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The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 8 | Pages 951 - 959
1 Aug 2019
Preston N McHugh GA Hensor EMA Grainger AJ O’Connor PJ Conaghan PG Stone MH Kingsbury SR

Aims. This study aimed to develop a virtual clinic for the purpose of reducing face-to-face orthopaedic consultations. Patients and Methods. Anonymized experts (hip and knee arthroplasty patients, surgeons, physiotherapists, radiologists, and arthroplasty practitioners) gave feedback via a Delphi Consensus Technique. This consisted of an iterative sequence of online surveys, during which virtual documents, made up of a patient-reported questionnaire, standardized radiology report, and decision-guiding algorithm, were modified until consensus was achieved. We tested the patient-reported questionnaire on seven patients in orthopaedic clinics using a ‘think-aloud’ process to capture difficulties with its completion. Results. A patient-reported 13-item questionnaire was developed covering pain, mobility, and activity. The radiology report included up to ten items (e.g. progressive periprosthetic bone loss) depending on the type of arthroplasty. The algorithm concludes in one of three outcomes: review at surgeon’s discretion (three to 12 months); see at next available clinic; or long-term follow-up/discharge. Conclusion. The virtual clinic approach with attendant documents achieved consensus by orthopaedic experts, radiologists, and patients. The robust development and testing of this standardized virtual clinic provided a sound platform for organizations in the United Kingdom to adopt a virtual clinic approach for follow-up of hip and knee arthroplasty patients. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2019;101-B:951–959


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 62 - 62
1 Mar 2021
Wallace CN
Full Access

The British Orthopedic Association recommends that patients referred to fracture clinic are reviewed within 72 hours. With the increase in referrals and limited clinic capacity it is becoming increasingly difficult to see every referral with in a 72 hour time frame. Some patients are waiting 2 weeks or more before they can be seen in a fracture clinic. With the aim of improving care by seeking to meet BOAST 7 target, waiting times for fracture clinic appointments at the Homerton University Hospital were audited prospectively against this national guideline, before virtual fracture clinic was implemented and 6 weeks after the implementation of virtual fracture clinic at our hospital. Virtual fracture clinic is where an Orthopedic consultant reviews a patients x-rays and A&E documentation and decides if that patients needs to be seen in a face to face fracture clinic to discuss operative vs. non-operative management of their injury or if a treatment plan can be delivered without the patient having to come back to hospital. The study was conducted as a prospective closed-loop audit in which the second cycle took place after the implementation of the new virtual fracture clinic service. The first cycle showed a non-compliant waiting time with only 18% of patients being seen within 72 hours. Following the implementation of virtual fracture clinic, 84% of all patients were reviewed within 72 hours. Virtual fracture clinic delivered a significant reduction in waiting times. Virtual fracture clinic has only just been implemented at the Homerton University Hospital and hopefully at the next audit we will be 100% compliant with the BOA BOAST 7 Guideline. We would recommend that virtual fracture clinics being rolled out in Orthopedic departments in all hospitals which have Orthopedic services


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 1, Issue 11 | Pages 683 - 690
1 Nov 2020
Khan SA Asokan A Handford C Logan P Moores T

Background. Due to the overwhelming demand for trauma services, resulting from increasing emergency department attendances over the past decade, virtual fracture clinics (VFCs) have become the fashion to keep up with the demand and help comply with the BOA Standards for Trauma and Orthopaedics (BOAST) guidelines. In this article, we perform a systematic review asking, “How useful are VFCs?”, and what injuries and conditions can be treated safely and effectively, to help decrease patient face to face consultations. Our primary outcomes were patient satisfaction, clinical efficiency and cost analysis, and clinical outcomes. Methods. We performed a systematic literature search of all papers pertaining to VFCs, using the search engines PubMed, MEDLINE, and the Cochrane Database, according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic review and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) checklist. Searches were carried out and screened by two authors, with final study eligibility confirmed by the senior author. Results. In total, 21 records were relevant to our research question. Six orthopaedic injuries were identified as suitable for VFC review, with a further four discussed in detail. A reduction of face to face appointments of up to 50% was reported with greater compliance to BOAST guidelines (46.4%) and cost saving (up to £212,000). Conclusions. This systematic review demonstrates that the VFC model can help deliver a safe, more cost-effective, and more efficient arm of the trauma service to patients. Cite this article: Bone Joint Open 2020;1-11:683–690


