Abstract

Ear, nose and throat (ENT) specialist outreach clinics, in which hospital-based consultants hold clinics in general practice surgeries, have been popular with general practitioners (GPs) and patients. This prospective study recorded data on 1155 consecutive patients seen by one ENT surgeon in two GP surgeries. At each consultation, a record was kept of the requirement for further investigations that would normally be done at the same time as the consultation in a hospital department. The results showed that 76 per cent of patients needed an investigation, which would be readily available in a hospital but not in a GP surgery (audiometry, endoscopy, microscopy of the ear, a minor procedure or X-ray). This study indicates that despite the apparent convenience of outreach ENT clinics to patients and GPs, patients may need to spend more time being assessed than they would if they were investigated in one visit to a hospital department. Unless an outreach clinic is used frequently, it is difficult to justify the cost of equipping it to the same level as a hospital department. Limited resources would be better spent providing good access to well-equipped regularly-used hospital ENT outpatient departments.

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