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Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the commonest heart rhythm abnormality, affecting around 8.8 million people in the European Union, and confers a substantial risk of stroke and death. It accounts for one third of hospital admissions for cardiac rhythm disturbances, and the rate of AF-related admissions has continued to rise in recent years. The work of Prof Gregory Lip and Dr Deirdre Lane has made Birmingham an internationally-respected centre of excellence for research in AF, delivering crucial impacts in international clinical practice guidelines and improvements in patient care within three main areas: treatment decisions related to stroke and bleeding risk, screening practice in primary care, and stroke and bleeding risk assessment, ultimately reducing morbidity and mortality for a significant proportion of the population, particularly among the elderly.
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.
We have developed the first ever physiotherapy guidelines (2008-) for contracted (frozen) shoulder (CFS). CFS is painful and disabling, affects c.9% of the UK working-age population,1 and costs the NHS > £13.5 million annually.2 Appropriate physiotherapy could improve outcomes and reduce costs by up to £2,000 per case.b
Endorsed by the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy (CSP), the guidelines have generated great interest and already influenced practice and will improve the quality and cost-effectiveness of clinical management, as well as patients' experiences. They will also provide a better framework for research into the condition and, as a `live', electronic document, will evolve with future research.
Stroke affects 15 million people globally and is a leading cause of death and adult physical disability. King's College London (KCL) research has provided the evidence that underpins many of the present day policies, guidelines and clinical practice for stroke care, not only in the UK but also in other countries. KCL research has demonstrated that stroke units are effective and reduce mortality and dependence by 22%. The implementation of these findings in England has increased the number of patients managed on a stroke unit from 18% to 62% between 2000-2012, preventing 550 deaths, enabling 1,700 more patients to make a full recovery and saving £82 million per year.
York research showing that a) screening for depression in primary care is ineffective and b) collaborative and stepped care improves outcomes for depression in primary care, has changed national and international policy. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) revised its guidelines, the National Screening Committee altered its recommendations, and money has been saved by no longer paying GPs to screen for depression under the Quality and Outcomes Framework. US advisory bodies have also shifted away from recommending routine screening for depression. Treatment guidelines/programmes in the USA, Europe and Australia now recommend collaborative care for the management of depression. Our research has also resulted in an expansion of the NHS Improving Access to Psychological Therapies programme, with many patients benefitting from improved care. The computer support system (PC-MIS©) we developed to record treatments and to track patient progress over time is the most widely used in the NHS. The clinical performance benchmarks we derived from this form the basis of metrics used for NHS-wide performance management of depression services.
Research by Community and Health Research Unit (CaHRU) broadly impacted on healthcare provision and care received by patients from ambulance services. The research directly informed policy and was a key factor in improving prehospital care for emergencies by directly influencing care systems, regulators, ambulance services, paramedics, and service users, initially in the East Midlands and subsequently throughout England from 2008 onwards.
The research which aimed to improve quality of ambulance care led to: development of new clinical quality indicators for ambulance services in England; benchmarking of service quality; initiatives to address gaps in care; measurable improvements in managing pain, heart attack, stroke, asthma and diabetes across all English ambulance services. Regulators now use these quality indicators to assess ambulance trusts in England.
High blood pressure (or hypertension) is the major cause of stroke and other cardiovascular disease, and is one of the most important preventable causes of morbidity and mortality in developed and developing countries. In the UK it affects half the population over 60 and costs the NHS £1Bn per year in drugs alone.
A University of Birmingham primary care-led study has provided definitive evidence of the superiority of ambulatory blood pressure measurement (ABPM) over clinic and home blood pressure monitoring as a means of diagnosing hypertension. The associated cost-effectiveness study showed that this approach will save the NHS over £10.5M per year. As a result of this research, NICE guidelines have been amended and ABPM has become the reference standard. The research has also influenced public and policy debate in the UK and internationally.
The ability of healthcare professionals to empathise with patients has been shown to enhance patient satisfaction, improve symptoms and promote well-being. Research at University of Glasgow has developed the Consultation and Relational Empathy (CARE) Measure — the first validated, patient-rated questionnaire developed in a primary care setting that measures patient perceptions of healthcare professionals' empathy and quality of care. The CARE Measure is formally embedded into healthcare professional training standards through its inclusion in Scottish General Practitioner (GP) appraisals and the Royal College of General Practitioners Membership (MRCGP) and Interim Membership by Assessment of Performance (iMAP) processes; through these means more than 8,000 GPs are using the CARE Measure. It has also been incorporated into the Scottish Government's policy on Healthcare Quality and adopted by the General Medical Council and the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy.
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.
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.