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 6, Issue 5 | Pages 259 - 269
1 May 2017
McKirdy A Imbuldeniya AM

Objectives. To assess the clinical and cost-effectiveness of a virtual fracture clinic (VFC) model, and supplement the literature regarding this service as recommended by The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) and the British Orthopaedic Association (BOA). Methods. This was a retrospective study including all patients (17 116) referred to fracture clinics in a London District General Hospital from May 2013 to April 2016, using hospital-level data. We used interrupted time series analysis with segmented regression, and direct before-and-after comparison, to study the impact of VFCs introduced in December 2014 on six clinical parameters and on local Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) spend. Student’s t-tests were used for direct comparison, whilst segmented regression was employed for projection analysis. Results. There were statistically significant reductions in numbers of new patients seen face-to-face (140.4, . sd. 39.6 versus 461.6, . sd. 61.63, p < 0.0001), days to first orthopaedic review (5.2, . sd. 0.66 versus 10.9, . sd. 1.5, p < 0.0001), discharges (33.5, . sd. 3.66 versus 129.2, . sd. 7.36, p < 0.0001) and non-attendees (14.82, . sd. 1.48 versus 60.47, . sd. 2.68, p < 0.0001), in addition to a statistically significant increase in number of patients seen within 72-hours (46.4% 3873 of 8345 versus 5.1% 447 of 8771, p < 0.0001). There was a non-significant increase in consultation time of 1 minute 9 seconds (14 minutes 53 seconds . sd. 106 seconds versus 13 minutes 44 seconds . sd. 128 seconds, p = 0.0878). VFC saved the local CCG £67 385.67 in the first year and is set to save £129 885.67 annually thereafter. Conclusions. We have shown VFCs are clinically and cost-effective, with improvement across several clinical performance parameters and substantial financial savings for CCGs. To our knowledge this is the largest study addressing clinical practice implications of VFCs in England, using robust methodology to adjust for pre-existing trends. Further studies are required to appreciate whether our results are reproducible with local variations in the VFC model and payment tariffs. Cite this article: A. McKirdy, A. M. Imbuldeniya. The clinical and cost effectiveness of a virtual fracture clinic service: An interrupted time series analysis and before-and-after comparison. Bone Joint Res 2017;6:–269. DOI: 10.1302/2046-3758.65.BJR-2017-0330.R1


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 6 - 6
3 Mar 2023
Ramage G Poacher A Ramsden M Lewis J Robertson A Wilson C
Full Access

Introduction. Virtual fracture clinics (VFC's) aim to reduce the number of outpatient appointments while improving the clinical effectiveness and patients experience through standardisation of treatment pathways. With 4.6% of ED admissions due to trauma the VFC prevents unnecessary face to face appointments providing a cost savings benefit to the NHS. Methods. This project demonstrates the importance of efficient VFC process in reducing the burden on the fracture clinics. We completed preformed a retrospective cross-sectional study, analysing two cycles in May (n=305) and September (n=332) 2021. We reviewed all VFC referrals during this time assessing the quality of the referral, if they went on to require a face to face follow up and who the referring health care professional was. Following the cycle in May we provided ongoing education to A&E staff before re-auditing in September. Results. Between the two cycles there was an average 19% improvement in quality of the referrals, significant reduction in number of inappropriate referrals for soft tissue knee and shoulder injuries from 15.1% (n=50) to 4.5% (n=15) following our intervention. There was an 8% increase in number of fracture clinic appointments to 74.4% (n=247), primarily due to an increase number of referrals from nurse practitioners. Radial head fractures were targeted as one group that were able to be successfully managed in VFC, despite this 64% (n=27) of patients were still seen in the outpatient department following VFC referral. Conclusion. Despite the decrease in the number of inappropriate referrals, and the increase in quality of referrals following our intervention. The percentage of VFC referrals in CAVUHB is still higher than other centres in with established VFCs in England. This possibly highlights the need for further education to emergency staff around describing what injuries are appropriate for referral, specifically soft tissue injuries and radial head fractures. In order to optimise the VFC process and provide further cost savings benefits while reducing the strain on fracture clinics


