A rapid review of the effectiveness of innovations to support patients on elective surgical waiting lists
Authors: Evidence Service, Chukwudi Okolie, Rocio Rodriguez, Alesha Wale, Amy Hookway, Hannah Shaw, Alison Cooper, Ruth Lewis, Rebecca-Jane Law, Micaela Gal, Jane Greenwell, Adrian Edwards
Published on: 1st April 2022
This rapid review was conducted as part of the Evidence Service’s collaboration with Heath and Care Research Wales
Next update: Update not planned
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Introduction
Surgical waiting times have reached a record high, in particular with elective and non-emergency treatments being suspended or delayed during the COVID-19 pandemic. Prolonged waits for surgery can impact negatively on patients who may experience worse health outcomes, poor mental health, disease progression, or even death. Time spent waiting for surgery may be better utilised in preparing patients for surgery.
The rapid review sought to examine how positive, innovative interventions might support patients on surgical waiting lists in Wales, and elsewhere, along with improving healthcare delivery.
The review aims to help patients on record high elective surgery waiting lists, and inform strategies and policy in managing these lists.
Main points
How up to date is this evidence?
Searches were conducted in 2022, and we included evidence covering the period of 2014 to 2021.
What we found
We included 48 systematic reviews, 23 of which related to orthopaedic surgery. Other research included cardiac, vascular, abdominal and nonspecific surgery.
- Exercise, psychological and smoking pre-operative interventions have some benefit although, generally, their effectiveness cannot be measured against surgical outcomes.
- Educational interventions can sometimes be helpful but can also add to anxiety and impact on mental health.
- No evidence was identified relating to the current COVID-19 pandemic.
What this means
Further research is required:
- to understand how various patient subgroups, particularly those affected by inequality, respond to preoperative interventions.
- on social prescribing or other community-centred approaches.
Policy-makers, educators, and clinicians should consider recommending such interventions to be covered in curricula for health professionals.
Can the NHS transform waiting periods into beneficial preparation periods – moving the emphasis from ‘how long’ to ‘how’ the patient might prepare?
Technical information
The purpose of this rapid review was to identify innovations to support patients on surgical waiting lists so as to inform strategy and policy to address the elective surgical backlog in Wales. To address this we looked to answer the question ‘What are the effectiveness of innovations to support patients on elective surgical waiting lists?’
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