference guidance.

We’d really appreciate you sharing any other local evaluations of RDS in this way – it all helps to build the evidence base for impact.

If you have any questions about the content of this newsletter, please contact his.decisionsupport@nhs.scot  If you would prefer not to receive future newsletters, please email Olivia.graham@nhs.scot and ask to be removed from the circulation list.

 

With kind regards

 

Right Decision Service team

Healthcare Improvement Scotland

Breast skin problems

Warning

Modernising Patient Pathways Programme

Background

The Modernising Patient Pathway Symptomatic Breast Speciality Group has been established to support and look at new innovative ways to develop delivering Symptomatic Breast services across NHS Scotland.

Through development of Once for Scotland approaches for delivery of care, focus is being placed on looking at opportunities to develop clinical pathways to reduce unwarranted variation in delivery of quality healthcare and to sustainably improve waiting times for non-urgent care within breast services. Speciality Delivery Groups have been established to engage and fully utilise the role of clinical leadership across NHS Scotland.

Development of the Breast Skin Problems Pathway has been progressed through MPPP speciality group as was a common theme identified during meetings held with colleagues across NHS Scotland. The recommendations have not followed the standard process used by SIGN to and are based on available guidance and expert opinion, with peer review to provide quality assurance.

This guidance will be reviewed and updated as new evidence emerges.

Consensus

A common theme during the Breast Speciality Delivery group meetings has focused on the referral of women with breast skin issues to secondary care services.

A consensus was formed around the principles that:

The majority of breast skin issues are innocent and most can be managed without referral to secondary care.

Pathway recommendations

1. Specific breast imaging is not required outwith screening if examination of breast tissue is normal on examination.

2. Skin itch, scaling and redness (often affecting areola)

  1. Eczema of the breast is common and often presents with itch, redness, skin thickening and scaling of the skin, often affecting the areola. The skin can become raw and weep. This should be distinguished from discharge from the milk ducts of the nipple.
  2. It can be managed as eczema elsewhere on the body.
  3. If cases fail to settle with local steroid or similar changes are present affecting the nipple itself, patients should be referred to the breast service to exclude Paget’s Disease of the nipple.
  4. If there is doubt in the breast clinic regarding the nature of a skin condition, a punch biopsy should be performed.

 

3. Redness of skin

  1. Patchy and variable erythema of the skin of the breast is common and usually entirely innocent.
  2. Reassurance is usually all that is required.
  3. Inflammatory breast cancer occurs when lymphatic channels with the breast are obstructed. This results in oedema and erythema of the breast often with a palpable mass and/or palpable lymph nodes. It is rare but concern should prompt urgent referral to the breast service.

4. Skin cysts

 

  1. Skin cysts affecting the breast area are common, particularly affecting the underside of the breast and axilla.
  2. Patients should be encouraged to stop smoking and lose weight.
  3. Acute infection should be treated with appropriate antibiotics.
  4. Significant abscesses may be referred to secondary care.
  5. Discharging abscesses can be managed with dressings and often do not require referral.
  6. Persistent troublesome individual lesions may be referred to secondary care for consideration of elective excision.
  7. A constellation of lesions under the breast or the axilla (with the groins often also affected) is due to hidradenitis suppurativa. Surgical management of this condition is discouraged and referral through dermatology pathways may be considered.

5. Skin cancer

  1. Skin cancer can affect the breast and suspected cases can be referred through dermatology pathways.

References and further resources

Scottish Referral Guidelines for Suspected Cancer. www.cancerreferral.scot.nhs.uk

   gjnh.cfsdpmo@gjnh.scot.nhs.uk

  www.nhscfsd.co.uk

@NHSScotCfSD

Centre for Sustainable Delivery

  Scan the code to visit our website

 

Editorial Information

Last reviewed: 10/01/2023

Next review date: 10/01/2024

Author(s): Centre for sustainable delivery.