Abstract
Abstract Introduction Lower gastrointestinal bleeding (LGIB) accounts for 3% of all surgical referrals in the UK, with an in-hospital mortality of 3.4%. The BSG 2019 guidelines recommend risk stratification as per Oakland scoring, inpatient lower GI endoscopy for admissions and CT-angiography for unstable patients. This study evaluates the delivery of these outcomes in a district hospital setting. Method Retrospective audit assessing all acute LGI bleed admissions from 01-07-2019 to 28-02-2020 at Russells Hall Hospital. Shock Index (SI) and Oakland score used to stratify patients into unstable, stable-major and stable-minor LGIB. Compliance with BSG standards was assessed by review of investigations and emergent patient management. Results 143 patients (Median age = 70years) evaluated, with 64 admissions having no formal risk stratification (OAKLAND-score) documented. Only 12 admissions underwent inpatient LGI endoscopy with sigmoid diverticulosis the most common pathology (39.3%). CT-angiogram was the initial investigation for 75% of patients admitted with unstable LGIB. Conclusions OAKLAND-scoring is a sensitive tool to stratify LGIB patients based on clinical parameters. Application of BSG-2019 guidelines and developing consistency in management is challenged by the lack of routine access to LGI endoscopy and tools to manage bleeding endoscopically.
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