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Annual Report 2017-2018. North East and North Cumbria AAA Screening Programme Prepared by Tracy Gilchrist Screening Manager Gateshead Health NHS Foundation Trust

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Page 1: Annual Report 2017-2018. North East and North Cumbria AAA ... · If you are a man aged over 65 you are more likely to have an abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA). That is why the NHS

Annual Report 2017-2018. North East and North Cumbria AAA

Screening Programme

Prepared by Tracy Gilchrist Screening Manager Gateshead Health NHS Foundation Trust

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NENC AAASP Contact Details:

0191 445 2554

[email protected]

The North East and North Cumbria AAA Screening Programme Queen Elizabeth Hospital Sheriff Hill Gateshead Tyne & Wear NE9 6SX

https://www.facebook.com/qegateshead?ref=ts&fref=ts

http://www.qegateshead.nhs.uk/aaa

https://twitter.com/QEGateshead

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The North East and North Cumbria AAA Screening Programme 2017/18 Annual Report

Contents

NENC AAASP Contact Details 2

Overview of Performance: Clinical Director’s Statement 3

Overview of Operational Performance: Screening Manager 5

The Screening Programme 5

Screening Venues 6

Why do We Offer Screening? 7

Screening Outcomes 8

Referral to a Vascular Unit 8

Incidental Findings 9

Screening Nurse Practitioner 9

Programme Performance 10

Pathway Standards 10

Waiting Time Standards 11

Service Specification Reports 12

Quality Assurance: Consultant Radiologist/ QA Lead’s Statement 13

Clinical Governance 14

Multidisciplinary Meetings 14

Programme Board Meetings 14

Operational Board Meetings 14

Senior Management Meetings 15

Meeting Attendance 15

Service User Feedback and Incidents 15

Education and Training 16

Research and Audit 17

Right Results 17

Attended not Screened 17

Customer Satisfaction Feedback

18

Referral Outcomes 23

Reducing Inequalities 23

Promotion and Events 25

Future Developments 30

Resources 30

References 31

Appendix

1. Screening venues, frequency and times 32

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Overview of Performance: Clinical Director’s Statement

Once again it is my pleasure to be writing an introduction to the 2017/2018 annual report for the

North-East and North Cumbria abdominal aortic aneurysm screening programme. It has been

another great year, and I would like to highlight some of our particular successes.

We have successfully taken over the running of screening and surveillance clinics in North Cumbria

and developed effective coordination with the vascular unit in Carlisle in relation to onward

referrals. Well done team for sorting out the difficult logistics to provide a great service across such a

wide area.

We remain the largest aneurysm screening programme in the NHS at present and despite the

difficulties associated with covering such a large geographical area we are one of only 8 of 41

screening programmes in the NHS who have successfully reached all the national QA targets. That is

a huge credit to the whole team at QE Gateshead and has been highlighted at a national level. Again

well done all.

An enormous amount of work has also been done by the team to try to improve attendance and we

have seen a very significant improvement in attendance rates for aneurysm screening such that

more than 80% of men invited attend across the programme – putting us in a position of having one

of the best attendance rates in the NHS. Fantastic!

We also had some very successful coverage on the Look North BBC programme during the year and

this led to a significant increase in awareness about the importance of aneurysm screening amongst

the public and resulted in a large increase in self referrals for screening. We will continue to make

every effort to improve public awareness as this is essential if we are to keep attendance rates high.

As well as these headline successes the team continues to deliver a very good efficient service across

the region and our nurse practitioners have continued to try and improve our coordination with the

vascular units and GPs and to work with the men with aneurysms to try and improve their

cardiovascular risk factors. Our technicians have also continued to turn excellent job at scanning

with some of the lowest scan failure rates in the country and our health improvement practitioners

have spearheaded our efforts to highlight the program to GP and the general public.

It is been a great year, but we are not complacent. We know there are areas we can still improve in

and we are working on those. We will have our national QA visit and assessment later this current

year and we will take on board any comments or suggestions from them. However I am confident

that we will be seen on national inspection to be an excellent unit and a credit to the region and to

screening services at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Gateshead.

Gerry Stansby

[email protected]

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Overview of Operational Performance: Screening Manager

Welcome to the first Annual Report for the North East and North Cumbria (NENC) AAA Screening

Programme. The report concentrates on the data for the 2017-18 screening cohort and aims to

highlight the continued achievements of the NENC Programme during the screening year.

The North East of England AAA Screening Programme (NE AAASP) commenced screening in January

2011. The programme boundaries were extended to include North Cumbria in April 2017. We are

the largest local screening programme covering a population of 3.1 million over a large demographic

area bordering Scotland in the North and Yorkshire and Lancashire in the South.

We have completed our seventh full year of screening and we continue to strive to deliver real

improvements for our target population. We have performed in excess of 95,000 screening tests

over the last seven years and have increased the provision of screening venues from 27 to 39.

Our service is aligned with the values of the NHS Constitution. We are committed to putting patients

at the heart of everything we do and our goal is to ensure a safe, consistent and efficient screening

service. We continue to focus on improving service quality and maximising delivery by listening to

service user comments and bench marking our performance against the NAAASP and Public Health

England Quality Standards and key performance indicators. We have consistently met all national

performance targets and commissioning requirements. In addition we undertake multiple local

audits to improve the quality and clinical safety of the local programme to ensure the right result is

given to the right gentleman at the right time.

NENC AAASP is delivered by a highly motivated and enthusiastic team consisting of screening

technicians, nurse practitioners, programme lead, CST, Coordinator, health improvement

practitioner and admin staff who ensure the delivery of care is consistently of a high quality. A

special thank you must be made in recognition to all of those who continue to work so hard to

ensure we deliver a safe, effective programme which ensures National Standards are maintained in

the provision of AAA screening in the North East and North Cumbria. The continued success of the

local programme is undoubtedly thanks to their dedication and hard work.

Finally I would like to congratulate the team at Gateshead Trust for another successful year, their

dedication, hard work and high standards of professionalism are consistently recognised and

reflected not only in friends and family feedback and by their peers at Gateshead Trust but also

nationally as once again the programme was named as one of the 8 programmes to achieve all of

the standards.

