Prehab for Cardiff and Vale cancer patients cuts hospital stay

Jenny ReesWales health correspondent

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Some cancer patients who followed special exercise, diet and wellbeing plans before surgery could be moved from palliative care and be considered for curative surgery

Cancer patients who followed special exercise, diet and wellbeing plans before surgery spent on average three fewer days in hospital, according to new research.

In some cases patients could be moved from palliative care and be considered for curative surgery, such were the improvements to their health as a result of the programme.

Public Health Wales evaluated the “prehab2rehab” scheme run at Cardiff and Vale health board, which was mainly offered to patients who needed surgery for colorectal cancer.

It recommended the programme be rolled out to patients diagnosed with all cancers, right across Wales.

The Welsh government has been asked to comment.

While similar prehabilitation schemes are available across Wales once a person is diagnosed with cancer, this scheme also enabled GPs to refer patients onto the programme from the moment cancer was suspected and offered support until the day of surgery.

The report heard some patients found the prospect of “yet another” appointment overwhelming, but others said the sessions gave them a sense of purpose and control over their diagnosis, building strong social connections with others going through similar experiences.

The sessions included access to dietary advice, specialist pharmacies, cardiology clinics and psychological therapy, depending on the patient’s needs, though the report said a greater focus on rehabilitation could ensure lifestyle changes were sustained following treatment.

Deputy head of evaluation at Public Health Wales, Dr Esther Mugweni, said: “By reducing time spent in hospital, the programme not only supports patients, but also has the potential wider benefit to NHS resources.”

The report suggested a reduced length of stay could lead to improved patient flow and greater capacity for planned care within the NHS, where waiting lists remain a significant challenge.

It recommended the scheme be spread to all cancer patients across Wales.

Chair of the Wales Cancer Alliance, Lowri Griffiths, said this provided even more evidence of the benefits to prehabilitation sessions.

“This is incredibly important if people are to also undergo other treatments like chemotherapy or radiotherapy.

“Going into treatment as healthy as possible means you are likely to have a better outcome – it’s vital that we take this learning and apply it across all health boards in Wales so that patients can benefit wherever they are.”

Exercise classes were provided at leisure centres and gyms, and patients who participated in three or more sessions spent around three days fewer in hospital, following surgery, compared to those who did not do the classes.

In Wales each month just under 2,000 people typically start treatment for a first cancer – figures are not routinely published for those starting treatment for a cancer which has returned or spread.

The report acknowledged limitations in its findings, as the majority of patients had one type of cancer, and staff were concerned that few patients from ethnic minority communities engaged with the scheme. However, it said the impact on the length of post-operative stay was promising.

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