Implementation of A Telephone Triage System for Management Of Acute Nasal Fracture in Response to The Coronavirus Disease 2019 Pandemic
Abstract
Haran Devakumar, Bhavesh V Tailor, Dana Low, Sarah Moin, Dimitrios Ioannidis
Background: Acute nasal fracture is a common referral to ENT outpatient clinic. During the Covid-19 pandemic, NHS outpatient services were increasingly stretched and placed patients and staff at risk of Coronavirus. Virtual clinic appointments provided an effective method for reducing Covid-19 risk and improving the efficiency of outpatient services. We sought to implement a telephone triage system for the assessment of nasal fractures.
Method: A telephone triage pathway for nasal fracture was implemented in October 2021. Data on nasal fracture appointments and outcomes were retrospectively collected for 2 months prior to, and after, the introduction of the telephone triage pathway. All patients with suspected nasal fracture referred to ENT by the Emergency Department at Colchester Hospital were included.
Results: At baseline, 32 patients were referred for face-to-face (F2F) clinic, 20 (62%) attended and 12 (38%) did-not-attend (DNA). Of those who attended, 17 (85%) were managed conservatively and 3 (15%) had manipulation under anaesthetic (MUA). 24 patients were included in the telephone triage pathway, 13 (54%) attended and 11 (46%) DNA. Of those who attended, 11 (84%) were discharged and 2 (16%) were brought in for F2F assessment. One was managed conservatively and the other had a MUA (8%). The increase in DNA rate from the F2F pathway to the telephone triage pathway was not statistically significant.
Conclusion: Our data suggests that the telephone triage system for nasal fracture management results in fewer F2F appointments. This reduces COVID-19 transmission to the public and hospital staff but also improves utilisation of outpatient capacity.