Tracy Gilchrist

Screening Manager

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The Screening Programme

If you are a man aged over 65 you are more likely to have an abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA). That

is why the NHS AAA Screening Programme invites men for screening during the year (1 April to 31

March) that they turn 65. Men are sent an appointment at a screening site local to their area of

residence by the administration centre based at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Gateshead. Men over

65 who have not previously been screened or diagnosed with an aneurysm can request a scan by

contacting the North East and North Cumbria (NENC) Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Screening

Programme (AAASP) admin team directly on 0191 445 2554.

The North East of England AAASP commenced screening in January 2011. In April 2017 the

programme boundaries were extended to include North Cumbria and the programme title changed

to the North East and North Cumbria (NENC) AAASP. We are the largest local screening programme

covering a population of 3.1million distributed over a large demographic area. The programme

offers screening to all eligible men (registered with a GP) residing within the following CCG

boundaries:

NHS North Cumbria NHS Darlington NHS Durham Dales, Easington and Sedgefield NHS Hambleton, Richmondshire and Whitby NHS Hartlepool and Stockton-on-Tees NHS Newcastle Gateshead

NHS North Durham NHS North Tyneside NHS Northumberland NHS South Tees NHS South Tyneside NHS Sunderland

Our aim is to maximise attendance at screening and our venues and sites have been chosen to

ensure the travel time to the screening site does not exceed 45 minutes if at all possible.

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Screening Venues

The NENC AAASP offers community based screening at 39 venues throughout the North East and

North Cumbria (including 5 offender Health venues).

North of Tyne Berwick Infirmary

Blyth Community Hospital

Cresta Unit (Newcastle General Hospital)

Hexham General Hospital

Molineux Primary Care Centre Morpeth NHS Centre Shiremoor Resource Centre Ponteland Road Health Centre Regent Centre Gosforth Spring Terrace Health Centre The Bondgate Surgery Alnwick County Durham & Darlington Bishop Auckland General Hospital

Darlington Walk in Centre

Peterlee Health Centre

Queens Road Surgery

Sacriston Medical Centre

Sedgefield Community Hospital Stanley Primary Care Centre

South of Tyne Blaydon Primary Care Centre

Cleadon Park Primary Care Centre

Gateshead Health Centre

Grindon Primary Care Centre

Houghton Primary Care Centre Washington Primary Care Centre Teesside Lawson Street Health Centre

North Ormesby Village Resolution Centre

One Life Primary Care Centre Hartlepool

Redcar Primary Care Centre North Yorkshire Friarage Community Hospital Richmond Community Hospital Whitby Community Hospital South of Tyne

North Cumbria Hill Top Heights (Carlisle) Penrith Hospital Workington Community Hospital Offender Health HMP Durham HMP Frankland HMP Holme House HMP Kirklevington HMP Northumberland

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Why Do We Offer Screening?

Aorta with an AAA taken from NAAASP Invitation Leaflet

The aorta is the main blood vessel that supplies blood to your body. It runs from your heart down through your chest and abdomen. In some people, as they get older, the wall of the aorta in the abdomen can become weak. It can then start to expand and form an abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA). Men are six times more likely to have an aneurysm than women and it is estimated that around 1 in 70 men aged between 65 and 74 in England have an AAA.

The chance of having an aneurysm increases with age and the risk of having an abdominal aortic

aneurysm can also increase if:

You smoke

You have high blood pressure

Your brother, sister or parent has, or has had, an abdominal aortic aneurysm

If you have an aneurysm you will not usually notice any symptoms. This means you cannot tell if you

have one, will not feel any pain and will probably not notice anything different.

An aorta which is only slightly larger than normal is not dangerous, however, it is still important to

monitor whether the aneurysm is getting bigger.

A large AAA over 5.5cm in diameter is rare but can be very serious due to a high risk of rupture. As

the wall of the aorta stretches it becomes weaker and can burst, causing internal bleeding. Around

80 out of 100 people die when an aneurysm bursts. The programme targets men aged 65 and over

because 95% of ruptured aortic aneurysms occur in this group.

The screening test for AAA is a simple, pain-free ultrasound scan of the abdomen that usually takes

less than 10 minutes. The technician will ask you to lie down and lift up or unbutton your shirt. You

will not need to undress. The technician will put a cool jelly on your abdomen and then move a small

scanner over the skin. The scan will show a picture of the aorta on a screen that the technician will

measure. You will be told your result straight away and your GP will be informed by letter.

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Screening Outcomes; in relation to aortic size.

Measurement Likelihood Category Outcome

<3cm 985 in 1,000 men Normal – no AAA Discharge- no further tests needed

3.0-4.4cm 14 in 1,000 men

Small aneurysm Annual appointments

4.5-5.4cm Medium aneurysm Quarterly appointments

≥5.5cm 1 in 1,000 men Large aneurysm Referral to vascular unit for further tests and consideration of surgery

Referral to a Vascular Unit

Consistent practice is required to promote high standards of care within AAA screening. The NHS

AAA Screening Standard Operating Procedures “Essential Elements in Providing an Abdominal Aortic

Aneurysm (AAA) Screening and Surveillance Programme- March 2017, version 5.0”(2) states the

principles for AAA Screening include the rapid referral to a Vascular Unit for those meeting the

criteria for considering treatment.

Vascular Units have been assessed by the National Programme and the Vascular Society of Great

Britain and Ireland to be able to provide appropriate surgical treatment for open and endovascular

repair of abdominal aortic aneurysms.

If an aorta measures ≥5.5cm a referral to an agreed vascular unit for surgical review will be made

within 1 working day of the scan. All referrals should be seen in the vascular outpatients department

within two weeks of the referral being made. If the AAA has a diameter on ultrasound of over 7cm,

an urgent referral will be made with every attempt to see the patient at the next available

outpatient clinic.

If surgery or stenting is indicated, the operation should be completed within eight weeks of the date

of referral from the screening programme to minimise the risk of AAA rupture.

Current NENC AAASP performance against these standards can be found within the Programme

Performance section of the report.

