The UK and the world's leading #colorectalsurgery journal. Official journal @ACPGBI @escp_tweets @AECP_FAECP. Impact factor: 3.92 (2021). Editor @stevebrownshef
Patients' views on the timing of their first ileocolic resection for terminal ileal Crohn's disease: over 40% have surgery far too late! @stevebrownsheff@ColorectalDis https://t.co/l2IxH3ZeRE
🔪📽️Join our first #CoDiMovieNights feature! 📽️🔪 Every Thursday evening we will be dipping into the @ColorectalDis video channel and would love to hear your thoughts on our content.
Watch our first full video here: https://t.co/tOHSRWtODf
#Colorectaldisease#CoDiMovieNights
🚀 New Colorectal Disease SoMe Team
Under the guidance of Editor-in-Chief Steven Brown we’re launching a refreshed social media strategy for the journal.
👥 Meet the SoMe Advisory Group https://t.co/lCOS7zw3la
📅 Discover our new weekly agenda
#ColorectalDisease#SoMe4Surgery
Plenty of doctors promote bad information online.
Certainty does not equal expertise.
I learned long ago that it's better to provide good information that try to battle bad information, so I humbly offer this level 1 evidence on the safety and efficacy of colonoscopy:
1. Colonoscopy is safe, and the risk of perforation during screening is 3.1 per 10,000, or 0.031%. If you are that unlucky 1 in 3,226 people, the risk of it killing you is less than 5%
Source: https://t.co/XREVXOYGhf
2. Colonoscopy reduces your chance of getting colorectal cancer, and it reduces your chance of dying from colorectal cancer. In fact, there's a 68% reduction in CRC mortality with colonoscopy.
Source: https://t.co/9rqtHDCJUW
I try my best to ignore physicians who use twitter to promote pseudoscience and generate traffic to their websites, but it's Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month, so I feel obligated to share my thoughts.
Be the voice of the next generation in colorectal publishing
Join our Early Career Editorial Board: review, outreach, content, strategy
Deadline: October 10th👇
https://t.co/fjkmmSGiRd
Long‐term perineal wound healing and re‐operation rates after proctectomy in patients with inflammatory bowel disease—A retrospective multicentre study https://t.co/fHngezGWsg @ColorectalDis OPEN ACCESS @ACPGBI@escp_tweets@coloproctoaec
🎉 Big cheers to all who passed the @EBSQcolo Exam in Paris (Sept 12–13, 2025)! 🥂
Welcome to the club of EBSQ-certified Colorectal Surgeons 🚀
Came for the exams, left as champions — a career milestone unlocked! 🚀
https://t.co/qpQVmeqWyt
The #ACPGBI2025 abstracts are now published in @ColorectalDis
A huge thank you to everyone who submitted their work & presented at the @ACPGBI Annual Meeting in Harrogate
🔗 https://t.co/5CV3IHsS6S
#OpenAccess
@jdcamcolorectal
@MissLHancock
Clinical Frailty Scale predicts overall survival after colon cancer surgery in people aged 80 years and older: A prospective multicentre observational study - Niemeläinen https://t.co/ZSNHLH0gkl @ColorectalDis@escp_tweets@ACPGBI@coloproctoaec open access from 🇫🇮
PAVFCOS: The development of a core outcome set for pouch anal and vaginal fistula https://t.co/ZLqOngAgS5 pleased to have participated in this open access @ColorectalDis study @escp_tweets@coloproctoaec@ACPGBI