@article {Fofariae000546, author = {Rishi K Fofaria and Susan Barber and Yewande Adeleke and Tom Woodcock and Nikolaos Kamperidis and Alaa Mohamed and Ravi Misra and Ajit Shah and Susan Bailey-Fee and Howard Bluston and Denise Robinson and Tracey Tyrrell and Naila Arebi}, title = {Stratification of inflammatory bowel disease outpatients by disease activity and risk of complications to guide out-of-hospital monitoring: a patient-centred quality improvement project}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, elocation-id = {e000546}, year = {2019}, doi = {10.1136/bmjoq-2018-000546}, publisher = {BMJ Open Quality}, abstract = {Background Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic relapsing-remitting condition affecting 600 000 people in the UK. Traditionally, patients attend outpatient clinics for monitoring regardless of their symptoms or risk of developing complications. This can lead to a mismatch between need and access: patients in remission given elective appointments displace those in need of urgent specialist attention. Novel initiatives implemented in the UK to improve outpatient monitoring have often required a well-maintained patient registry, empowered patients and significant information technology support.Design and strategy In this large-scale quality improvement project at St Mark{\textquoteright}s Hospital, a tertiary centre for IBD, we stratified over 1000 patients attending three non-complex IBD clinics over 12 months according to disease activity and risk profile. The aim was to offer a choice and subsequently transfer 50\% of eligible patients to specialist nurse-led telephone clinics and demonstrate non-inferior satisfaction levels to existing outpatient follow-up. We also sought to ensure there was timely access to a newly established rapid access clinic for patients requiring urgent specialist attention.A core project team consisting of healthcare professionals, patients and quality improvement scientists met regularly. The team tested and scaled up interventions using {\textquoteleft}Plan-Do-Study-Act{\textquoteright} cycles within the {\textquoteleft}Model for Improvement{\textquoteright} framework and analysed data continuously using statistical process charts.Results Over 12 months, the average number of eligible patients transferred to telephone clinics rose from 17.6\% (42/239) using a questionnaire method to 59.3\% (73/123) using active discussion in clinic. Patient satisfaction scores remained high and non-inferior to baseline scores in face-to-face clinics. The median waiting time to be seen in the rapid access clinic was 6.5 days.Conclusion This is the first published study to report on the successful stratification of patients with IBD based on disease activity and risk of complications to create a more responsive, sustainable and patient-centred model for IBD monitoring.}, URL = {https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/8/3/e000546}, eprint = {https://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/8/3/e000546.full.pdf}, journal = {BMJ Open Quality} }