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Incidental Findings

The screening test objective is to identify abdominal aortas only. If any incidental findings are found

the programme has developed a local protocol with the Commissioning team in line with National

Guidance to ensure that the gentleman are promptly referred for further tests/treatment as

appropriate:

Enlarged iliac aneurysm

Gentlemen with enlarged iliac measurements ≥ 2.5cm will be reviewed on an individual basis

by the Clinical Director and Consultant Radiologist Lead. Where appropriate gentlemen will

be referred for a vascular consultation at the nominated vascular unit

Potentially Serious pathology

Gentlemen with a potentially serious pathology will be referred to their local GP for urgent

referral to the local hospital for further imaging

General pathology

Gentlemen with routine pathology will be referred to their local GP for non-urgent referral

to their local hospital for routine imaging

Screening Nurse Practitioner (SNP)

Men with an AAA require close monitoring, support and secondary prevention to reduce their

overall cardiovascular risk and improve outcomes. The aim of the nurse specialist consultation is to

provide an assessment and advice regarding the health and lifestyle of men with screen detected

AAAs at specific points in the screening process. The NHS Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Screening

Programme Nurse Specialist Best Practice Guidelines, February 2016, Version 1.0 (3) states:

All screen positive men should be offered a face to face appointment with the nurse specialist within

12 weeks of their initial scan. If the gentleman is unable or unwilling to attend a face to face

consultation they should be offered a telephone consultation with the nurse specialist, this should be

offered within 12 weeks of their initial scan

Due to the geographical locations and limited operating hours of clinic venues NENC AAASP is unable

to offer all men a face to face SNP appointment within twelve weeks. NENC AAASP has agreed with

NAAASP to offer all gentlemen a telephone nurse assessment (ideally within two weeks of this

appointment) and a face to face appointment at the subsequent surveillance appointment. NENC

AAASP identified 145 ‘new’ aneurysms during 2017-18. The SNP completed the following:

Booked SNP Telephone

Assessment

Completed Telephone

Assessments

DNA telephone

assessment

Declined SNP

assessment

Identified by another

programme

Number of SNP appointments completed

within 12/52

143 141 2 1 1 97.2%

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During the telephone assessment the SNP takes a detailed medical history, records all current

medications and reviews the observations obtained at the clinic; weight, height, BMI, blood pressure

and pulse. This enables us to give relevant and timely health promotional advice regarding healthy

eating and increased exercise to reduce BMI, smoking cessation and reducing alcohol intake. The

screening programme recommends that all men with an AAA should commence antiplatelet and

statin therapy unless there are contradictions.

The SNP can also offer support with any emotional concerns men may have regarding, for example,

working, driving, contacting DVLA, travel and travel insurance and discuss familial risks associated

with AAA. The SNP provides a detailed report for the GP highlighting all advice given and alerting the

GP to any risk factors identified and the screening programme recommendation regarding

antiplatelet and statin therapy.

A member of the nursing team attends as many subsequent surveillance appointments as possible.

At each surveillance appointment the gentleman will have a repeat ultrasound scan of his abdominal

aorta. This face to face contact involves the review of aneurysm growth, blood pressure, and

compliance with medications, progress with reducing BMI, smoking cessation, and increasing

physical activity if required. There is also an opportunity to offer reassurance and counselling,

particularly if the AAA has been increasing in size and a referral to the vascular team is imminent. A

SNP reviews the information collected for every man under surveillance after each attendance and

writes to the man’s GP, documenting the advice given and highlighting any risk factors or concerns

identified.

Programme Performance

Pathway Standards

Performance against the Pathway Standards is provided by NAAASP on a quarterly basis. The

standards assess the screening process, the acceptable threshold is the lowest level of performance

which programmes are expected to attain to ensure patient safety and programme effectiveness.

The standards allow for continuous improvement enabling providers and commissioners to identify

where improvements are needed across the pathway. NENC AAASP provides this information to our

commissioners via multiple meetings including Programme Board, Operational Board and

Contractual meetings. There are four Key Performance Indicators:

AA1: Completeness of Offer

AA2: Coverage of Screen

AA3: Coverage of Annual Surveillance Screen

AA4: Coverage of Quarterly Surveillance Screen

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NENC AASP KPI performance (as reported by NAAASP) for 2017-18 is below:

KPI Tested/ offered

Total % National Average

Purple <90% not achieved; Amber 90% to <99% acceptable; Green ≥99% achievable

AAA1: Completeness of Offer

18291 18294 100.0% 99.6%

Purple <75% not achieved ; Amber 75% to <85 acceptable; Green ≥85% achievable

AAA2: Coverage of Screen

15152 18294 82.8% 80.8%

Purple <85% not achieved; Amber 85% to <95% acceptable; Green ≥95% achievable

AAA3: Coverage of Annual Surveillance Screen

629 698 90.1% 91.1%

AAA4: Coverage of Quarterly Surveillance Screen

428 474 90.3% 91.9%

Attendance rates have progressively improved across the region over the last 7 years. The 2017-18

data confirms we are performing slightly higher than the National average with 82.8% of our eligible

population tested during the screening year. This is a 9.2% increase from our first screening year

where we tested 73.6% of the eligible population.

We can contribute this achievement to several factors:

Revised communications strategy involving social media, local press coverage, Trust website

and working closely with CCGs, GP practices, pharmacies, local support groups and our

stakeholders

Health Improvement Practitioner presence at stakeholder events throughout the region to

promote the service and increase awareness

Waiting Time Standards

It is the screening provider’s responsibility to track individual referrals with the receiving Trust and

ensure they are monitoring any delays in the patient being seen for assessment or subsequent

treatment. Pathway Standards 11 and 12 allow NENC AAASP to effectively monitor any delays in the

patient being seen for assessment or subsequent treatment and act accordingly. Unless there is an

acceptable reason for delay, this will be investigated by NENC AAASP as a screening safety incident

in accordance with National Screening Programmes guidance on managing safety incidents in

screening programmes. All delays are reported to the local screening programme board and the

regional Quality Assurance team.

