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Right Decision Service newsletter: March 2024

Welcome to the Right Decision Service (RDS) newsletter for March 2024. Please forward this newsletter to others who may be interested. They can contact olivia.graham@nhs.scot to be added to the circulation list.

Promotion and communication resources

Promotional flyers are now available in the Learning and Support area of RDS:

What is RDS and what impact does it have? (infographic)

General RDS flyer

Being a partner in my care: Realistic medicine app for citizens

Managing medicines for patients and carers app

Home care decisions app

Child protection app (South Lanarkshire HSCP)

All except the infographic are also available as editable Word versions. Please contact his.decisionsupport@nhs.scot  if you would like Word versions.  

Redesign and improvements to RDS

Search and browse improvements are progressing well and the plan is still to release these in mid-May.  The first stages of work on archiving and version control are complete. User stories (requirements) are being defined for:

  • Deep linking to individual toolkit URLs/QR codes
  • Translating content from a structured Word document directly into RDS
  • Capability to review and edit changes made to shared content

New feature requests

These have all been compiled and effort estimated. Once the redesign work is complete, these will be prioritised in line with the remaining budget. We expect this to take place around late June.

Evaluation

A big thank you to all of you who have completed our Impact and Value questionnaire. The data from this will be really helpful in informing the first draft of the business case for long term provision of the RDS. This will be reviewed by the National Advisory Board for RDS later this month.

We welcome further responses. If you haven’t yet completed the survey, please follow this link, and please encourage other RDS toolkit leads and users to do so.

New toolkits

A few examples of toolkits published to live in the last month:

 

Toolkits in development

Some of the toolkits the RDS team are currently working on:

  • Updates to the Respiratory prescribing guidance and Manage Medicines for patients and carers toolkits
  • Respiratory Managed Clinical Network Pathways
  • Child abuse pathways in NHS Tayside
  • Patient information leaflet collection in NHS Borders
  • Referral management toolkit for NHS Borders
  • NHS Lothian – Infectious diseases; Acute oncology guidelines; Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh Emergency Care.

Please contact his.decisionsupport@nhs.scot if you would like to learn more about a toolkit. The RDS team will put you in touch with the relevant toolkit lead.

Learning opportunities

The RDS Learning working group is progressing with developing training resources for editors, and intend to have resources to share by end of June. This includes resources for:

  • Each stage of the development journey for RDS toolkits – Scoping to Implementation/Evaluation and Maintenance.
  • RDS content governance.
  • Core functionality – learning bytes.

 

Editor webinars

Just a reminder that we are offering webinars for existing and potential new editors on the following dates:

  • Wednesday 10 April 3.30-4.30 pm
  • Thursday 18 April 12-1 pm

 

To book for one of these webinars, please complete the registration form at https://forms.office.com/e/eGjKqNVjeF

Quality audit

Many thanks to all of you who have met with me recently to complete or clarify your responses to the quality audit survey at the end of last year.  Work to complete the quality audit for all toolkits published on RDS prior to November last year will continue for the next few months.

Implementation projects

The RDS team is now working with Moray HSCP to evaluate impact of the new RDS toolkit “Preventing progress of diabetes”  (https://preventdiabetes.scot.nhs.uk ) to support people at high risk of diabetes type 2 and those who are candidates for remission. We are looking at the impact of use of the app with SMS prompts on people’s readiness for lifestyle change over an 8 week period. This includes comparing impact in people who have a call with a dietitian in addition to using the app to people who only use the app.

If you have any questions about the content of this newsletter, please contact us on his.decisionsupport@nhs.scot.

With kind regards

Right Decision Service team

Healthcare Improvement Scotland

 

Viral Warts

Treatment/ therapy

Warts are caused by a common viral infection, the human papillomavirus (HPV). Most resolve spontaneously within a year or two. They may vary in appearance depending on the types of HPV, the anatomical site involved and the host immune response. They often have small black dots, representing coagulated capillaries, particularly evident on paring. 

Common hand warts 

Common Hand Warts

Deep plantar wart (verruca) 

  • May be tender on pressure 

Deep Plantar Wart

Mosaic plantar wart 

  • May be slow to resolve in comparison to other warts 

Mosaic Plantar Wart

Plane wart 

  • Flat topped pink or pale brown. Often on face or other sun exposed sites 

Plane Wart

Filiform facial wart 

Filiform Facial Wart

Most patients with viral warts can be managed in primary care. 

Consider no  treatment as warts usually resolve spontaneously 

Common hand warts 

  • Self treatment daily with salicylic acid (up to 26%) or glutaraldehyde paints or gels after paring the warts 
  • Continue treatment for at least three months then review 
  • Consider 3-weekly cryotherapy in non-responders, occlusion under waterproof plaster, and use in combination with topical therapy 
  • Cryotherapy may be distressing and therefore inappropriate for young children 

Deep plantar wart / mosaic plantar warts 

  • Self treatment with daily salicylic acid paint (up to 50%) 
  • Paring of plantar warts with single-use file enhances treatment response 
  • Consideration of cryotherapy three weekly for up to 10 treatments: single or double freeze thaw cycle(s) 
  • Patients with painful plantar warts can be treated with corn plasters 

Plane warts 

  • Plane warts often resolve spontaneously 
  • Avoid cryotherapy 
  • Apply topical retinoic acid if persistent 

Filiform facial warts 

  • Do not apply wart paints 
  • Treat filiform facial warts with careful cryotherapy for 5-10 seconds to the wart but avoid surrounding skin 
  • Repeat every 2 or 3 weeks 

Referral Management

  • Symptomatic warts persistent for at least two years and unresponsive to topical agents and cryotherapy 
  • Diagnostic uncertainty especially in the elderly 
  • Multiple recalcitrant warts in the immunosuppressed 
  • If you need support for a patient with anogenital warts, seek advice from your local genito-urinary medicine team 

Clinical tips

  • Do not use salicylic acid on the face 
  • Cryotherapy should be administrated by appropriately trained staff 
  • Diagnostic doubt over solitary wart: remove by curettage for histopathology 
  • Children with verrucae should not be banned from swimming pool but can wear verruca socks 

Patient information resources

Editorial Information

Author(s): Adapted from Dermatology Patient Pathways.

Co-Author(s): NHS Scotland, Scottish Dermatology Society.