Improving participation and engagement with a COVID-19 surveillance programme in an outpatient setting

Author:

Wemyss CallumORCID,Hobson Simon,Sweeney Jill,Chua Pei Rong,Binti Mohd Khairi Siti Aishah,Edwards Maura,Burns Jacqueline,McGoldrick NiallORCID,Braid Raymond,Gorman Megan,Redmond Suzanne,Clark Claire,Brown Clare,Watling Chris,Conway David IORCID,Culshaw ShaunaORCID

Abstract

BackgroundOn 3 August 2020, Public Health Scotland commenced a prospective surveillance study to monitor the prevalence of COVID-19 among asymptomatic outpatients attending dental clinics across 14 health boards in Scotland.ObjectivesThe primary aim of this quality improvement project was to increase the number of COVID-19 tests carried out in one of the participating sites, Glasgow Dental Hospital and School. The secondary aim was to identify barriers to patient participation and staff engagement when implementing a public health initiative in an outpatient setting.MethodA quality improvement working group met weekly to discuss hospital findings, identify drivers and change ideas. Details on reasons for patient non-participation were recorded and questionnaires on project barriers were distributed to staff. In response to findings, rapid interventions were implemented to fast-track increases in the numbers of tests being carried out.ResultsOver 16 weeks, 972 tests were carried out by Glasgow Dental Hospital and School Secondary Care Services. The number of tests per week increased from 19 (week 1) to 129 (week 16). This compares to a similar ‘control’ site, where the number of tests carried out remained unchanged; 38 (week 1) to 36 (week 16). The most frequent reason given for non-participation was fear that the swab would hurt. For staff, lack of time and forgetting to ask patients were identified as the most significant barriers.ConclusionPublic health surveillance programmes can be integrated rapidly into outpatient settings. This project has shown that a quality improvement approach can be successful in integrating such programmes. The key interventions used were staff engagement initiatives and front-line data collection. Implementation barriers were also identified using staff questionnaires.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy,Leadership and Management

Reference15 articles.

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3. Public Health Scotland . Covid-19 surveillance in dental settings: report summarising findings of asymptomatic programme August 2020 to April 2021, 2021. Available: https://beta.isdscotland.org/find-publications-and-data/population-health/covid-19/covid-19-surveillance-in-dental-settings/ [Accessed 20 Jun 2021].

4. Public Health Scotland . Enhanced Surveillance of COVID-19 in Scotland - dental asymptomatic surveillance protocol, 2020. Available: https://hpspubsrepo.blob.core.windows.net/hps-website/nss/3145/documents/1_covid-19-protocol-for-surveillance-in-dental-settings.pdf [Accessed 20 Jun 2021].

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