NHS Digital has published statistics on vaginal mesh procedures

21

May 2018

The report “Retrospective Review of Surgery for Urogynaecological Prolapse and Stress Urinary Incontinence using Tape or Mesh: Hospital Episode Statistics (HES), Experimental Statistics, April 2008 - March 2017” has been produced by NHS Digital, to investigate activity, summarised within Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) data, for the NHS, in England, of patients who have had a urogynaecological procedure for the treatment of urogynaecological prolapse or stress urinary incontinence, including those where mesh, tape or their equivalents have been used. The HES data warehouse contains details of all admissions, outpatient appointments and accident and emergency (A&E) attendances at NHS hospitals in England. This report covers the period from April 2008 to March 2017, using Admitted Patient Care and Outpatient data.

Key findings in the report include:

  • Between 2008/09 and 2016/17, 100,516 patients had a reported tape insertion procedure for stress urinary incontinence and 27,016 patients had a reported mesh insertion procedure for urogynaecological prolapse.
  • In 2016/17 there were 7,245 patients who had an insertion for this procedure and 2,680 patients who had an insertion for this procedure, which is a reduction of 48 and 13 per cent, respectively, from 2008/09.
  • For patients who had a removal procedure more than 30 days after their initial insertion, the highest rate of readmissions occurs in the reporting year following the insertion.

See full details here.

Subscribe to our newsletter delivered every second week not to miss important reimbursement information.

The latest related news

21

Mar 2022

The NHS Insights Prioritisation Programme (NIPP) is commissioned by the NHS Accelerated Access Collaborative (AAC) and the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR). It is designed to accelerate the evaluation and implementation of innovation that supports post-pandemic ways of working, builds service resilience, and delivers benefits to patients. Fourteen projects have been funded and have now commenced activity that will be ongoing until March 2023.

Read more

14

Mar 2022

In February 2021, the Clinical Coding and Schedule Development (CCSD) working group, which develops and maintains procedural and diagnostics nomenclature for private payers in England, published Bulletins 0182 and 0079 with changes to be implemented no later than April 10, 2022. Three new procedure codes concerned robotic surgery in orthopaedic area, spinal procedures, and ophthalmology, and five new diagnostic codes were introduced.

Read more

01

Mar 2022

On February 04, 2022, NHSX announced merging with NHS Digital into the new Transformation Directorate at NHS England. NHSX's mission will remain the same - to drive the digital transformation of the NHS and social care.

Read more

16

Feb 2022

On February 02, 2022, NHS England updated the 2021/22 National Genomic Test Directory for rare and inherited diseases, initially published in October 2021. No new codes were introduced. Amendments were made in 77 codes, including changing the test method, commissioning category, specialist group.

Read more

11

Feb 2022

A new multi-agency advisory service (MAAS) is currently under development by the National Institute of Health and Care Excellence (NICE). This new cross-regulatory service will be a “one-stop-shop” for support, information, and guidance on the regulation and evaluation of AI technologies. The launch of the new service is scheduled for summer 2022.

Read more