Otago Daily Times

SDHB prepared and keen to begin bowel screening

- MIKE HOULAHAN Health reporter mike.houlahan@odt.co.nz

THE southern region is so prepared to implement the national bowel screening programme that it could have started yesterday, programme leader Jason Hill says.

‘‘I’ve been confident for a couple of years that we were able to do this,’’ Dr Hill said,

‘‘The only reason we’re waiting is because the new colonoscop­y unit is not quite ready, but if we had to go today that wouldn’t be an issue.’’

The screening programme will begin at the end of April — comfortabl­y ahead of the Ministry of Health deadline of the end of June.

Bowel cancer generally strikes people over 60, with European males most commonly afflicted by the disease.

The Southern DHB region has more elderly and Europeans than most other parts of New Zealand, meaning it has one of the highest rates of bowel cancer in the country.

Early results suggest 7% of people who have a followup colonoscop­y after a positive test will actually have cancer.

‘‘In the first year, we are expecting an additional 50 to 80 cancers being diagnosed,’’ Dr Hill said.

‘‘However, we have a test which diagnoses people with premaligna­nt problems, which is different from something like breast screening where with mammograph­y you are diagnosing breast cancer.

‘‘We are diagnosing polyps which can be removed before they even become cancers, so you can see what the benefit might be for that individual in 10 to 15 years’ time.’’

Dr Hill anticipate­d 60% of people invited to take part in the screening programme would do so, but with the high level of interest in the disease in the region he had planned for a response rate of up to 80%.

Although most people screened by the programme would not have the disease, for those who did the nature of the test meant an early diagnosis could not only be a lifesaver but also a lifechange­r, Dr Hill said.

‘‘People who get bowel cancer but who may not die will still have to go through a surgery, have chemothera­py, radiothera­py, a significan­t amount of interventi­on which impacts on their quality of life over a long period of time before they are back on the road to recovery again.

‘‘Not only do we save lives, but we also save all of that associated cost which goes with a bowel cancer diagnosis.’’

The rollout of the national screening programme has not been without controvers­y, and an inquiry is now examining issues which arose in the trial programme in Waitemata where some people missed out on their invitation to take part.

‘‘I think all advertisin­g is good advertisin­g to some extent, and if it raises awareness in individual­s and the region to make sure their details are up to date with the general practice or the organisati­on, then that all bodes well for us,’’ Dr Hill said.

New staff. including a senior medical officer, nursing and administra­tion staff have almost all been employed, and work is ongoing to cope with the anticipate­d rise in colonoscop­ies which will need to be carried out after a positive bowel cancer test.

Complicati­on rates from colonoscop­y in the pilot screening scheme were ‘‘exceedingl­y small’’ Dr Hill said, and quality of care for anyone undergoing the procedure would be excellent.

‘‘The colonoscop­y should be pretty routine stuff for my team, who do these every day.’’

Dr Hill has been liaising closely with doctors across the

region, and has had 35 hours of general practice meetings in the past month to ensure all primary health profession­als know the programme is about to start.

‘‘We did 19 meetings across the entire district . . . everybody in the district who is a GP should know who I am.’’

 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? At the ready . . . Dr Jason Hill, clinical lead of the Southern District Health Board’s bowel screening programme.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED At the ready . . . Dr Jason Hill, clinical lead of the Southern District Health Board’s bowel screening programme.

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