| Literature DB >> 31210174 |
Keith Siau1,2,3, John T Green2,4, Neil D Hawkes2,5, Raphael Broughton2, Mark Feeney2,6, Paul Dunckley2,7, John Roger Barton2,8, John Stebbing2,9, Siwan Thomas-Gibson2,10,11.
Abstract
The Joint Advisory Group on Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (JAG) was initially established in 1994 to standardise endoscopy training across specialties. Over the last two decades, the position of JAG has evolved to meet its current role of quality assuring all aspects of endoscopy in the UK to provide the highest quality, patient-centred care. Drivers such as changes to healthcare agenda, national audits, advances in research and technology and the advent of population-based cancer screening have underpinned this shift in priority. Over this period, JAG has spearheaded various quality assurance initiatives with support from national stakeholders. These have led to the achievement of notable milestones in endoscopy quality assurance, particularly in the three major areas of: (1) endoscopy training, (2) accreditation of endoscopy services (including the Global Rating Scale), and (3) accreditation of screening endoscopists. These developments have changed the landscape of UK practice, serving as a model to promote excellence in endoscopy. This review provides a summary of JAG initiatives and assesses the impact of JAG on training and endoscopy services within the UK and beyond.Entities:
Keywords: diagnostic and therapeutic endoscopy; gastrointesinal endoscopy; health service research
Year: 2018 PMID: 31210174 PMCID: PMC6540274 DOI: 10.1136/flgastro-2018-100969
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Frontline Gastroenterol ISSN: 2041-4137
Timeline of JAG achievements and corresponding drivers
| Year | JAG milestone | Driver(s) |
| 1994 | JAG established. | |
| 1999 | First JAG position statement: ‘ | |
| 2002 | First JAG committee meeting. | |
| 2003 | Development of endoscopy modernisation England – NHS endoscopy toolkit. | DoH support |
| 2004 | GRS piloted – part of NEP, aligned with JAG. | DoH support |
| ‘ | NCEPOD ‘Scoping Our Practice’ | |
| Early preparation for JAG QA visits. | DoH support | |
| 2005 | National endoscopy training programme established. | DoH support, SACs |
| Endoscopy GRS handover to JAG to underpin accreditation. | ||
| Bowel Cancer Screening Programme (BCSP). | ||
| 2006 | Endoscopy service accreditation commenced to coincide with BCSP. | |
| 2007 | BSG Quality and Safety Indicators for Endoscopy document released. | |
| 2008 | Gastrointestinal Endoscopy for Nurses programme commenced. | NEP |
| 2009 | Formal handover of NEP work and all outputs to JAG. | |
| Release of JETS e-Portfolio. | ||
| National Nurse Endoscopist project linked to training centres. | DoH support | |
| GRS introduced for private providers. | ||
| 2011 | JAG GRS released for use in New Zealand and Ireland. | |
| Electronic e-certification (diagnostic upper GI endoscopy, flexible sigmoidoscopy and colonoscopy). | 2nd National Colonoscopy Audit, | |
| First DOPyS. | ||
| 2013 | National Endoscopy Database project started. | |
| JAG formally take on administration and governance of BCSP accreditation from Public Health England. | ||
| Best Practice Tariff for JAG-accredited units. | DoH support | |
| BCSP Bowel Scope accreditation started. | ||
| 2016 | Updated Global Rating Scale census and JAG accreditation standards released. | |
| Updated DOPS forms and trainee certification criteria released. | ||
| 2017 | JAG Research Group formed. |
BCSP, Bowel Cancer Screening Programme; BSG, British Society of Gastroenterology; DoH, Department of Health; DOPS, direct observation of procedural skills; DOPyS, direct observation of polypectomy skills; GRS, Global Rating Scale; JAG, Joint Advisory Group on Gastrointestinal Endoscopy; JETS, JAG Endoscopy Training System; QA, quality assurance; NCEPOD, National Confidential Enquiry into Patient Outcome and Death; NEP, National Endoscopy Programme; SAC, Specialist Advisory Committee.
