NETS
NET-S is administered by the Australian Safety and Efficacy Register
of New Interventional Procedures - Surgical (ASERNIP-S) in conjunction
with the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons, and is a member of the
Australian and New Zealand Horizon Scanning Network.
As a result of recent collaboration with the Australian and New
Zealand Horizon Scanning Network (see background), classification of
surgical procedures assessed and listed within the NET-S Database have
changed. Surgical procedures detected through the horizon scanning
process are now assessed via Horizon Scanning Technology Prioritising
Summaries and Horizon Scanning Reports. Surgical procedures that have
more widespread use in Australia, or that are already established into
routine surgical practice, are assessed via Accelerated Systematic
Reviews, Systematic Reviews or Technology Overviews.
Assessments of surgical procedures are still available through the
NET-S Database, but new assessment reports are now also available
through our new publications page.
About the Net-S Database of Procedures
NET-S was developed with the aim of providing an early warning system
for identification of new and emerging surgical techniques and
technologies prior to their introduction into routine clinical practice.
NET-S has developed unique methodologies to improve the horizon scanning
process, particularly in the area of surgery.
This is occurring through the following strategies:
- direct communication with Fellows of the Royal Australasian College
of Surgeons
- close surveillance of abstracts presented at relevant specialty
meetings
- ongoing searching of the literature describing new techniques and
technologies
- establishing links with key players and targeting other appropriate
groups, such as medical device manufacturers
- soliciting input from surgeons, consumers and other relevant groups
via this website.
Each procedure in the database is assigned one of the following
classifications:
-
Horizon Scanning Technology Prioritising Summary
Short (approximately two to three pages) reports that provide a summary
of new and emerging surgical technologies or techniques which can be
used as a basis for deciding if a procedure should be further assessed,
monitored in a further 12 months or archived. If further assessment is
required on a procedure which is yet to emerge or is emerging into
Australian healthcare following a prioritising summary, then it would be
recommended for a Horizon Scanning Report. Horizon Scanning Technology
Prioritising Summaries are available on request.
-
Horizon Scanning Report
Reports that assess surgical technologies or techniques that are new or
emerging into Australian healthcare. Completed Horizon Scanning Reports
are available on this website.
-
Accelerated Systematic Review
Accelerated systematic reviews assess surgical procedures that have more
widespread use in Australia, and generally have more peer-reviewed
information available, than a Horizon Scanning Report. Accelerated
systematic reviews are produced in response to a need for a systematic
summary and appraisal of available literature for a new or emerging
surgical procedure. This need may arise if the uptake of the new
technique or technology appears to be inappropriate given the evidence
available at the time (it may be diffusing too quickly or too slowly).
Alternatively, there may be uncertainty or controversy regarding the
clinical or cost effectiveness of the new procedure, or there may be
significant concerns regarding its safety or indications for use in
particular populations. Accelerated systematic reviews use the same
methodology as full systematic reviews, but may restrict the types of
studies considered (for example, by only including comparative studies
and not case series) in order to produce the review in a shorter time
period than a full systematic review. Completed Accelerated Systematic
Reviews are available on this website.
-
Systematic Review
Systematic reviews assess surgical procedures through the use of a
clearly formulated question using systematic and explicit methods to
identify, critically appraise and summarise relevant studies (published
and unpublished) according to predetermined criteria. Reported outcomes
can be synthesised either quantitatively or narratively or can include
meta-analysis to statistically analyse and summarise the results of the
included studies. Systematic reviews are fundamental tools for
decision-making by health professionals, consumers and policy makers, as
they provide conclusions based on research evidence. Completed
Systematic Reviews are available on this website.
-
Technology Overview
Technology overviews aim to provide information to assist
decision-makers to make their own evidence-based recommendations. The
technology overview is not a systematic review, and does not attempt to
compare the safety and efficacy of a single intervention and provide a
recommendation for use.
-
Awaiting Review
Nominated surgical procedures that are already established into routine
surgical practice and will be prioritisied for review by ASERNIP-S.
-
Under Review
Nominated surgical procedures being reviewed by ASERNIP-S.
© Royal Australasian College of Surgeons. All rights reserved.
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