eISSN: 1897-4317
ISSN: 1895-5770
Gastroenterology Review/Przegląd Gastroenterologiczny
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SCImago Journal & Country Rank
1/2022
vol. 17
 
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Letter to the Editor

Implementation of virtual rapid access outpatient clinics for suspected gastrointestinal malignancies during the COVID-19 pandemic: could they become the default in the future?

Mohamed Zohdy
1
,
Charalampos Seretis
1

  1. Department of General Surgery, George Eliot Hospital NHS Trust, Warwickshire, United Kingdom
Gastroenterology Rev 2022; 17 (1): 81–82
Online publish date: 2022/03/18
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The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic in January 2020 has had a major impact on the way elective and emergency medical care and services are delivered. Especially during the peak waves of the pandemic, there was a notable decline in the number of emergency surgical and medical acute admissions, due to the fear of hospital-acquired COVID-19 [1]. As a result, many patients presented to seek medical advice only upon inability to cope with their symptoms or gross systemic deterioration [2–4]. In addition, we observed that patients with more vague, quiescent symptoms were not presenting for assessment as previously in the outpatient clinics. Unfortunately, the same was true even for patients with symptoms described as “red flag” for suspected malignancies, such as involuntary weight loss, altered bowel habits, symptomatic anaemia, or bleeding per rectum. That led us, as a surgical service with dedicated fast-track pathways (known as “2-week wait clinics” – 2wwc) for investigation of patients with suspected gastrointestinal symptoms, to plea for continuation of the stream of these referrals from the general practitioners in our catchment area. However, due to reasonable concerns from the patients’ regarding the risk of acquiring COVID-19 during these outpatient visits, we had to substitute our traditional 2wwc with entirely virtual clinics.
Despite the initial scepticism, particularly taking into account the inability of the clinic running the 2wwc to perform a physical examination and assess in person the functional status of the patients, it seems that after a short period of adaptation, this “virtual switch” turned out to be a very useful evolvement. Using a structured approach to the patient’s symptoms and having a simple electronic record of their accompanying medical problems, as well as any previous imaging or endoscopic examinations, we were able to deliver the service without major problems. In most cases the clinician has already decided the type of investigations that would be required; e.g. for a middle-aged person with occasional bleeding per rectum and altered bowel habits realistically we would request a colonoscopy, along with a computed tomography (CT) scan of the abdomen and pelvis or a CT-colonography. Therefore, we realised that usually the telephone consultation would confirm to proceed along the lines of a more or less pre-thought investigation pathway. Of course, in marginal cases with patients at the extremes of age or with...


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keywords:

surgery, clinic, COVID-19, pandemic, cancer

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