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 125 - 125
4 Apr 2023
Heylen J Macdonald N Larsson E Moon K Vaughan A Owens R
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In current practice in the UK there are three main approaches to investigating suspected scaphoid fractures not seen on initial plain film x-rays. Early MRI of all cases. Review all cases in clinic at two weeks with repeat x-rays. Hybrid model. Virtual Fracture Clinic (VFC) triage to reduce those who are seen in clinic at two weeks by:. ∘. Organising early MRI for those with high-risk presentation. ∘. Discharging those with an alternative more likely diagnosis. Our unit uses the VFC model. We aimed to evaluate its efficiency, safety, clinical outcomes and economic viability. All patients attending the emergency department with either a confirmed or suspected scaphoid fracture between March and December 2020 were included (n=305). Of these 297 were referred to the VFC: 33 had a confirmed fracture on x-ray and 264 had a suspected fracture. Of the suspected fractures reviewed in VFC 14% had an MRI organised directly owing to a high-risk presentation, 79% were brought for fracture clinic review and 17% discharged with an alternative diagnosis such as osteoarthritis. Of those subsequently reviewed in fracture clinic at two weeks: 9% were treated as scaphoid fractures (based on clinical suspicion and repeat x-rays), 17% had MRI or CT imaging organised, 5% did not attend and 69% were discharged. Overall, 17% of cases initially triaged, had further imaging – 41 MRIs and 5 CTs. MRI detected: 5% scaphoid fracture, 17% other fracture, 24% bone contusion, complete ligament tear 10%, partial ligament tear 39% and normal study 10%. The results of MRI minimally affected management. 3 patients were taken out of plaster early, 1 patient was immobilized who was not previously and no patients underwent operative management. In the following 12-month period one patient re-presented with a hand or wrist issue. This approach avoided 218 MRIs, equating to £24000 and 109 hours of scanner time. VFC triage and selective use of MRI scanning is a safe, efficient and cost-effective method for the management suspected scaphoid fractures. This can be implemented in units without the resource to MRI all suspected scaphoid fractures from the emergency department


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 2, Issue 3 | Pages 211 - 215
1 Mar 2021
Ng ZH Downie S Makaram NS Kolhe SN Mackenzie SP Clement ND Duckworth AD White TO

Aims. Virtual fracture clinics (VFCs) are advocated by recent British Orthopaedic Association Standards for Trauma and Orthopaedics (BOASTs) to efficiently manage injuries during the COVID-19 pandemic. The primary aim of this national study is to assess the impact of these standards on patient satisfaction and clinical outcome amid the pandemic. The secondary aims are to determine the impact of the pandemic on the demographic details of injuries presenting to the VFC, and to compare outcomes and satisfaction when the BOAST guidelines were first introduced with a subsequent period when local practice would be familiar with these guidelines. Methods. This is a national cross-sectional cohort study comprising centres with VFC services across the UK. All consecutive adult patients assessed in VFC in a two-week period pre-lockdown (6 May 2019 to 19 May 2019) and in the same two-week period at the peak of the first lockdown (4 May 2020 to 17 May 2020), and a randomly selected sample during the ‘second wave’ (October 2020) will be eligible for the study. Data comprising local VFC practice, patient and injury characteristics, unplanned re-attendances, and complications will be collected by local investigators for all time periods. A telephone questionnaire will be used to determine patient satisfaction and patient-reported outcomes for patients who were discharged following VFC assessment without face-to-face consultation. Ethics and dissemination. The study results will identify changes in case-mix and numbers of patients managed through VFCs and whether this is safe and associated with patient satisfaction. These data will provide key information for future expert-led consensus on management of trauma injuries through the VFC. The protocol will be disseminated through conferences and peer-reviewed publication. This protocol has been reviewed by the South East Scotland Research Ethics Service and is classified as a multicentre audit. Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2021;2(3):211–215


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 2, Issue 5 | Pages 301 - 304
17 May 2021
Lee G Clough OT Hayter E Morris J Ashdown T Hardman J Anakwe R

The response to the COVID-19 pandemic has raised the profile and level of interest in the use, acceptability, safety, and effectiveness of virtual outpatient consultations and telemedicine. These models of care are not new but a number of challenges have so far hindered widespread take-up and endorsement of these ways of working. With the response to the COVID-19 pandemic, remote and virtual working and consultation have become the default. This paper explores our experience of and learning from virtual and remote consultation and questions how this experience can be retained and developed for the future.

Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2021;2(5):301–304.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 34 - 34
1 Mar 2021
Holmes N Vaughan A Smith A
Full Access

Virtual Fracture Clinic (VFC) is a consultant-led orthopaedic trauma outpatient triage and management service. The use of VFC has recently become commonplace in the United Kingdom. It allows multiple referral sources to the orthopaedic team, with clinical information and imaging reviewed by a consultant in VFC who formulates an appropriate management plan with the patient contacted; either to attend clinic for consultation or discharged with advice over the phone. The VFC is more efficient than a traditionally delivered outpatient fracture clinic service. We have utilized VFC for 1 year at our hospital, East Kent University Hospital Foundation Trust (EKHUFT), and undertook a closed loop audit to evaluate the service and highlight potential areas of improvement. The Objective of the study was to identify whether the implementation of new re-designed VFC referral guidelines together with teaching set across one of the hospitals in EKHUFT improved the effectiveness and standards of VFC referrals. An initial audit was performed of all referrals made to VFC over a 2 weeks period in December 2018. Changes to the VFC referral pathway were implemented, and teaching sessions performed by the orthopaedic team to all referring units, including minor injury units (MIU) and the emergency department (ED). After implementation, re-audit of VFC referrals was performed in February 2019 over a similar 2 weeks period. Patient demographics, diagnosis and outcomes were collected from the online patient record with images reviewed using PACS software. Following intervention, referral rates dropped by 27.7% (136 vs 188 patients) over the 2 weeks periods. Patient demographics, injury type and severity remained the same between the 2 groups. 51.5% (70/136) did not meet VFC pathway criteria after the intervention and were considered inappropriate, compared to 70% in the original group. 15.4% (21/136) referrals could have been managed in the emergency department using the new guidelines and leaflet discharge. 5.1% (7/136) of the referrals should have been referred to orthopaedic on-call acutely and 22% (30/136) of the referrals had a soft tissue injury or no injury identified. This did not change between the 2 groups despite intervention. Referring MIU and ED units require continued support and teaching over a prolonged time period to hopefully see further improvements. Immediate hot reporting of radiographs may further benefit the service, but staffing and funding issues particularly out of hours, means this remains an aspiration


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 44 - 44
1 Oct 2019
Watt T Abbott C Oxborrow N Siddique I Verma R Angus M
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Purpose. A Virtual Spinal Clinic (VSC) was set-up at a regional spinal referral centre to see if patient care could be improved through early advice to provide timely management, early onward referral, improve patient satisfaction and minimise chronicity. The clinic was based on the successful virtual model used throughout the country within orthopaedic fracture clinics. VSC is a Consultant led multi-disciplinary (MDT) clinic run by Advanced Practitioners (AP). Methods. A 3-month trial of the VSC was completed bi-weekly. Patients diagnosed with conservatively managed spinal fractures were referred from the on-call service. A management plan was devised by a Consultant Spinal Surgeon and communicated to patients by the AP via a telephone-call consultation where clinical advice and management could be discussed. Results. 23 clinics completed. 271 patient contacts. 216 reviewed virtually. Completed outcomes of VSC. 34.65% Discharged. 51.18% Routine appointment. 14.17% Urgent appointment. Conclusion. VSC successfully completed safe and timely assessments, management plans, telephone consultations and onward referrals for Greater Manchester patients with acute spinal fractures. Patients had earlier access to health professionals to provide advice, reassurance, complete onward referrals and safety-netting. Patient satisfaction improved, with patient reporting the telephone consultation was reassuring and allowed early return to previous function. VSC reduced patients waiting time for a follow-up appointment and reduced patients travel time across Greater Manchester. In the future, it is hoped that the 6-week follow-up telephone call service will be utilised more as VSC develops. No conflicts of interest. No funding obtained


