Irish journal of medical science
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Increasing demand exists for blended approaches to the development of professionalism. Trainees of the Royal College of Physicians of Ireland participated in an online patient safety programme. ⋯ An online training programme on medical error improved self-rated knowledge, attitudes and skills in junior doctors and was deemed an effective learning tool. Perceptions of work issues such as a poor culture of error reporting among doctors may prevent improved attitudes being realised in practice. Online patient safety education has a role in practice-based initiatives aimed at developing professionalism and improving safety.
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The advent of laparoscopic surgery has facilitated the management of acute appendicitis in the adult population. In the paediatric population (<12 years), management varies according to institution and/or consultant expertise. The aim of this study was to analyse consultant preference for laparoscopic versus open appendicectomy in the management of acute appendicitis in children under 12 years presenting to general hospitals. ⋯ This study has shown wide variability amongst consultant general surgeons when considering open versus laparoscopic appendicectomy in children under 12 years. Restricted access to specialist paediatric laparoscopic equipment, combined with declining exposure to paediatric surgical training, may continue to limit the numbers of paediatric laparoscopic appendicectomies performed in the general setting.
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Management of axillary disease in breast cancer has evolved significantly over the last two decades with the introduction of SLNB and a trend towards less radical surgery. Data from the American College of Surgeons Oncology Group Z0011 trial proposes that not all patients with positive axillary lymph nodes require completion axillary dissection. ⋯ There has been a change in clinical practice since the publication of the Z0011 trial, illustrated by a decrease in the rate of axillary clearance in node-positive breast cancers.
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The implementation of the European work-time directive has created increased transitions of care during weekends as doctors adhere to a shift-work structure. This raises concerns over continuity of care and patient safety. To address this, doctors must develop a time efficient yet safe system of handover of patients to the team on-call. Intuitively weekend care provides the ideal setting to develop a handover tool. ⋯ The standardisation of weekend handover using a combination of an electronic tool supplemented with verbal handover is feasible. It resulted in a significant improvement in surrogate markers of patient care quality.
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Planar bone scintigraphy (PBS) is a standard radiological technique to detect skeletal metastases from prostate cancer (PC), the addition of SPECT-CT to PBS improves its diagnostic accuracy. The aim of this study was to assess the additional value of targeted SPECT-CT with PBS in detecting skeletal metastasis form prostate cancer, considering resource implications in an Irish hospital setting. ⋯ SPECT-CT improves the diagnostic accuracy of PBS in detecting skeletal metastasis from PC and is superior to PBS alone in differentiating benign from malignant lesions. Notwithstanding resource implications of increased cost, specialist equipment and specialist manpower hours; we recommend the use of SPECT-CT in conjunction with PBS for targeted evaluation of suspicious bony lesions in this cohort of patients.