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Quality standards for the management of alcohol-related liver disease: consensus recommendations from the British Association for the Study of the Liver and British Society of Gastroenterology ARLD special interest group

Authors :
Paul Richardson
Steven Masson
Ashwin Dhanda
Ewan Forrest
Ankur Srivastava
Pauline Dundas
Lynsey Corless
Jennifer Towey
Neil Rajoriya
Christopher Oldroyd
Sarah Morgan
James Maurice
Richard Aspinall
Joanne McDonagh
Sara Bardell
Richard Parker
Vanessa Hebditch
Michael Allison
Ryan Buchanan
Robert Goldin
Steve Hood
Joanne Sayer
Vikram Bains
J Ryan
Thomas Phillips
Seonaid Anderson
Ian Davidson
Ian Webzell
Victoria Lavers
Nicole Rainford
Arron Jones
Emma Stennett
Jeff Fernandez
Erica Forster
Dennis Freshwater
Ruth Gailer
Deborah Lindsay
Tania Nurun
Elizabeth Oxley
Sally Pannifex
Graham Parsons
Mandy Smith
Roya Vaziri
Andrew Wellstead
Source :
BMJ Open Gastroenterology, Vol 10, Iss 1 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2023.

Abstract

Objective Alcohol-related liver disease (ALD) is the most common cause of liver-related ill health and liver-related deaths in the UK, and deaths from ALD have doubled in the last decade. The management of ALD requires treatment of both liver disease and alcohol use; this necessitates effective and constructive multidisciplinary working. To support this, we have developed quality standard recommendations for the management of ALD, based on evidence and consensus expert opinion, with the aim of improving patient care.Design A multidisciplinary group of experts from the British Association for the Study of the Liver and British Society of Gastroenterology ALD Special Interest Group developed the quality standards, with input from the British Liver Trust and patient representatives.Results The standards cover three broad themes: the recognition and diagnosis of people with ALD in primary care and the liver outpatient clinic; the management of acutely decompensated ALD including acute alcohol-related hepatitis and the posthospital care of people with advanced liver disease due to ALD. Draft quality standards were initially developed by smaller working groups and then an anonymous modified Delphi voting process was conducted by the entire group to assess the level of agreement with each statement. Statements were included when agreement was 85% or greater. Twenty-four quality standards were produced from this process which support best practice. From the final list of statements, a smaller number of auditable key performance indicators were selected to allow services to benchmark their practice and an audit tool provided.Conclusion It is hoped that services will review their practice against these recommendations and key performance indicators and institute service development where needed to improve the care of patients with ALD.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20544774
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMJ Open Gastroenterology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.b956417e8f024053a61438377f3ac920
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgast-2023-001221