J Neurol Surg B Skull Base 2020; 81(S 01): S1-S272
DOI: 10.1055/s-0040-1702523
Oral Presentations
Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

A Patient-Driven Quality Improvement Initiative for Pituitary Adenoma Care

Irene Druce
1   University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada
,
Mary-Anne Doyle
1   University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada
,
Amel Arnaout
1   University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada
,
Dora Liu
1   University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada
,
Fahad Alkherayf
1   University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada
,
Charles Agbi
1   University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada
,
Erin Keely
1   University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada
,
Janine Malcolm
1   University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada
› Author Affiliations
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
05 February 2020 (online)

 
 

    Pituitary adenomas are common and often require complex multidisciplinary care with multiple specialists. This may result in a health care system that is challenging for patients to navigate. Audits of care at our institution revealed opportunities for improvement to better align care with patients’ needs. A quality improvement initiative that incorporated a patient advisory committee of patients who had received treatment for pituitary adenoma at our center and their family members was used to help identify opportunities for improvement. The patient-identified gaps in care included the need to coordinate and minimize appointments and the desire for better communication and education. Based on this information, changes were implemented to the pituitary program, including increasing access to the multidisciplinary clinic and developing a standardized and centralized triage process. A pre- and postintervention analysis consisting of retrospective chart reviews revealed that these changes had an impact on wait times for first assessment, and a significant shift in location of this first visit—with a larger proportion of patients being seen in the multidisciplinary clinic after intervention. We demonstrate that patient involvement, beyond individual patient–physician interactions, can lead to meaningful and observable changes, and can improve the quality of care for pituitary adenoma.


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    No conflict of interest has been declared by the author(s).