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 21 - 21
1 Jul 2022
Lewis A Bucknall K Davies A Hutchison A
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Abstract

The Coronavirus pandemic mandated an immediate and dramatic change in the delivery of acute trauma services to minimise face-to-face contact. In our hospital, patients presenting to the Emergency Department with a knee injury and no fracture seen on Xrays were referred to a “Virtual Fracture Clinic” (VFC) where Xrays and clinical notes were reviewed by the duty Trauma and Orthopaedic Consultant the following working day. We present the outcomes of 101 consecutive patients managed through this process and deemed to have a “Soft Tissue Knee Injury” with a minimum follow-up of six months.

All Xrays were reviewed by a sub-specialist knee surgeon blinded to notes or clinical outcomes. Electronic clinical records were reviewed to determine further clinical appointments, surgical treatment and pending interventions.

Of 101 patients, the knee surgeon diagnosed 1 Fracture, 4 Lipo-haemarthroses, 41 significant effusions and 55 patients with normal Xrays. Correlation to urgent surgery was 100% for fracture (1/1), 25% for Lipo-haemarthrosis (1/4), 7.3% for significant effusion (3/41) and 9.1% for normal Xrays (5/55). A further 9.8% (4/41) of the “effusion” group and 7.3% (4/55) of the “normal” group were subsequently listed for non-urgent surgery.

Overall 17% (7/41) of “effusion” patients and 16% (9/55) of “normal” patients required surgery. Management plans from VFC varied within groups.

Acute “soft-tissue” injuries of the knee in adults cannot be reliably managed via VFC based on X-ray findings. A staged review by an appropriately trained health professional could reduce demand on acute knee surgical clinics and may enhance patient outcomes.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_9 | Pages 5 - 5
1 Feb 2013
Phillips A Goubran A Searle D Naim S Mandalia V Toms A
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We sought to validate a method of measuring the range of motion of knees on radiographs as part of a new system of “Virtual Knee Clinics”.

The range of motion of 52 knees in 45 patients were first obtained clinically with goniometers and compared to radiographs of these patients' knees in full active flexion and extension. Four methods of plotting the range of motion on the radiographs were compared.

The intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) for inter-rater reliability using the goniometer was very high; ICC=0.90 in extension and 0.85 in flexion. The best ICC for radiographic measurement in extension was 0.86 indicating substantial agreement and best ICC in flexion was 0.95 (method 4). ICC for intra-rater reliability was 0.98 for extension and 0.99 for flexion on radiographic measurements.

Measuring range of motion of the knee has never previously been validated in the literature. This study has allowed us to set up a “Virtual Knee Clinic,” combining postal questionnaires and radiographic measurements as a surrogate for knee function. We aim to maintain high quality patient surveillance following knee arthroplasty, reduce our new to follow-up ratios in line with Department of Health guidelines and improve patient satisfaction through reduced travel to hospital outpatients.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 1 | Pages 6 - 10
1 Jan 2018
Lovelock TM Broughton NS

The number of arthroplasties of the hip and knee is predicted to increase rapidly during the next 20 years. Accompanying this is the dilemma of how to follow-up these patients appropriately. Current guidelines recommend long-term follow-up to identify patients with aseptic loosening, which can occur more than a decade postoperatively. The current guidelines and practices of orthopaedic surgeons vary widely. Existing models take up much clinical time and are expensive. Pilot studies using ‘virtual’ clinics and advanced-practice physiotherapists have shown promise in decreasing the time and costs for orthopaedic surgeons and patients.

