Costs and benefits of a one stop clinic compared with a dedicated breast clinic: randomised controlled trial.
- 2 March 2002
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Vol. 324 (7336) , 507
Abstract
To determine the cost to the NHS and the impact on anxiety of a one stop clinic for assessing women with suspected breast cancer. Randomised controlled trial. Women aged 35 or over referred with a breast lump. Teaching hospital, north west England. Women were randomly allocated to attend a one stop clinic or a dedicated breast clinic. Reduction in mean anxiety from baseline at 24 hours after the first visit and at 3 weeks and 3 months after diagnosis; mean cost per patient. 670 women were randomised. Compared with women who attended the dedicated clinic, patients attending the one stop clinic were less anxious 24 hours after the visit (adjusted mean change in state anxiety _5.7 (95% confidence interval _8.4 to _3.0)) but not at 3 weeks or 3 months after diagnosis. The additional cost to the NHS of a one stop attendance was pound 32 per woman; this was largely explained by greater cytopathological and radiological staff costs. One stop clinics may not be justified in terms of a reduction in short term anxiety.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Repeated measures in clinical trials: simple strategies for analysis using summary measuresStatistics in Medicine, 2000
- The impact of patient treatment preferences on the interpretation of randomised controlled trialsEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 1999
- How reliable is modern breast imaging in differentiating benign from malignant breast lesions in the symptomatic population?Clinical Radiology, 1999
- What is meant by intention to treat analysis? Survey of published randomised controlled trialsBMJ, 1999
- The accuracy of "one-stop" diagnosis for 1,110 patients presenting to a symptomatic breast clinic.1999
- Psychologic distress in women with abnormal findings in mass mammography screeningCancer, 1999
- The British Association of Surgical Oncology Guidelines for surgeons in the management of symptomatic breast disease in the UK (1998 revision)European Journal of Surgical Oncology, 1998
- The emergence of the ‘waiting game’: a critical examination of the psychosocial issues in diagnosing breast cancerJournal of Advanced Nursing, 1997
- Randomised consent designs in cancer clinical trialsEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 1995
- The Hospital Anxiety and Depression ScaleActa Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 1983