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Written by a patient at Royal Shrewsbury Hospital
10th February 2019


I was admitted to the royal shrewsbury hospital under the care of Mr A Farquharson with acute complicated sigmoid diverticulitis, He explained everything to me his bedside manner was wonderful, he told me that i would be going theatre and to expect to have a stoma, Lucky for me he was able to perform a laparoscopy to identify the collection and drain this with a washout, You can imagine how thrilled i was, at the outcome, I wish to thank Mr Farquharson for his dedication and professional skills in his work, Oh by the way he has a wonderful handshake, Very Many Thanks Maureen Jones, Patient No 320599.

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Written by a patient at Royal Shrewsbury Hospital
9th January 2019


Straightforward and competent. He and the hospital did what they said they would. Promptly and efficiently.

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Written by a patient at Royal Shrewsbury Hospital
7th January 2019


Consultant saw me several times whilst I was a patient for 7 days in hospital and was very encouraging when I visited his clinic post operation. I felt completely at ease with him. When first diagnosed with bowel cancer he operated within 7 days of my consultation with him.

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Written by a patient at Royal Shrewsbury Hospital
3rd September 2018


As someone aged 68 years who had not hitherto had a serious illness in their entire life, and never been inside a hospital, it is difficult not to become quite emotional about the skills and sheer humanity of a surgeon who heads up a team which has given my family and me the prospect of their Grandpa's life stretching beyond three score years and ten. After an appointment with my GP on Friday 4th May, I was told an appointment would be made to see a consultant within 2 weeks, this became just 3 days. The following Monday was a Bank Holiday, but on the Tuesday Mr Farquharson's Secretary rang to say I could see him on Wednesday morning. I saw him without waiting, he examined me and gave me a letter and directions to walk through the hospital corridors to book a colonoscopy. The colonoscopy was two weeks later during the evening, but on examination I was told straight away I probably had colon cancer . This was on 23 May. After a series of phone calls I was given a CT scan on Bank Holiday Sunday afternoon in Shrewsbury and an MRI scan at Telford the following Wednesday. Mr Farquharson's Secretary then arranged an appointment to see him at Telford on Monday evening. He very calmly and in a completely reassuring manner explained all the results to hand to my wife and myself. When I asked what options I had for treatment he simply told us I was coming in for surgery a week on Friday and he would remove the cancer. I cannot explain how reassuring his certainty and matter-of-fact manner was to us, especially when he added that he would expect me to be fit for discharge after 3-5 days. I was so elated I forgot to have a moan about the £3 parking charge. A meeting with Mr F's. colorectal nurse specialists reiterated what would happen during surgery and afterwards, with the support we could draw on in recovery. During Pre-surgical assessment in Shrewsbury on the Monday before surgery, the team picked up a possible heart murmur. Again, the speed of action to book an echo-cardiogram at Telford was amazing, Telford rang the results through to Shrewsbury to say surgery could proceed and they rang me to reassure me, all within 2 hours. It is difficult to express my gratitude at this efficiency and the sense of confidence it conveys to someone under the stress of a cancer diagnosis. On the morning of the surgery Mr Farquharson met me at 7.30 and was thorough in explaining everything which would happen. I met the anaesthetist who basically told me the heart issue and blood pressure would not be a problem. I continued to feel calm and parted company with my wife, with Mr F. telling us he would phone her as soon as possible after surgery. Mr Farquharson came onto the ward in the afternoon to explain that the surgery had gone well, a stoma and bag had not been necessary and the colon had been sealed. .A total of 16 lymph nodes had been removed for examination. When my wife arrived she was so glad to have been phoned by Mr.F. immediately after the surgery. Medical schools can teach anatomy and surgical procedures but they cannot place into the individual personality the special something that conveys to patients "this guy is on your side and really cares about what happens to you". I also cannot speak highly enough for the care on the colorectal ward 27 at RSH. The nursing care was wonderful, dealing professionally with patients who were often very poorly, treating them with dignity and keeping a sense of humour under pressure. Finally, my most abiding memory of the 10 days I spent in hospital, was at 8am on the Wednesday after surgery, when sitting in my chair dozing, Mr Farquharson appeared before me as if by stealth, in his tracksuit, and very simply said "I have been into my office and your results are back, lymph nodes are clear, the cancer has gone, no chemo"... No formality, just checked his post and straight onto the ward to tell me. Back from first follow up appointment today, as self-effacing as usual, Mr Farquharson explained 5 year surveillance. He is a man with outstanding professional skills, supported by the pyramid of an outstanding team, all delivered within an environment where people matter. We are not supposed to get this level of service from our harassed NHS. I realise I have been lucky in meeting Mr Farquharson and his team, perhaps our politicians can enhance their endeavours by listening to what they need and get away from trying to apply accountancy limitations to what is at its best a service which meets people's needs.

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Written by a patient at Royal Shrewsbury Hospital
3rd September 2018


I have had more than one operation in my life but when it comes to colorectal surgery you want your surgeon to be good at what he does. If I ever have problems in the future I would not see any one else. Mr Farquharson has changed my life. I was so scared about the outcome of my operation but he put me at ease and explained things to me in full. I was still worried before I had the operation but I knew as soon as I came out of surgery I was so much better. Six weeks down the line I am a very happy patient who received such excellent care from my consultant, I want to shout from the roof tops... if anyone is scared to be referred for colorectal surgery, don't be. The NHS offers patient choice and you can ask to see the consultant you prefer.

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Profile

Mr Adam Farquharson is a Consultant Colorectal Surgeon at Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust (SaTH) having graduated from the University of Sheffield and completing higher surgical training in the Yorkshire and the Humber Deanery.

He has a specialist interest in robotic colorectal surgery including colorectal cancer, pelvic floor dysfunction (including faecal incontinence. obstructive defecation syndrome and rectal prolapse) and complex anal fistulas. He also has a general, emergency and colorectal surgery practice incorporating the management of proctology including haemorrhoids, anal fistula and anal fissure.

He undertook a specialist laparoscopic colorectal Fellowship at Concord Repatriation General Hospital in Sydney, Australia (2012-13) and was awarded the Ethicon Endo-Surgery David Dunn Memorial travelling fellowship to support this period of specialist laparoscopic colorectal training.

In the later stages of training he completed a postgraduate degree in education at the University of Sheffield (Masters of Education) with his thesis examining the video assessment of surgical skills. He is an Educational Supervisor for Foundation Doctors, Core Trainees and Speciality Trainees at SaTH . He is a Fellow of the Faculty of Surgical Trainers of the RCS Edinburgh and Faculty for the NOTSS group. He is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (HEA).

Mr Farquharson is the current TPD - Professional Development at the NHS England West Midlands School of Surgery and a member of the National General Surgery Specialist Advisory Committee and ISCP link.

He is Clinical Director for Gastrointestinal Surgery and a core member of the Pelvic Floor multidisciplinary team at SaTH