Figure 1The role of JAG.12 Courtesy of Dr John Anderson. BCSP, Bowel Cancer Screening Programme.
Figure 2JAG trainee certification pathway.12 Courtesy of Dr John Anderson. DOPS, direct observation of procedural skills; JAG, Joint Advisory Group on Gastrointestinal Endoscopy; KPIs, key performance indicators; QA, quality assurance.
The four GRS domains and their corresponding items
| Domains | Clinical quality | Quality of the patient experience | Workforce | Training of endoscopists |
| Items |
Leadership and organisation. Safety. Comfort. Quality. Appropriateness. Results. |
Respect and dignity. Consent process including patient information. Patient environment and equipment. Access and booking. Planning and productivity. Aftercare. Patient involvement. |
Teamwork. Workforce delivery. Professional development. |
Environment, training, opportunity and resources. Trainer allocation and skills. Assessment and appraisal. |
Figure 3JAG unit accreditation pathway. GRS, Global Rating Scale; JAG, Joint Advisory Group on Gastrointestinal Endoscopy; KMS, Knowledge Management System; QA, quality assurance.
Figure 4BCSP accreditation pathway.12 Courtesy of Dr John Anderson. BCSP, Bowel Cancer Screening Programme; DOPS, direct observation of procedural skills; DOPyS, direct observation of polypectomy skills; JAG, Joint Advisory Group on Gastrointestinal Endoscopy; MCQ, Multiple Choice Questionnaire; NHS, National Health Service.
Figure 5Results from the literature search.
Comparisons in colonoscopy KPIs between the two national colonoscopy audits
| Bowles | Gavin | |
| Year performed | 1999 | 2011 |
| Procedures | 9223 | 20 085 |
| Caecal intubation rate (%) | 76.9 | 92.3 |
| Polyp detection rate (%) | 22.5 | 32.1 |
| Conscious sedation (%) | 94.6 | 88.9 |
International use and involvement of JAG services (based on JAG International Committee minutes from July 2016) – courtesy of JAG office
| Nation | Level of interaction with JAG |
| Australia |
JAG are advising |
| Canada |
Services have permission to use offline version of DOPS forms. Implementation of Canadian GRS. |
| Hong Kong |
Implementation of nurse endoscopist bowel cancer screeners trained via JAG curriculum. |
| Iraq |
Benchmarking of Iraqi endoscopy services using GRS. |
| Ireland |
Services completed GRS census (36 public and 5 private endoscopy services registered with JAG). Majority of services working towards accreditation. Eight services accredited. |
| Malawi |
JAG supported training courses run in Malawi. |
| Netherlands |
Use of GRS tools. |
| New Zealand |
Services previously completed GRS census. On hold pending conversations with the Ministry of Health regarding future direction of work. |
| Norway |
Interest in GIN courses and e-Portfolio, with members of Norway screening programme attending a GIN training the nurse trainer course. |
| Poland |
JAG-based Training Colonoscopy Leaders Course. |
| Portugal |
JAG supported colonoscopy upskilling and Training and Trainer courses (2015). |
| Saudi Arabia |
King Abdullah Medical City Hospital leads approached JAG to ask about possibility of becoming JAG accredited. Conference call held to scope work and a proposal has been made to offer access to GRS and support via calls and documentation in the first instance. |
| Singapore |
Services have permission to use offline version of DOPS forms. |
| South Africa |
JAG supported colonoscopy upskilling and Training and Trainer courses (2015/2016). |
| Spain |
A trial version of the GRS was requested by Madrid Hospital and set up. |
| USA |
JAG setting up teleconference with representatives from the University of Colorado regarding EUS and ERCP training. |
EUS, Endoscopic Ultrasound; ERCP, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography; DOPS, direct observation of procedural skills; GIN, GI Endoscopy for Nurses; GRS, Global Rating Scale; JAG, Joint Advisory Group on Gastrointestinal Endoscopy.