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Information taken from NAAASP Quality Standards Report July 2018 *includes cohort & surveillance data NENC

Performance *National

Performance Acceptable Achievable

AAA-PS-11 % subjects with AAA

≥5.5cm seen by a vascular specialist within two weeks

94.4% 94.6% ≥90% >95%

AAA-PS-12 % subjects with AAA ≥5.5cm

deemed fit for intervention and not declining, operated on by a vascular surgeon within 8 weeks

67.6% 52.5% ≥60% >80%

Service Specification Performance

The Screening Management and Reporting Tool (SMaRT) database enables the local programme to

obtain ‘real time’ performance data. Service specification reports include men who attended

screening after the NAAASP Key Performance Indicator (KPIs) data submission deadline therefore

there is variation from the KPI data reported by NAAASP. The NENC AASP service specification

performance (as reported to our commissioners) for 2017-18 is shown below: Information taken from SMaRT Database Report June 2018

Initial screens service specification report 17-18 Count %

Total eligible subjects 18515

Subjects with insufficient details to make offer 84 0.5%

Subjects offered screening who are tested 15224 82.2%

Measurement <3.0cm and discharged 15067 99.0%

Measurement of 3.0-4.4cm 127 0.8%

Measurement of 4.5-5.4cm 18 0.1%

Measurement of ≥5.5cm referred to vascular surgeon 9 0.1%

Information taken from SMaRT Database Report June 2018

Surveillance screens service specification report 17-18 Count %

Total surveillance subjects 832

Subjects offered screening who are tested 788 94.7%

Measurement <3cm and discharged 3 0.4%

Measurement of 3.0-4.4cm 597 75.8%

Measurement of 4.5-5.4cm 148 18.8%

Measurement of ≥5.5cm referred to vascular surgeon 29 3.7%

Measurement of <3cm overridden into surveillance 8 1.0%

Information taken from SMaRT Database Report June 2018

Self-Referral screens service specification report 17-18 Count %

Total self-referral subjects 466

Subjects offered screening who are tested 435 93.3%

Measurement of 3.0-4.4cm 430 98.9%

Measurement of 4.5-5.4cm 4 0.9%

Measurement of ≥5.5cm referred to vascular surgeon 1 0.2%

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Quality Assurance: Consultant Radiologist/ QA Lead’s Statement

Our screeners remain busy in clinics throughout the region performing aortic measurements on men

in their 65th year and also surveillance imaging of men with small aneurysms. As in previous years

the number of new aneurysms detected far exceeds the number of men referred for surgery or

those lost to follow up.

Much of our quality assurance work is directed at ensuring the consistent high quality and reliability

of these examinations. In the 2017-18 screening year we performed 2250 quality assurance reviews

on;

All men with aortas above 3cm requiring surveillance or referred to surgical units as required

by national standards.

Random samples of each screeners examinations on a rolling basis

All possible incidental findings

Any examination where the screener requests another opinion

Training new screening technicians

It is reassuring the vast majority of examinations were performed to a high standard and again our

rate of incomplete examinations (where the aorta could not be measured) is well below that

national average.

This is only part of our role however and we assess quality in other ways and are very grateful to

everyone who took the time to complete one of our satisfaction surveys or feedback their

experiences of our service to us. We take all of your comments seriously and changes resulting from

these have included opening new screening venues to reduce travelling time and improve the

opportunities for men to attend screening venues near to where they live or work.

The first round of the National Programme Quality Assurance reviews are almost complete. Several

members of our team have been involved in visiting other programmes as advisors and assessors

and this has been an invaluable opportunity to observe how screening is delivered elsewhere and to

benchmark our work against that of other programmes. We hope that this preparation will serve us

well for our own upcoming review in November 2018.

Our local recruitment to the UK Aneurysm Growth Study has now ceased but recruitment will

continue from the research centre at Leicester University. Thanks to all of our men for their support

and to our screening technicians for all of their hard work in making this project so successful. This is

now producing some useful outcomes and in the past year publications regarding the genetic basis

for aneurysms and also on the management of risk factors for cardiovascular disease in men with

aneurysms have been presented and published. As this is a long term study assessing aneurysm

growth rates it will however be several years before all of the main results are available.

In the meantime we have undertaken other smaller scale studies and in the last year have presented

work assessing the links between social deprivation and travel distances and attendance for

aneurysm screening.

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For further information regarding any aspect our quality assurance or research please get in touch

Dr Colin Nice

[email protected]

Clinical Governance

The Department of Health (1998) defines clinical governance as a framework through which NHS

organisations are made accountable for the quality of service they provide (7). The aim is that

services will be continuously improved through the creation of an environment in which excellence

in clinical care will flourish. There are seven areas of activity which are used to make sure we deliver

the highest quality health care to our service users:

Clinical audit

Clinical effectiveness

Clinical information

Education and training

Risk management

Service user, carer and public involvement

Staffing and staff management

NENC AAASP is committed to embedding Clinical Governance throughout all of its processes.

‘SafeCare’ is QE Gateshead’s internal branding created to communicate the trust’s overarching

patient safety ethos. Integral to this is the vision that no patient should suffer unnecessary harm,

pain or suffering as a result of an error or planned medical intervention.

The leadership, management and governance of the NENC AAASP are integral to assuring the

delivery of high-quality person-centred care. We achieve this by the following:

Programme Board Meetings

The senior management team now meets twice a year with the Programme Board, which represents

the Commissioning members to discuss programme performance, current risks, patient feedback

and incidents using National performance criteria as a bench marking tool.

Operational Board Meetings

The AAA screening team now meets twice a year with the Screening and Immunisation Lead and QA

team to discuss programme operational performance, current risks, patient feedback and incidents

using National performance criteria as a bench marking tool.

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Senior Management Team Meetings

Senior Management MDTs bring together staff with the necessary knowledge, skills and experience

to ensure high quality diagnosis, treatment and care. The MDT meeting is about considering the

patient as a whole not just about treating the AAA taking into account of the patient’s views,

preferences and circumstances wherever possible when considering their advice on the care that is

most appropriate for the patient’s condition.

Multi-Disciplinary Team Meetings

All members of the local programme attend a multi-disciplinary team meeting. The meetings offer

an ideal opportunity to embed the SafeCare culture of the programme and of Gateshead Health NHS

Foundation Trust into our daily practice. They offer an exceptional opportunity for all of the team to

meet to discuss current performance, improvement initiatives, staffing, risk management,

disseminate information and share good practice.

