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A decade of research at the University of Southampton has given thousands of people around the world suffering from dizziness and balance disorders access to a self-management resource that can alleviate their symptoms. Professor Lucy Yardley has pioneered the use of a Balance Retraining (BR) booklet to transform the means of delivering cost-effective, life-changing treatment previously offered to less than one in ten UK patients. The booklet, translated into several languages, has been distributed to patients and practitioners as far afield as China and Japan. Yardley's findings have contributed the bulk of good quality evidence to the Cochrane Review on vestibular rehabilitation.
The Counterweight Programme (CW) is a structured model for obesity management in primary care settings. CW has made substantial changes to clinical and public health guidelines and to practice nationally and internationally: the Programme has since been adopted in Primary Care Galway, Ireland and for a government funded trial in Ontario, Canada. The creation of a spin out company, Counterweight Ltd, in 2011 resulted in concomitant job creation and significant commercial activity, with CW now being used in private healthcare, pharmacies, fitness clubs, and by freelance healthcare professionals. Moreover, the programme has significantly benefited the health and welfare of obese patients and improved care practice by increasing quality, accessibility and cost effectiveness of weight management services in the UK.
Between 1996 and 2013 researchers at Swansea University evaluated service initiatives and changing professional roles associated with the management of patients with debilitating gastrointestinal disorders. This work showed the clinical and cost effectiveness of two main innovations: open access to hospital services for patients with inflammatory bowel disease; and increased responsibility for nurses, particularly as endoscopists. Our evidence has had a broad, significant impact on: national policy through incorporation in NHS strategies, professional service standards and commissioning guides; service delivery through the provision of increasing numbers of nurse endoscopists and the wide introduction of nurse-led open access to follow-up; and patient care, as documented in sequential national audits in 2006, 2008 and 2010.
Research into primary care insomnia by the Community and Health Research Unit (CaHRU) has led to broad improvements in healthcare provision for insomnia, improved patient quality of life, informed national/international policy and practice in insomnia care and impacted directly on health professional practice and insomnia sufferers, initially in Lincolnshire spreading across the UK and internationally from 2008 to 2011. Direct effects on practice include changes in sleep management and reduced hypnotic prescribing through seminars, workshops, conferences and e-learning developed by the team; inclusion in UK policy, practitioner information, training materials and guidance on hypnotics has led to greater professional and public awareness of sleep management internationally.
Work led by Professor Nick Barber at the UCL School of Pharmacy showed that a majority of patients have problems soon after starting a new medicine for a chronic condition, and this led to the development of a post-consultation intervention by pharmacists that was shown to be more effective and cheaper than normal care. This entered Department of Health policy for pharmacy in 2008 and Barber helped design the New Medicines Service that was launched in October 2011. This service is offered by community pharmacists in England and by the end of May 2013 over a million patients had received the service. The intervention increases patient adherence to medication, thus improving quality of care, and reducing cost to the NHS from wastage. It also improves patient safety through better identification and resolution of adverse effects.
In response to the gap between standards and the reality of preventive cardiovascular disease (CVD) health care delivered across Europe, Imperial College researchers developed an innovative nurse-led, multidisciplinary, family centred, CVD prevention programme (EUROACTION) and led its evaluation in hospital and general practice across 8 European countries. We showed that patients and their families in our programme can achieve healthier lifestyles and better risk factor management compared to usual care and these differences were sustained out to one year. We then adapted our learning from EUROACTION for the NHS, by integrating secondary and primary prevention into one community service (MYACTION), and managing cardiovascular disease as a family of diseases with common antecedents. To train doctors, nurses and allied professionals to deliver MYACTION we created an MSc in Preventive Cardiology which is now in its 6th year. EUROACTION is now recommended as an evidence based model of care in current European CVD prevention guidelines, and MYACTION is being commissioned by the NHS in London, and Galway, Republic of Ireland, and by the Western Isles Health Board. Our research has impacted directly on the development and delivery of high quality preventive care in both Europe, and the NHS, and on the training of doctors, nurses and allied health professionals in preventive cardiology.
Work on better management and identification of Medically Unexplained Symptoms (MUS) has led to the introduction of new treatments in primary care in England through the Improving Access to Psychological Treatment (IAPT) programme as well as having an impact on service planning and commissioning. These approaches have also been implemented into the routine training and practice of General Practitioners (GPs) in parts of Europe. A clinical and economic evaluation of a psychosocial approach to chronic fatigue syndrome using general nurses and development of a cognitive behaviour therapy approach has changed general practice and enhanced the patient experience for those with MUS.
Beneficiaries of this research are patients in intensive care and healthcare staff. This research has had impacts in two distinct but related areas:
These advances are informed by our synthesis and application of rigorous, innovative methodologies relating to questionnaire development and real-time data collection.
Many hand surgical units worldwide have routinely used night-time splints in all patients after Dupuytren's contracture fasciectomy and dermo-fasciectomy, despite the lack of robust evidence to support its use.
Jerosch-Herold's programme of research identified that routine night-time splinting for all patients after fasciectomy or dermo-fasciectomy surgical treatments for Dupuytren's contracture is not beneficial. This finding is changing clinical practice, and informing guidelines and policies in the UK, New Zealand and the USA. As a result, health care organisations are ceasing to prescribe routine night-time splinting. This reduces inconvenience and discomfort for patients, relieves pressure on services and generates financial savings, all whilst maintaining equally good clinical outcomes.
The reach of the research findings impact is high, as Dupuytren's contracture is a common disorder of people of Northern European ancestry which results in surgical interventions for thousands of people annually (13,000 pa in the UK alone).
Osteoarthritis affects 8.5 million people in the United Kingdom, accounting for a third of all years lived with disability. Our research has provided commissioners and third-sector organisations with accurate estimates of the size of the problem, policy-makers with evidence on groups at particularly high-risk, and clinicians with original evidence on better approaches to assessing and managing osteoarthritis in patients presenting to primary care. These key insights have supported advances in public health and health care policy debate, changes in legislation, and improvements in the quality of patient care through training and new national, European, and global guidelines for health professionals.