Abstract

Abstract Aim Head and neck cancer incidence is expected to rise, with smoking and alcohol consumption the greatest risk factors. The related CQUIN target encourages identification of patients who smoke and drink harmful amounts of alcohol. Locally these questions are integrated into discharge summaries. We aimed to review questionnaire completion and encourage staff to give advice to minimise patients’ future head and neck cancer risk. Method We conducted a retrospective audit of adult patients admitted locally under head and neck surgeons in a three-month period. Local audit standard was completion of the questionnaires in 95% of patients. Intervention was education of ENT juniors (foundation and core trainees) alongside ward-based prompts. Re-audit was conducted for two-months following intervention. Results Initial audit reviewed 99 discharge summaries, and re-audit reviewed 115. Following intervention there was improved documentation of smoking status from 27.3% to 48.7% (n = 27/99 vs n = 56/115) and alcohol use from 36.3% to 51.3% (n = 36/99 vs n = 59/115) respectively. However, even in re-audit a significant proportion were documented as ‘unable' to answer (smoking 41.7%, alcohol 42.6%); of these the majority were day case procedures (smoking n = 35/48, alcohol n = 42/49). Conclusions Staff education can encourage doctors to discuss smoking and alcohol and represents health promotion and a reduction in risk of malignancy. Many day case patients were documented as ‘unable’ to answer; this may reflect that discharge paperwork is frequently completed in the immediate post-operative period. Further improvement could be achieved with educational interventions for registrars and consultants, and consideration of the practical challenges negatively impacting questionnaire completion for day case patients.

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