Only four early years postgraduate surgical training posts in the UK meet nationally approved minimum quality standards. Specific recommendations are made to improve training in this cohort and to bolster recruitment and retention into Higher Surgical Training.
Objective: In the context of testicular torsion, research demonstrates a delay from the onset of testicular pain to attending hospital in adolescents, leading to high rates of testicular loss. This is due to a lack of knowledge about this condition. In this study, we aimed to investigate the methods adolescents and their parents felt would be effective in testicular torsion education. Design: Qualitative semi-structured interviews and focus group workshops were used to generate ideas and opinions regarding the ‘ideal’ education package for testicular torsion. Setting: One-to-one interviews with young men and a chosen chaperone recruited through purposive sampling from after-school clubs. Focus groups recruited from an active hospital youth forum. Method: Qualitative data analysis was undertaken to explore collective and normative views and to validate findings using a combination of thematic framework, and descriptive and content analysis. Results: In all, 16 young men aged 11–19 years with an attending chaperone were interviewed. Forty-four young people of both sexes participated in focus groups. Participants in all groups supported school-based teaching about testicular torsion, with focus group members mentioning Personal, Social, Health and Economic Education (PSHE) as the preferred setting. Members of all groups also advocated the use of video, but tone was a matter of debate. Reservations were expressed regarding the use of social and online media as primary means of dissemination but saw these as useful adjuncts to formal school lessons. Focus group members were supportive of teaching in a mixed sex environment and for repeat lessons at 11 and 13 years of age. Conclusion: Study findings support the development and use of PSHE teaching, using video methodology, to promote knowledge about testicular torsion in boys and young men. An evidence-based intervention to improve outcomes in testicular torsion for this cohort can now be developed.
Aim
Cancer treatment targets were halted in the COVID-era due to a major re-organisation of services and coincided with a drop in prostate cancer (PCa) referrals, investigations, and diagnoses. This study measures the impact of the pandemic on a PCa diagnostic pathway in a major cancer centre.
Method
Data was collected during the onset of COVID-19 (March to June 2020) and the same months in 2019 for urgent suspected prostate cancer (USPC) referrals. All referrals, PSA tests, multiparametric MRI's of prostate (mpMRI-P), and TRUS-guided biopsy of the prostate (TBP) were recorded.
Results
USPC referrals reduced by 65% from a mean 315 referrals per month to 110 during the pandemic. During March-June 2019 a total of 10,404 PSA tests were conducted in the healthcare trust, which reduced by 39% during COVID-19. Multiparametric MRI of prostate was reduced by 45%. TRUS biopsies were down by 65%, from a mean of 31 to 11 biopsies per month, with only 3 biopsies being conducted in April 2020.
Conclusions
The reduction in PCa referrals and workload in our centre in the COVID-era has been significant. The uncertainty associated with such a drop in demand poses concerns for meeting future cancer targets when prostate cancer referrals return to baseline.
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