This review discusses current practices and future trends in the follow-up of patients who have an arthroplasty.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2018;100-B:6–10.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 12 - 12
4 Jun 2024
Chapman J Choudhary Z Gupta S Airey G Mason L
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Introduction. Treatment pathways of 5. th. metatarsal fractures are commonly directed based on fracture classification, with Jones types for example, requiring closer observation and possibly more aggressive management. Primary objective. To investigate the reliability of assessment of subtypes of 5. th. metatarsal fractures by different observers. Methods. Patients were identified from our prospectively collected database. We included all patient referred to our virtual fracture clinic with a suspected or confirmed 5. th. metatarsal fracture. Plain AP radiographs were reviewed by two observers, who were initially trained on the 5. th. metatarsal classification identification. Zones were defined as Zone 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 2, 3, diaphyseal shaft (DS), distal metaphysis (DM) and head. An inter-observer reliability analysis using Cohen's Kappa coefficient was carried out, and degree of observer agreement described using Landis & Koch's description. All data was analysed using IBM SPSS v.27. Results. 878 patients were identified. The two observers had moderate agreement when identifying fractures in all zones, apart from metatarsal head fractures, which scored substantial agreement (K=.614). Zones 1.1 (K=.582), 2 (K=.536), 3 (K=.601) and DS (K=.544) all tended towards but did not achieve substantial agreement. Whilst DS fractures achieved moderate agreement, there was an apparent difficulty with distal DS, resulting in a lot of cross over with DM (DS 210 vs 109; DM 76 vs 161). Slight agreement with the next highest adjacent zone was found when injuries were thought to be in zones 1.2, 1.3 and 2 (K=0.17, 0.115 and 0.152 respectively). Conclusions. Reliability of sub-categorising 5. th. metatarsal fractures using standardised instructions conveys moderate to substantial agreement in most cases. If the region of the fracture is going to be used in an algorithm to guide a management plan and clinical follow up during a virtual clinic review, defining fractures of zones 1–3 needs careful consideration


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 97-B, Issue SUPP_12 | Pages 46 - 46
1 Nov 2015
Hussein A Young S Shepherd A Faisal M
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Introduction. Local commissioning groups are no longer funding outpatient follow up of joint replacements in an effort to save money. We present the costs of changing from traditional follow up methods to a virtual clinic at Warwick Hospital. Before September 2014 all joint replacements were seen in outpatients at six weeks, one year, five years, ten years and then every two years thereafter. They were usually reviewed, in a non-consultant led clinic, by a Band 7 specialist physiotherapist. This cost approximately £50 per patient including x-ray. Occasionally, the patients were seen in a consultant led clinic costing approximately £100. Methods and Results. Currently patients are reviewed in outpatients at six weeks and one-year post operation by a specialist physiotherapist. Patients over the age of 75 years (at time of surgery) are then discharged to the care of their GP. Patients under the age of 75 enter the virtual clinic. They receive an Oxford Hip/Knee Score and x-ray at seven years post op then every three years after. In order to set up and maintain the virtual clinic a midpoint band 3 administrator was employed. Based on 3000 follow up episodes per year the cost of administrating the database is £7 per patient; however this will vary dependent on actual activity. The cost of a virtual appointment with a specialist physiotherapist who will review the Oxford Hip/Knee Score and an x-ray is approximately £40 including x-ray. The total cost of a virtual clinic follow up is therefore approximately £47. Conclusion. Virtual clinics do not save large amounts of money compared to outpatient follow up by specialist physiotherapists and may actually cost more if significant numbers of patients need to be brought back to clinic. They incur significant administration costs (including set up) but do free up outpatient availability to see new patients


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_33 | Pages 1 - 1
1 Sep 2013
Wallace DT Mahendra A Findlay H Jane MJ
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Bone and soft tissue sarcoma is an uncommon. Benign swellings are, however, common. An approach to tertiary referral is required to accommodate the need for specialist interpretation of all concerning referrals, while maintaining an acceptable time to diagnosis and management. We aim to describe a new tertiary sarcoma service, utilising modern communication technology and the “virtual clinic” model through a multidisciplinary approach. All suspected musculoskeletal sarcoma cases are discussed, with available history and imaging, in a virtual clinic by a multidisciplinary team within a week of referral. Clinic decisions allow either immediate discharge, progress to further investigation, or clinic appointment. Data from the first thousand patients was prospectively collected for initial management decision, and final intervention, and in 625 for waiting time. Almost one third of patients were discharged from the virtual clinic without physical appointment. 45% were sent for further investigation prior to first clinic appointment. Of 625 patients with referral data, mean waiting time was 5.1 days to virtual clinic. For malignant bone and soft tissue tumours, not requiring neoadjuvant treatment, median time to surgery from virtual clinic review was 37 and 47 days respectively. Through a virtual clinic approach to tertiary sarcoma care, almost a third of referrals have been managed quickly without need for an unnecessary appointment. For 45% of patients the first appointment will be after all necessary investigations have been performed to facilitate rapid decision making. This enables shorter clinic waiting times and rapid transition from first referral to definitive management


