This article was originally published as: Nurses’ experience establishing a nurse‑led bladder cancer surveillance flexible cystoscopy service
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Abstract
Objective: The aim of this article is to describe and evaluate the processes involved in setting up a nurse‑led bladder cancer surveillance flexible cystoscopy service.
Setting: Day Surgery Unit, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.
Subjects: Registered nurses, follow‑up bladder cancer patients and the urological team.
Primary argument: As a result of inefficiencies in current practice including, waiting times, utilisation of doctors’ time, poor documentation and communication and patients being lost to follow‑up the existing system for bladder cancer surveillance was questioned.
Conclusion: This experience has resulted in the creation of a training‑tool with competencies, patient pathways, guidelines and protocols. In turn there was a noticeable reduction in waiting times and improved communication and documentation resulting in a robust nurse‑ led bladder cancer surveillance service.
Authors
- Kathryn Chatterton
- Pat Bugeja
- Benjamin Challacombe
- Paul Anderson
- Anthony Costello
Keywords
bladder cancer surveillance, flexible cystoscopy, nurse cystoscopist, training tool, consent
References
References not available for this article.

