Abstract 1871
Background
Much of the work of a busy oncology day unit is undocumented, especially the work involved in phone triage during the working hours of 8am to 6pm. Phone calls from patients, their family doctors, palliative care teams, or from within the Hospital itself seeking advice form the majority of this aspect of the Specialist Oncology Nurse and Staff Nurses’ time. This project was performed to assess the nature of these calls and the broad advice given to the callers so that a dedicated Acute Review Specialist Oncology Nurse Clinic could be developed.
Methods
In conjunction with key oncology nurses and their medical oncologist colleagues a log to capture each answered call was developed. This centred on the date and time of the call, the source, the issue raised, the advice given, if advised to go to the Emergency Room the reason why, and other actions that were necessary. A form was completed per answered call, and collected at the end of the day. Data was recorded on a spreadsheet. All forms were annonymised with regard to patient identifiers. The forms were focused on whether the issue was successfully addressed within the day unit, the Hospital’s emergency room, the community services, or whether solely by the advice given over the telephone.
Results
A sample size of 252 incoming answered calls by the Oncology Nursing Staff to the Nurses’ station was analysed. Just over half these calls (52%) were made by patients/family members. Other calls related to internal questions such as from Interventional Radiology or other diagnostic areas of the Hospital (26%), pharmacies (7%), and family doctors (4%). The other 11% of calls were mainly from wards relating to advice on inpatients or seeking consults. Of the unwell patients calling for advice, near half (48%) were seeking advice on what action to take: stay at home or come to Hospital. 35% of patients were seeking either a new appointment or change in appointment date. The remaining 17% of patients were seeking non-emergency review by the medical oncology team.
Conclusions
This analysis of answered calls highlights the need for involvement of experienced oncology nurses in the triage of phone calls to a busy oncology day unit, and the need to develop an Acute Review Clinic, managed by an experienced oncology nurse specialist.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
Beaumont Hospital Cancer Centre.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
4527 - Identification of malnutrition risk factors in patients with cancer in the first nursing visit
Presenter: Amaia Valverde
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract
2904 - Engaging Cancer Survivors, Healthcare Providers and Advocates in The Development of a Colorectal Cancer Survivorship Information Resource: A Participatory Action Research Study
Presenter: Amanda Drury
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract
3435 - Medical nurses’ experiences of the care-needs of adult patients with a primary brain tumour
Presenter: Jamila Mohammed
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract
857 - Feasibility and acceptability of a mHealth intervention to increase colonoscopy uptake among Chinese first-degree relatives: a pilot cluster randomized controlled trial
Presenter: Yang Bai
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract
1087 - Cancer patient participation and compliance in microbiome sample collection: an oncology research nurse’s experience
Presenter: Julie Malo
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract
2783 - Implementing Digital Individual Care plans for Patients with Head and Neck cancer- Challenges and opportunities
Presenter: Helena Ullgren
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract
1152 - The Effect of the Short-term and Long-term Compassion Fatigue Resiliency Program on the Quality of Life, Perceived Stress and Psychological Resilience of Oncology-Hematology Nurses
Presenter: Tugba Pehlivan
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract
1172 - Competing risk analyses of overall survival and cancer-specific survival in patients with orbital rhabdomyosarcoma after surgery: a large cohort study
Presenter: Yu Zhang
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract
5949 - Communication of genetic information to family members in hereditary cancers and healthcare providers’ role
Presenter: Carla Pedrazzani
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract
2494 - CAR-T Nursing Education at a UK Specialist Cancer Hospital
Presenter: Rose Ellard
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract