The rise of ‘big data’ in medical research, including genetics, should help us understand more fully the natural history and prevalence of disorders and what can be expected from our interventions, and so help us counsel our patients. Obtaining data for accreditation and revalidation purposes is a bonus, but of secondary importance. Agreement on what data need to be collected prospectively for audit, research, billing and outcomes is not easy, and is compounded by communication difficulties between clinicians and administrative coding staff. This Journal of Laryngology & Otology issue contains an article that looks at septal surgery and nasal trauma patients, and the experience of a team who liaised closely with their coding team to identify and correct problems in communication and resulting errors.Reference Nouraei, Hudovsky, Virk and Saleh 1 The problems identified are likely to be widely applicable, not just to this patient group or this institution. This study complements articles in recent issues on the efficacy of common ENT proceduresReference Seymour 2 and wide data collection on quinsy management. 3
Myringoplasty outcomes nationally and in local centres has been a prominent topic in recent Journal editions.Reference Phillips, Yung and Nunney 4 , Reference Carr, Strachan and Raine 5 This month's issue contains an article investigating revision myringoplasty outcomes.Reference Prinsley 6 It showed that revision surgery and primary surgery had similar outcomes in that particular centre, which was helpful in that hospital when counselling patients pre-operatively.
Voice and swallowing problems in patients with Parkinson's disease crop up in the clinic occasionally, but the literature contains few sizeable series. This issue reports on a series of 13 patients from a tertiary voice clinic in Lewisham, which provides the basis for a strategy to help these often-neglected patients.Reference Gibbins, Awad, Harris and Aymat 7
Epistaxis is a major reason for acute admission to ENT wards, and the rise of anti-coagulation use in the management of cardiac disorders has exacerbated the problem. The article by Flood and colleagues in this issue examines every aspect of the evidence in relation to the use of endoscopic sphenopalatine artery ligation,Reference Ellinas, Jervis, Kenyon and Flood 8 which has become a mainstay of treatment, albeit with some variation in indications and in treatment algorithms. This analysis complements views from other recent Journal contributions on the topic.Reference Hall, Blanchford, Chatrath and Hopkins 9 , Reference Fox, Nash, Liu and Singh 10 A forthcoming Journal ‘virtual issue’ will focus on epistaxis.