Region leads way with tech-led bowel cancer screening
THE West Midlands has become the first region to screen people for bowel cancer in their pharmacy or at home using a so-called ‘pill cam’.
Screening people in their own community rather than in hospital will help to significantly cut waiting times and speed up lifesaving diagnoses.
It is expected that 2,000 people will use the new colon capsule endoscopy service (CCE) across the West Midlands in its first year and cut waiting times cut from 30 weeks to just two.
The rollout of ‘pill cam’ is the first time this innovative, clinically proven screening technology will be available to residents in Birmingham and Solihull.
It will also significantly increase bowel cancer screening capacity in Coventry and Warwickshire and follows successful trials led by University Hospital Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust and WM5G.
This is the first part of the pioneering £10 million Levelling Up Smart City Region programme led by the West Midlands Combined Authority (WMCA).
The programme sets out to use cutting-edge wireless technology to help revolutionise the way healthcare is delivered within local communities and aligns closely with plans to increase NHS productivity
set out in last week’s Budget.
The NHS Productivity Plan focuses on three key areas: transforming access and services for patients, using data to reduce time spent on unproductive administrative tasks, and updating fragmented and outdated IT systems.
Through the Smart City Region programme, the West Midlands is already leading the way in all three areas, rolling out CCE, developing an exemplar hospital that addresses issues around capacity and flow, and trialling the use of AI and data to improve primary-care tasks and measure-intervention outcomes for conditions such as diabetes.
Pill cam will significantly cut waiting times and speed up lifesaving diagnoses by screening people for cancer in their local pharmacy, at home or in other community settings. WM5G, which is part of the WMCA, leading health-tech innovation, has partnered with Corporate Health International (CHI) to provide the pillcam service and will work in close partnership with the NHS Birmingham & Solihull and Coventry & Warwickshire Integrated Care Boards to deliver the screening.
In addition to colon capsule endoscopy, the WMCA will also be expanding prevention, remote monitoring and smart hospital services.
This will help more people stay healthy and in work, avoid being admitted to hospital or get discharged faster and be supported to live at home for longer.
Dr Adil Butt, consultant gastroenterologist and clinical service lead for endoscopy at Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, said: “Adopting clinically proven and remotely available technologies, such as CCE, enables both quicker diagnosis by streamlining existing referral pathways and releases valuable extra capacity within existing systems.
“This makes the diagnostic process more convenient for all, bringing previously hospital-based specialist care closer to patients by delivering screening services in their local community. This vital extra capacity comes at a critical time when the UK is facing a significant diagnostic backlog.”