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 102-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 125 - 125
1 Jul 2020
Chen T Camp M Tchoukanov A Narayanan U Lee J
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Technology within medicine has great potential to bring about more accessible, efficient, and a higher quality delivery of care. Paediatric supracondylar fractures are the most common elbow fracture in children and at our institution often have high rates of unnecessary long term clinical follow-up, leading to an inefficient use of healthcare and patient resources. This study aims to evaluate patient and clinical factors that significantly predict necessity for further clinical visits following closed reduction and percutaneous pinning. A total of 246 children who underwent closed reduction and percutaneous pinning following supracondylar humerus fractures were prospectively enrolled over a two year period. Patient demographics, perioperative course, goniometric measurements, functional outcome measures, clinical assessment and decision making for further follow up were assessed. Categorical and continuous variables were analyzed and screened for significance via bivariate regression. Significant covariates were used to develop a predictive model through multivariate logistical regression. A probability cut-off was determined on the Receiver Operator Characteristic (ROC) curve using the Youden index to maximize sensitivity and specificity. The regression model performance was then prospectively tested against 22 patients in a blind comparison to evaluate accuracy. 246 paediatrics patients were collected, with 29 cases requiring further follow up past the three month visit. Significant predictive factors for follow up were residual nerve palsy (p < 0 .001) and maximum active flexion angle of injured elbow (p < 0 .001). Insignificant factors included other goniometric measures, subjective evaluations, and functional outcomes scores. The probability of requiring further clinical follow up at the 3 month post-op point can be estimated with the equation: logit(follow-up) = 11.319 + 5.518(nerve palsy) − 0.108(maximum active flexion). Goodness of fit of the model was verified with Nagelkerke R2 = 0.574 and Hosmer & Lemeshow chi-square (p = 0.739). Area Under Curve of the ROC curve was C = 0.919 (SE = 0.035, 95% CI 0.850 – 0.988). Using Youden's Index, a cut-off for probability of follow up was set at 0.094 with the overall sensitivity and specificity maximized to 86.2% and 88% respectively. Using this model and cohort, 194 three month clinic visits would have been deemed medically unnecessary. Preliminary blind prospective testing against the 22 patient cohort demonstrates a model sensitivity and specificity at 100% and 75% respectively, correctly deeming 15 visits unnecessary. Virtual clinics and automated clinical decision making can improve healthcare inefficiencies, unclog clinic wait times, and ultimately enhance quality of care delivery. Our regression model is highly accurate in determining medical necessity for physician examination at the three month visit following supracondylar fracture closed reduction and percutaneous pinning. When applied correctly, there is potential for significant reductions in health care expenditures and in the economic burden on patient families by removing unnecessary visits. In light of positive patient and family receptiveness toward technology, our promising findings and predictive model may pave the way for remote health care delivery, virtual clinics, and automated clinical decision making


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_31 | Pages 63 - 63
1 Aug 2013
Wallace DT Jane MJ Findlay H Mahendra A
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Most lumps found in the extremity are benign. Some, however, are not. An approach to tertiary referral is required to accommodate the need for specialist evaluation of all concerning lumps, while maintaining an acceptable time to diagnosis and definitive management. We describe a new approach to tertiary sarcoma service, utilising modern communication technology and the “virtual clinic” approach. Methods. Data from 1053 consecutive patients referred to the MSK oncology service at Glasgow Royal Infirmary between January 2010 and August 2012 was prospectively collected. Results. All suspected musculoskeletal sarcoma cases were discussed referred to our tertiary sarcoma virtual clinic were discussed. Mean time from referral to clinic for the 625 patents referred from January 2011 was 5.1 days. 41% of referrals came from out-with our health trust. 28.3% of patients were discharged from the virtual clinic without need for physical appointment. 45.8% were sent for further investigation prior to first clinic appointment, with the remaining 25.5% given an urgent clinic appointment. Final diagnoses of soft tissue tumours, bone tumours and “tumour like conditions” were present in almost equal parts. 358 patients (34%) of patients went on to have surgery, with 59 malignant soft tissue and 53 malignant bone tumours over this time period. Conclusions. Through an early, virtual clinic approach to tertiary sarcoma care, a third of referrals have been managed quickly without the need for an unnecessary appointment for the patient. For a further 45% of patients the first appointment will be after all necessary investigations have been performed to facilitate rapid decision making. This enables shorter clinic waiting times and rapid transition from first referral to definitive management


