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Complications and costs to the UK National Health Service due to outward medical tourism for elective surgery: a rapid review

Por: England · C. · Bromham · N. · Needham-Taylor · A. · Hounsome · J. · Gillen · E. · Ingram · B.-J. · Davies · J. · Edwards · A. · Lewis · R.
Objectives

Outward medical tourism is when people seek medical treatment in a different country to the one they live in. We aimed to identify all studies that describe the impact on the UK National Health Service (NHS) of patients who require treatment due to outward medical tourism for elective surgery and report on complications, costs and benefits.

Design

A rapid literature review. Medical and grey literature databases were searched, limited to literature published between 2012 and 2024.

Selection criteria

Studies published in the English language, conducted in any NHS setting, describing complications, costs or benefits due to outward medical tourism for elective surgery were included. We excluded emergency and semi-urgent surgery, dental and transplant surgery, cancer treatment and fertility treatment.

Outcome measures

Primary outcomes were costs and savings to the NHS. Secondary outcomes were type and frequency, demographics, procedures, complications, treatment, follow-up care and use of NHS resources. Results were summarised narratively. Study quality was assessed using JBI critical appraisal tools and the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) approach was used for certainty of evidence for costs.

Results

Some 35 case series and case reports and two surveys of NHS plastic surgeons were identified. Case studies described 655 patients treated in specific NHS hospitals between 2006 and 2024 for postoperative complications due to metabolic/bariatric surgery (n=385), cosmetic (n=265) and ophthalmic (n=5) surgery tourism. No cases relating to other surgical specialities were identified in the literature. Most patients were women (90%), with an average age of 38 (range 14–69) years. The most common destination for surgery was Turkey (61%). Complications were not well described for metabolic/bariatric surgery tourism; but for cosmetic surgery tourism, infection and wound dehiscence were most commonly reported. There was evidence that some patients needed complex treatment involving long hospital stays and multiple surgical interventions. Very low certainty evidence indicated that costs to the NHS from outward medical tourism for elective surgery ranged from £1058 to £19 549 per patient in 2024 prices. We found no studies that reported on the benefits of outward medical tourism.

Conclusions

A systematic approach is needed to collecting information on the number of people who travel abroad for elective surgery and the frequency and impact on the UK NHS of treating complications. Without these data, we cannot fully understand the risk of seeking surgery abroad.

Talking scrubs: improving the health outcomes of patients with communication disability - a mixed method investigation of feasibility, effectiveness and clinician-patient concordance

Por: Dee-Price · B.-J. M. · Fairweather · A. K. · Kelly · J. · Price · M. S. · Welsh · M. · Esterman · A. · Ellison · C. · Thomas · J. · White · E.
Introduction

People without access to recognised and understood speech and/or written communication methods can experience exceptional disadvantage in health settings. This can result in poor health outcomes, lengthier hospital admissions and adverse events, including preventable deaths. Despite numerous attempts to integrate augmentative and alternative communication into health settings, the first-person ‘voice’ of the patient is often not accessible or prioritised, deferring instead to others, such as parents or carers, or the ‘best guess’ by healthcare professionals. The Talking Scrubs project aims to form a bridge to augmentative and alternative communication by locating key communication icons on scrubs (and scrubs/vest) to be used with patients (in and of themselves) and/or to prompt the use of patient individualised communication methods. The paper describes the methodological process for Stage 4 of the project. Prior stages involved investigating the concept, developing and validating instrument measures and co-designing and feasibility pilot testing the scrubs/vests. Stage 4 (this protocol) aligns with the diagnostic process, to test the feasibility and effectiveness of the scrubs intervention at two large, metropolitan medical centres with 5–10 general practitioners, approximately 30 patients and up to 10 flow-on diagnostic screening clinicians such as nurses and phlebotomists. Stage 4 is the first time the instrument measures will be applied and re-tested post-validation.

Methods and analysis

Using mixed methods, Stage 4 will apply the communication self-efficacy instruments co-designed in Stage 2 and validated in Stage 3 to measure effectiveness of the scrubs intervention by comparing pre-intervention and post-intervention changes in both clinician and patient population groups. Qualitative interviews, agency recorded data and participant journal recordings (optional) will be used to identify feasibility. SPSS V.29 (IBM, Chicago, Illinois, USA) will be applied to analyse participant communication self-efficacy measures and NVIVO V.10 (Lumiverso, Denver, Colorado, USA) to the retrieved qualitative data.

Ethics and dissemination

Stages 3 and 4 have ethics approval from the University of South Australia Ethics Committee identification number 206 930 and are registered as a clinical trial with Australia and New Zealand Clinical Research Trials (ANZCRT) with registration number 12625000490471p. Stage 1 (national survey) and Stage 2 (stakeholder focus groups) received ethics approval from Flinders University. Findings will be disseminated through national and international health translation platforms, publications, media and on the Talking Scrubs website.

Trial registration number

ANZCRT with the registration number ACTRN12625000490471p.

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