Meeting attendance is illustrated below:

Programme Board

Operational Board

Senior Management

NENC MDT NENC Staff

Clinical Director 2/2 1/1 4/6 6/8 N/A

Consultant Radiologist 2/2 0/1 4/6 5/8 N/A

Screening Manager 1/2 1/1 2/6 4/8 4/8

Programme Lead/CST 2/2 0/1 3/6 5/8 5/8

CST (commenced Nov 17) N/A 1/1 2/3 2/2 2/2

Nurse Practitioners 1/2 1/1 6/6 8/8 8/8

Admin Coordinator 2/2 1/1 6/6 8/8 8/8

Health Improvement Practitioner 2/2 1/1 3/6 8/8 8/8

Nominated Screening Technician(s) 2/2 1/1 N/A 8/8 8/8

NB attendance rates affected by annual leave, maternity leave and sick leave

Service User Feedback and Incidents

NENC AAASP is committed to learning from complaints and incidents to improve clinical safety and

improve the quality of the screening service. All complaints and adverse incidents are reported using

the electronic data base DATIX system and are promptly investigated by the senior management

team. All incidents and complaints are reported to the Regional QA team and our Commissioners.

Each incident is awarded a severity grade by establishing the likelihood of recurrence and the

consequence of the incident.

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Datix severity scoring matrix

Screening incidents 2017-18:

4 low harm incidents resulting in improvements to failsafe procedures and staff health and

safety procedures

14 no harm incidents resulting in improvements to administrative, booking and reporting

procedures

All DATIX incidents and lessons learned are discussed at the local MDT meetings, project board

meetings and are also shared within the Trust via the Trust Risk Management strategy. Notification

is also made to our Commissioners, the regional Quality Assurance team, NAAASP, Public Health

England and other appropriate stakeholders in the event of a Serious Incident.

We will continue to build on the foundation of an open culture of learning and information

dissemination to continue to make improvements and enhance the quality of our service by careful

monitoring of performance and customer feedback.

Education and Training

All technicians and Nurse Practitioners employed by the NENC have completed the required NAAASP

screeners training or are currently in the process of completing the Diploma for Health Screeners

Qualification. Training and assessments are undertaken in house, with written assignments being

double marked by external examiners from the awarding body and an external Clinical Skills Trainer

(CST) assesses the screening technician final practical assessment.

The training commitment for screening staff remains continuous and mandatory training, online and

face to face, and in house development courses are regularly attended by screening all staff. Group

and individual skills training, takes place at regular intervals throughout the year.

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In addition to their initial training and qualification, technicians and nursing staff are assessed at

least every four months at clinic by the CST in relation to carrying out the examination, ergonomics,

equipment safety and knowledge. This helps to ensure an extremely high standard of practice is

maintained. Eight random images are also examined for quality every month for each individual by

the consultant radiologist or ultrasound lead.

All the team undertake regular Continued Professional Development, which we expect will become a

national requirement for screening technicians at some point in the future. We reflect on any events

that we may attend, and regularly feedback by presenting to colleagues at our monthly Staff and

MDT meetings. We regard this as a shared learning activity where we can all learn good practice and

discuss findings with other members of the team.

We strive to maintain a caring, efficient, high quality and friendly service, where our no blame

culture allows us all to learn from others.

Audit and Research

Right Results Audit

A “Right Results” policy is in place to ensure that there are standard operating procedures at all

stages of the screening pathway. A daily audit is completed to ensure the right subject and GP are

given the correct results in a timely fashion. These standard operating procedures are regularly

reviewed and are embedded in the overall risk management process for the screening programme.

Attended not Screened Audit

This is a continuous audit which commenced in 2013, and focuses on men who attend for their

appointment, but do not have a screening test. The aim of the audit is to identify why the man is not

screened and to facilitate screening using a variety of mediums in order to improve the patient

journey and increase screening uptake.

If screening does not occur, screening staff complete a form which is then returned to the screening

office. The Screening Nurse Practitioner examines the information provided and attempts to

facilitate a further appointment whenever possible.

During the 2017-18 screening year 43 men attended but were not screened at their first

appointment for a variety of reasons shown below:

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Number of attended not screened at 1st appointment cases April 2017-March 2018

The primary reason for non-screening remains centred on those men who are unable to consent for

screening, and maybe divided into two categories:

Men who lack the capacity to consent, and require a best interest decision be made on their

behalf

Men who are unable to understand information provided due to language barriers, and

require interpreter assistance to ensure information delivery and understanding

Collectively these issues relating to consent account for 41% of all ANS cases for the 2017-2018

screening year. 14 of the 18 men progressed to a scan at 2nd appointment; a best interest decision

‘not to progress to scan’ was made by the GP in 4 cases.

22 men did not progress to a scan at a 2nd appointment (driving concerns, consent / best interest

decisions by GP, existing vascular patients/ EVAR/ Open repair).

There were no identified trends to indicate screening sites, screening technician, environmental

factors, and days of the week or times of appointments contributed to ANS figures.

Customer Satisfaction Feedback

NENC AASP believes that the patient is the most important member of the health care team and is

central to ensuring safe and high quality care. AAA screening encourages people who use services to

influence how the service is run through providing suggestions via verbal and written feedback

(comments cards), patient feedback and Friends and Family questionnaires.

Patient satisfaction questionnaires are completed for 1 week, every month. All screening clinic

venues are included on a rolling programme. Men were asked to rate the NENC AAA Screening

service on the following categories:

Appointment details

18

10

4

6

1

1

1

2

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20

Consent

Driving Concerns

Existing vascular unit patient

interpreter required

Open abdo wound

Previous EVAR

Previous Open repair

Refused Scan

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Screening clinic facilities

Your clinic appointment

Staff performance

Men were also invited to provide comments and suggestions to improve service provision at the end

of each category on the questionnaire.

During 2017/18, 1148 patient satisfaction questionnaires were completed.

Results showed high levels of patient satisfaction with 91% men rating their appointment as

excellent.

Of the completed questionnaires;

1043 men rated their appointment as excellent

35 men rated their appointment as good

2 men rated their appointment as satisfactory

68 men did not answer this question

Similarly, high levels of patient satisfaction were recorded for information given about the screening

test and information about the results. In both cases, 92% of men rated the information as

excellent.

