NNAP Neurosurgical National Audit Programme

Hospital: ST GEORGE'S HOSPITAL

ST GEORGE'S UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS NHS FOUNDATION TRUST
Neurosurgical Unit
Trust Name ST GEORGE'S UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS NHS FOUNDATION TRUST
Hospital Name ST GEORGE'S HOSPITAL
Address Atkinson Morley Wing,
  St George's Hospital,
  LONDON
Post Code SW17 0QT
Telephone 020 8672 1255
Website URL https://www.stgeorges.nhs.uk/
Head Of Unit Mr Simon Stapleton
Hospital
Trust Name ST GEORGE'S UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS NHS FOUNDATION TRUST
Hospital Name ST GEORGE'S HOSPITAL
Address
 
Town/City
Post Code
Telephone
Website URL
Head Of Unit
Hospital
Consultants at this Unit
Unit Overview
The Department of Neurosurgery at St George's moved from the Atkinson Morley Hospital in Wimbledon to the St George's site in 2004 to the purpose-built Atkinson Morley Wing. It is one of the oldest departments in the UK. It is the neurosurgical unit to the major trauma centre, and provides neurosurgical care to emergency and elective patients, adults and children, from south-west London, Surrey and Sussex and further afield.
Clinical Services
Consultants and specialist interests:

Mr Francis JOHNSTON: Complex spine and vascular

Mr Simon STAPLETON: Oncology, anterior skull base / pituitary and paediatric neurosurgery

Mr Andrew MARTIN: Anterior skull base / pituitary, lateral skull base and oncology

Mr Pawan MINHAS: Complex spine and vascular

Professor Marios PAPADOPOULOS: Complex spine and vascular. Head of academic department

Mr Tim JONES: Oncology and facial pain

Miss Samantha HETTIGE: Paediatric neurosurgery

Mr Erlick PEREIRA: Functional / DBS and complex spine. Reader in the academic department

Mr Navneet SINGH: Oncology and paediatric neurosurgery


We currently have two locum consultants in the unit:

Mr Robert IORGA: Complex spine, vascular and skull base

Mr Mike HART: Functional / DBS


We are very sorry to say that Mr Matthew CROCKER died suddenly on January 27, 2022


Of the other consultants listed from HES data:

Professor B Anthony Bell: retired in 2015

Mr Henry Marsh: retired from clinical work in 2015

Mr James Laban: relocated to Sydney, Australia in 2018

Two previous locum consultants, Mr George ERALIL and Mr Bassam BABBOUS, moved on to other posts in 2016 and 2017 respectively.
Clinical Practice and Mortality
12 Month Practice (1 Year)


What does the Hospital Unit activity pie chart show?

The Hospital Unit activity pie charts represent the total procedures performed within elective (planned) Finished Consultant Episodes (FCEs) and non-elective (emergency) FCEs. An FCE is the time spent by a patient in the care of one consultant in one healthcare provider and there may be up to 24 procedures recorded for each FCE. The unit level pie charts are segmented to represent the proportion of cranial, spinal, and other procedures performed and, in addition, FCEs containing no procedures.


Please note that for Trusts which provide both adult services for patients aged 18 and older and paediatric services for patients aged 17 and younger, there will be two further pie charts showing elective and non-elective FCEs for their paediatric practice.


Activity Breakdown
Adult
Elective Non-Elective

Key

Cranial
No Procedure
Other
Spinal
Elective
Cranial No Procedure Other Spinal Total
512 174 267 617 1,570
Non Elective
Cranial No Procedure Other Spinal Total
495 359 467 245 1,566
Paediatric
Elective Non-Elective

Key

Cranial
No Procedure
Other
Spinal
Elective
Cranial No Procedure Other Spinal Total
45 11 30 13 99
Non Elective
Cranial No Procedure Other Spinal Total
54 40 54 9 157
36 Month Practice Profile (3 Years)


What does the Hospital Unit activity pie chart show?

The Hospital Unit activity pie charts represent the total procedures performed within elective (planned) Finished Consultant Episodes (FCEs) and non-elective (emergency) FCEs. An FCE is the time spent by a patient in the care of one consultant in one healthcare provider and there may be up to 24 procedures recorded for each FCE. The unit level pie charts are segmented to represent the proportion of cranial, spinal, and other procedures performed and, in addition, FCEs containing no procedures.


Please note that for Trusts which provide both adult services for patients aged 18 and older and paediatric services for patients aged 17 and younger, there will be two further pie charts showing elective and non-elective FCEs for their paediatric practice.


Activity Breakdown
Adult
Elective Non-Elective

Key

Cranial
No Procedure
Other
Spinal
Elective
Cranial No Procedure Other Spinal Total
1,567 508 871 2,040 4,986
Non Elective
Cranial No Procedure Other Spinal Total
1,542 836 1,261 801 4,440
Paediatric
Elective Non-Elective

Key

Cranial
No Procedure
Other
Spinal
Elective
Cranial No Procedure Other Spinal Total
120 23 58 36 237
Non Elective
Cranial No Procedure Other Spinal Total
165 87 139 20 411

Mortality – 30 Days

What does the Hospital Unit funnel plot chart show?

The mortality outcomes presented here are based on five years of data from April 2015 to March 2020. The analysis is based on adult elective surgery only which means that there will be no funnel plot displayed for any hospital that provides predominantly paediatric neurosurgical services, i.e. a children’s hospital.


Mortality
Adult
Paediatric

Mortality outcomes are based on adult elective surgery only and there are, therefore, no 30 day mortality outcomes available for this hospital. This may change in the future when a risk-adjusted methodology for paediatric outcomes has been developed.

Understanding the risk-adjusted mortality ratio

Risk adjustment (or case-mix adjustment) takes into account patient risk factors to calculate a predicted mortality ratio. This means that hospitals or consultants who see higher risk patients have their mortality rate adjusted to account for the factors that put these patients at greater risk.

Understanding the 'funnel plot'

The funnel plot displays the risk-adjusted elective procedural mortality ratio for each hospital, plotted against the expected number of mortalities for that hospital. The expected number of mortality events for each hospital will vary, dependent upon the number of procedures that have been performed and the risk profile of the patients they have been treated. The horizontal grey line represents the national average mortality ratio and the coloured lines the upper and lower 95% and 99.8% control limits. If a plot is above the upper 99.8% (blue) control line, the data is suggesting that the mortality ratio is higher than expected. Where plots are between that upper control limit and the lower control limit (yellow line), the mortality ratio is within the expected range. The hospital’s position is represented by the magenta-coloured plot.

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