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 5, Issue 2 | Pages 117 - 122
9 Feb 2024
Chaturvedi A Russell H Farrugia M Roger M Putti A Jenkins PJ Feltbower S

Aims. Occult (clinical) injuries represent 15% of all scaphoid fractures, posing significant challenges to the clinician. MRI has been suggested as the gold standard for diagnosis, but remains expensive, time-consuming, and is in high demand. Conventional management with immobilization and serial radiography typically results in multiple follow-up attendances to clinic, radiation exposure, and delays return to work. Suboptimal management can result in significant disability and, frequently, litigation. Methods. We present a service evaluation report following the introduction of a quality-improvement themed, streamlined, clinical scaphoid pathway. Patients are offered a removable wrist splint with verbal and written instructions to remove it two weeks following injury, for self-assessment. The persistence of pain is the patient’s guide to ‘opt-in’ and to self-refer for a follow-up appointment with a senior emergency physician. On confirmation of ongoing signs of clinical scaphoid injury, an urgent outpatient ‘fast’-wrist protocol MRI scan is ordered, with instructions to maintain wrist immobilization. Patients with positive scan results are referred for specialist orthopaedic assessment via a virtual fracture clinic. Results. From February 2018 to January 2019, there were 442 patients diagnosed as clinical scaphoid fractures. 122 patients (28%) self-referred back to the emergency department at two weeks. Following clinical review, 53 patients were discharged; MRI was booked for 69 patients (16%). Overall, six patients (< 2% of total; 10% of those scanned) had positive scans for a scaphoid fracture. There were no known missed fractures, long-term non-unions or malunions resulting from this pathway. Costs were saved by avoiding face-to-face clinical review and MRI scanning. Conclusion. A patient-focused opt-in approach is safe and effective to managing the suspected occult (clinical) scaphoid fracture. Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2024;5(2):117–122


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 5, Issue 4 | Pages 312 - 316
17 Apr 2024
Ryan PJ Duckworth AD McEachan JE Jenkins PJ

Aims. The underlying natural history of suspected scaphoid fractures (SSFs) is unclear and assumed poor. There is an urgent requirement to develop the literature around SSFs to quantify the actual prevalence of intervention following SSF. Defining the risk of intervention following SSF may influence the need for widespread surveillance and screening of SSF injuries, and could influence medicolegal actions around missed scaphoid fractures. Methods. Data on SSF were retrospectively gathered from virtual fracture clinics (VFCs) across a large Scottish Health Board over a four-year period, from 1 January 2018 to 31 December 2021. The Bluespier Electronic Patient Record System identified any surgical procedure being undertaken in relation to a scaphoid injury over the same time period. Isolating patients who underwent surgical intervention for SSF was performed by cross-referencing the unique patient Community Health Index number for patients who underwent these scaphoid procedures with those seen at VFCs for SSF over this four-year period. Results. In total, 1,739 patients were identified as having had a SSF. Five patients (0.28%) underwent early open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF). One patient (0.06%) developed a nonunion and underwent ORIF with bone grafting. All six patients undergoing surgery were male (p = 0.005). The overall rate of intervention following a SSF was 0.35%. The early intervention rate in those undergoing primary MRI was one (0.36%), compared with three in those without (0.27%) (p > 0.576). Conclusion. Surgical intervention was rare following a SSF and was not required in females. A primary MRI policy did not appear to be associated with any change in primary or secondary intervention. These data are the first and largest in recent literature to quantify the prevalence of surgical intervention following a SSF, and may be used to guide surveillance and screening pathways as well as define medicolegal risk involved in missing a true fracture in SSFs. Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2024;5(4):312–316