91%

3% 0%

6%

Appointment rating

Excellent Good Satisfactory Blank

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Of the completed questionnaires;

1053 men rated their appointment as excellent

39 men rated their appointment as good

2 men rated their appointment as satisfactory

54 men did not answer this question

Of the completed questionnaires;

1051 men rated their appointment as excellent

36 men rated their appointment as good

1 men rated their appointment as satisfactory

60 men did not answer this question

92%

3% 0%

5%

Information given about the screening test

Excellent Good Satisfactory Blank

92%

3% 0%

5%

Information given about the results of the screening test

Excellent Good Satisfactory Blank

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In relation to screening clinic facilities, 1101 (96%) men reported that the clinic was easy to find. 26

men (2%) said the clinic was not easy to find and a further 21 men (2%) did not answer the question.

Although a number of clinics were claimed to be difficult to find, 9 out of the 26 responses (35%)

related to the clinic at Cresta, suggesting patients may need additional locality information.

Wherever possible appointments are made as close as possible to the location of the GP practice

where an individual is registered. This was reflected in the findings relating to travelling time, with

87% of respondents claiming it took them less than 30 mins to get to their appointment.

96%

2% 2%

Was the clinic easy to find?

Yes No Blank

87%

10%

2% 1%

Travel time to clinic

Less than 30mins 30-45 mins Over 45 mins Blank

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Of the completed questionnaires

999 men travelled less than 30 mins

115 travelled between 30 – 45 mins

26 men travelled over 45 mins to attend their appointment

8 men did not answer the question

Those that travelled more than 45 mins to attend their appointment, attended a range of venues,

suggesting no one particular clinic venue was problematic in getting to. Venues where men travelled

more than 45 mins to attend included:

Berwick Bishop Auckland Carlisle Cleadon Park Cresta

Hexham Redcar Richmond Sedgefield Stanley

In relation to the clinic appointment, current screening letters advise that men should be seen within

30 minutes of their given appointment time. When asked if they had to wait beyond their

appointment, the majority of men stated that they were seen on or before their appointment time.

397 men were seen before their appointment time

589 were seen on their appointment time

87 men had a wait of up to 10 mins

15 men waited between 11-20 mins

4 Men waited over 20 mins

56 men failed to answer the question

35%

51%

8%

1% 0%

5%

Appointment waiting time

before appointment time on time wait up to 10 mins

wait between 11-20 mins wait over 20 mins blank

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The majority of men (1089) stated that they were treated with dignity and respect, with only 1

individual answering no to this question. 58 men failed to answer the question.

Clinic appointment times are largely dictated by the venue opening times and availability (usually

Monday- Friday 09:00-17:00); however the days and hours of service operation need to be flexible

to account for the needs and wants of the target population. The patient satisfaction questionnaire

asked men whether they would have preferred an evening appointment or a Saturday appointment.

Of the completed questionnaires;

66 men said that they would prefer an evening appointment

1013 said they would not prefer an evening appointment

69 men did not answer the question

58 men said that they would prefer a Saturday appointment

1015 said they would not prefer an Saturday appointment

75 men did not answer the question

The preference for evening and weekend clinics remains low and has not increased since previous

years. This will continue to be monitored and the possibility of additional clinics will be investigated

if the need arises.

Referral Outcomes

This is an audit to ensure the NENC AAASP and the current approved vascular units are achieving the

acceptable Pathway Standards and Waiting Time Standards set by NAAASP. Outcome records from

the Northgate SMaRT system and local data capture is used to ascertain our current performance

level. All data is validated with NAAASP to ensure accuracy.

This audit process has resulted in significant improvements in waiting times for patients. The

monitoring process also reinforced the need for a NENC AAASP update at the Vascular Advisory

Group Meetings to provide further clarification and additional guidance on the monitoring of the

current standards.

Reducing Inequalities

Screening for AAA has important ethical differences from clinical practice, because we are targeting

apparently healthy people we need to ensure we are offering enough information to allow

individuals to make informed choices about their health. There are risks associated with screening

and it is important that people heave realistic expectations of what the programme can deliver.

NENC AAASP ensures all men invited for screening are fully informed about the benefits and risks

associated with testing for AAA by enclosing the information leaflet provided by NAAASP with their

invitation letter.

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We can provide information leaflets in alternative formats including easy read, audio and other

languages on request and we are able obtain assistance from interpreting services and the learning

disability team if individuals need additional support. We discuss the benefits and risks of the

screening test at appointments and offer men the opportunity to ask questions before we perform

the scan.

Our vision is to achieve high quality, personal treatment for all men invited for screening. Every

member of the NENC AAASP team plays an important role in promoting equality throughout the

screening pathway from identifying and inviting eligible men for screening to ensuring men are

offered the right treatment at the right time, and feel they are treated with dignity and respect.

The AAA programme is designed to reduce risk at a population level and is therefore most effective

when coverage is high and screening uptake is independent of health inequalities within the

population. We completed a Health Equity audit (HEA) in 2017 (7) which helped us explore and

understand the reasons for differences in uptake throughout the region allowing us to improve our

service provision. The HEA reviewed data to identify inequalities in relation to provision, access,

locality, screening uptake and population enabling us to:

Identify local need

Understand the risk factors for low screening uptake

Address health inequalities

Allocate resources effectively to reduce variation in service and uptake

Focus interventions according to need

Develop strategies and plans according to need

Identify and work with partners from across all sectors

Implement interventions to tackle inequalities and provide a more equitable service

We have developed an action plan to prioritise and implement recommendations that were made in

the HEA. NENC AAASP aims to ensure equity of access for all our men by providing screening at

various local venues across the region including community hospitals, primary care centres and

prisons. We understand men may not be able to attend their appointment on the date or time

allocated and alternative appointments/ venues can be arranged by contacting the screening office.

Men are automatically offered a second appointment if they do not attend their first appointment. If

men do not wish to be screened they can cancel the appointment and we can offer screening at a

later date if required.

NENC AAASP works in partnership with the Cumbria and North East (CANE) Screening and

Immunisations team to improve screening uptake for AAA screening and reduce inequalities

throughout the North East and North Cumbria. An inequalities plan was developed in April 2015; it is

linked to the aims and objectives of the 2015-18 Screening and Immunisations Strategic Plan which

was formulated following the PHE/NHSE Health Inequalities Key Stakeholder Event in February 2015.

