Since the implementation of the CLEAR programme in December 2022, a team of specialists from SingHealth, including Drs Tan Ru Yu and Pang Suh Chien, both senior consultants with the department of renal medicine at Singapore General Hospital, and Dr Charles Ng, an associate consultant with the renal medicine department at Changi General Hospital, have trained more than 100 National Kidney Foundation nurses on the catheter unblocking procedure.
The programme has also expanded with the integration of other major hospitals in Singapore, including Changi General Hospital, Alexandra Hospital, Khoo Teck Puat Hospital, National University Hospital, Ng Teng Fong General Hospital, Sengkang General Hospital and Tan Tock Seng Hospital.
“With the right-siting of care, patients can receive treatment for their blocked catheters at the dialysis centre they go to and proceed with dialysis at the centre right after without having to make their way to the hospital,” noted Tan, who co-leads the programme with Associate Professor Jason Choo, a senior consultant also with the renal medicine department at the Singapore General Hospital, and medical director at the National Kidney Foundation.
While patients with increased risk of bleeding will continue to be referred to a hospital emergency department, the new health service comes as a timely and impactful solution to the nation’s rapidly-expanding dialysis community, which grows by about six patients every day.
Even with this caveat, the programme has eased the pressure on hospital systems. “The partnership with the National Kidney Foundation has enabled the hospital (and other hospitals) to focus on complex cases requiring immediate attention,” pointed out Tan.
The SGH-NKF partnership is supported by the National Improvement Unit as an initiative under the Ministry of Health’s National Diabetes Collaborative.
Adapted by Sruthi Jagannathan from SingHealth News (CLEARing catheter blockages at dialysis centres - SingHealth)