The plan is reviewed at each Programme Board Meeting. The Screening Manager, Programme Lead,

Health Improvement Practitioner and a member of the CANE team meet regularly throughout the

year to discuss progress.

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Service Promotion and Events

Our focus throughout 2017 -18 screening year has remained to continue improving awareness of the

programme, reduce inequalities/barriers to attending and to work with GP practices to support

them to increase uptake.

Below are some of the year’s highlights:

Commissioning for quality and innovation (CQUIN)

CQUINs are extra quality improvement goals that are agreed with commissioners. The CQUIN

enables us to look at the quality of service delivered and ensures continuous quality improvement,

whilst delivering better outcomes for patients. The NENC AAASP has a two year CQUIN, which aims

to improve outcomes and reduce inequalities through patient participation. NHS England

Commissioners receive progress reports at the end of each quarter.

In year 1, we developed an action plan to enable us to collect feedback from four different target

groups:

People who engage, this group were given a service improvement questionnaire to

complete at clinic

People who engage then go on to DNA, were telephoned by nurse practitioners

People who don’t engage, were sent questionnaires

General public were asked to complete a short awareness questionnaire at public awareness

events and focus groups.

Feedback was collected and reviewed, and from the feedback three different initiatives were

developed and presented to commissioners to agree one as a work scheme to progress for year 2 of

the CQUIN.

The work scheme that was agreed was to ‘increase uptake and reduce inequalities through GP

engagement’. This is a continuation of work that has already been completed within practices and

will be progressed throughout the coming year, targeting the lowest compliant localities first.

GP Engagement

Throughout the year we worked with GP practices to raise awareness of the programme. We

achieved this by attending Practice Manager, GP and Practice Nurse Meetings, and also attended

Time in Time Out (TITO) events.

Brief intervention training was delivered to practice staff; they received resources for campaigns and

were supported to facilitate awareness campaigns within practices. They were given display

materials and an electronic toolkit of resources to assist them to increase uptake. We are now

receiving more referrals from GP practices engagement.

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Health Improvement Practitioner and Programme Lead/ CST at DFP TV event

Pharmacy Engagement

Pharmacies in low compliant areas were contacted and some agreed to add flyers

to prescription packets to help promote the programme.

They were also given display materials for venues and offered AAA brief

intervention training for staff. We have since had an increase in referrals from

pharmacy engagement.

Community Engagement

A range of community AAA awareness interventions have been completed across localities. These have been in many different settings including community centres, shopping centres, libraries, hospitals, GP practices and bus stations. Five days of promotion was completed in the Metro Centre at Gateshead which was organised by a marketing company, DFP TV. The package included a promotional video that was played throughout the 5 day event on a large screen within the centre

AAA staff attended to chat with members of the public, answering any questions people had and

handing out information about the programme. 1,484 Service improvement questionnaires were

completed to assess local knowledge of the programme and the results are below:

Only 27% who completed the questionnaires that they were aware of the AAA screening

programme, 66% of people asked for more information. They were given AAA literature, and were

able to have a discussion with one of the health promotion team on the day.

Locally developed promotional poster

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54% of people completing the questionnaires said that work commitments were the greatest barrier

to attending screening appointments, 48% stated clinic times, 24% location, 33% family or carer

duties.

31%

67%

2%

Q1. Aware of the AAA programme

Yes

No

Missing 66%

29%

5%

Q2. Request for AAA Information

Yes

No

Missing

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

Workcommitments

Time ofappointment

Location Family or carerresponsibilities

Barriers to attending screening

YES

NO

Missing

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Communications

We worked closely with the Trust Communications Team to develop a NENC AAA communications

strategy, which helps us to inform men 65 and over, living in North East of England and North

Cumbria about the AAA screening programme. It went live in November 2016 and includes:

Review of the Trust website content to ensure the information on it is up to date

Commissioning new engaging and informative posters and artwork which can be used

both at poster sites and digitally (including social media and screen savers)

Developing a new animated video to illustrate what an AAA test is

Developing a suite and timeline of regular social media updates. Targeting posts for

geography and age

A campaign launch to promote the new animated video, with posters and graphics to

supplement

Increasing staff awareness by including articles in QE Weekly

Health Matters article to promote with GPs

Developing a suite of case study examples

Media work to develop key messages with local journalists

We will primarily be targeting males aged 65 and living in North East England, and North Cumbria,

who are registered with a GP. The general audiences include:

Residents

Primary Care providers

NHS staff in North East England, and North Cumbria

Media in North East England, and North Cumbria

Key stakeholders

In addition, we will also be targeting some more specific patient groups:

Populations identified as those not attending

Harder to reach groups/ travellers/ LBGT groups

Males 66+ and living in North East England, Cumbria who haven’t had a s screen

Key messages for implementing this strategy (through the action plan) are as follows:

Abdominal Aortic Aneurysms are a serious issue – with life threatening consequences

Taking up a screening offer is an important and vital step in looking after your health

Individuals need to have the right information to make a decision on the relative benefits

and risks of screening

The screen is quick, easy and not intrusive

Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm screening could save your life

NHS, Local authority, third sector, the community and other stakeholders are working

together to deliver screening and improve uptake

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Working with other organisations

We continue to work with other organisation to support one another with campaigns throughout

the year. These include Cancer Research UK, Health professional Engagement facilitators that

support GP practices to reduce barriers to screening and help to increase uptake. We continue to

attend Cancer Research & Macmillan roadshows, to help increase public awareness and reduce

barriers to attending screening, and engage with other wellbeing networks who are working within

harder to reach communities, to build capacity and promote AAA screening to a broad range of

audiences.

The NENC AAASP team also attended several events over the screening year to promote the service

and increase awareness within the stakeholder groups.

SMaRT User Group Meetings

The user group meeting is attended by nominated regional representatives for the local screening

programmes. The aim of the meeting is to review the current performance of the national database

provided by Northgate Solutions and improve service provision. The meeting also reviews the

potential impact of requests for change from local programmes at a national level. The SMaRT user

group representative for Cheshire and Merseyside, Cumbria and Lancashire, Greater Manchester

and the North East is currently the NENC AAASP Admin Coordinator.

Vascular Advisory Group (VAG) Meetings

The Screening Manager or Programme Lead/ CST and the Clinical Director (VAG chair) attend the

quarterly regional vascular network meetings to provide feedback regarding current performance

against the waiting time standards.

Health Improvement Practitioner at Cancer Research UK event

Health Improvement Practitioner at Macmillan roadshow

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NHS AAA Screening Programme Networking and Information Day

The NAAASP networking day is an excellent opportunity for programme managers, CSTs and nurse

practitioners to share best practice and service improvement initiatives to improve local service

delivery. The meeting includes a presentation by national clinical lead on current performance and

how the national programme might be optimised in the future.

Practice Nurse/ Practice Manager and CCG Meetings

The NENC AASP Health Improvement Practitioners team regularly attend CCG, practice nurse and GP

practice manager meetings throughout the region to increase awareness and provide coverage data

in order to improve service delivery.

Future Developments

The NENC AAASP continues to work closely with GP practices, local support groups and our

stakeholders to improve attendance in areas where screening uptake is poor.

Information about our screening service is available in local pharmacies, GP practices, on the QE

website, twitter feed and on the QE Gateshead Facebook page.

Resources

AAA Screening Leaflets; information in other languages:

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/abdominal-aortic-aneurysm- screening-invitation-

leaflet

AAA Screening Patient Decision Aid: http://sdm.rightcare.nhs.uk/pda/aaa- screening/

PHE Local Health: http://www.localhealth.org.uk/#sid=98;v=map10;sly=ccg_2013_DR;l=en;z=30

7642,737901,423026,346881

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References

1. The 2017-18 NHS England Service Specification No 23 (Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm

https://www.england.nhs.uk/commissioning/wp- content/uploads/sites/12/2016/04/serv-spec-23-

abdominal-aortic- aneurysm.pdf

2. Essential Elements in Providing an Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm (AAA) Screening and

Surveillance Programme- March 2017, version 5.0 available at:

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/aaa-screening-standard-operating-procedures

3. NHS AAA Screening Programme Pathway Standards (2016) available at:

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/aaa-screening-quality-standards-and-service-

objectives

4. NHS Guidance on Waiting Time Standards (June 2018) available at:

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/aaa-screening-waiting-times-standards/aaa-

screening-monitoring-waiting-times-to-surgery

5. UK NSC/National Screening Programmes guidance on managing safety incidents in screening

programmes available at:

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/managing-safety-incidents-in-nhs-screening-

programmes

6. NHS England’s Serious Incident Framework available at:

https://www.england.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/serious-incidnt-framwrk-upd.pdf

7. The North East of England and North Cumbria Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Screening

Programme Health Equity Audit available at:

https://www.qegateshead.nhs.uk/node/631

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Screening Venues Frequency and Times

Area Site Day Frequency Clinic Times

North Cumbria

Hill Top Heights (London Road) MONDAY FORTNIGHTLY 10:05-16:30

Penrith Hospital MONDAY MONTHLY 10:00-16:45

Workington Community Hospital FRIDAY FORTNIGHTLY 10:45-16;05

Durham & Darlington

Bishop Auckland General Hospital THURSDAY FORTNIGHTLY 09:35-17:00

Darlington Walk in Centre WEDNESDAY MONTHLY 09:15-16:20

Peterlee Health Centre TUESDAY MONTHLY 09:15-14:40

Queens Road Surgery MONDAY EVERY 2

MONTHS 09:15-16:20

Sacriston Health Centre MONDAY MONTHLY 09:15-14:40

Sedgefield Community Hospital TUESDAY EVERY 2

MONTHS 09:15-16:20

Stanley Primary Care Centre MONDAY WEEKLY 09:00-14:40

North of Tyne

Alnwick Bondgate Surgery FRIDAY EVERY 3 MONTHS 09:45-17:00

Berwick Infirmary THURSDAY EVERY 3 MONTHS 10:15-17:00

Blyth Community Hospital and Health Centre MONDAY WEEKLY 09:15-14:40

Cresta Unit at Newcastle General Hospital FRIDAY

EVERY 2

WEEKS 09:00-14:40

Hexham General Hospital FRIDAY EVERY 2 MONTHS 09:40-16:30

Molineux Primary Care Centre THURSDAY WEEKLY 09:15-14:40

Morpeth Health Centre FRIDAY MONTHLY 09:15-14:40

Regent Centre FRIDAY MONTHLY 09:15-14:40

Shiremoor Resource Centre FRIDAY WEEKLY 09:15-14:40

Spring Terrace Health Centre THURSDAY WEEKLY 09:15-14:40

North

Yorkshire

Friarage Community Hospital TUESDAY MONTHLY 09:40-17:00

Richmond Community Hospital THURSDAY MONTHLY 09:20-16:45

Whitby Community Hospital MONDAY EVERY 3 MONTHS 10:15-17:00

South of Tyne

Blaydon Primary Care Centre MONDAY WEEKLY 09:15-14:40

Cleadon Park Primary Care Centre WEDNESDAY WEEKLY 09:00-14:40

Gateshead Health Centre WEDNESDAY FORTNIGHTLY 09:15-14:40

Grindon Primary Care Centre FRIDAY FORTNIGHTLY 09:00-14:40

Houghton le Spring Primary Care Centre TUESDAY MONTHLY 09:00-14:40

Washington Primary Care Centre TUESDAY MONTHLY 09:00-14:40

Teesside

Lawson Street Health Centre WEDNESDAY FORTNIGHTLY 09:35-17:00

North Ormesby Resolution Health Centre TUESDAY FORTNIGHTLY 09:35-17:00

One Life Primary Care Centre Hartlepool TUESDAY MONTHLY 09:35-17:00

Redcar Primary Care Centre WEDNESDAY MONTHLY 09:35-17:00

HMP Health

Services

HMP Durham

AS REQUIRED

QUARTERLY a n d additional if requested

As per offender health clinic availability

HMP Frankland

HMP Holme House

HMP Kirklevington

HMP Northumberland

Appendix 1

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