Clinical Specialty Guide

Endoscopy Nursing
in GCC Countries

High-volume day-case specialty with excellent pay, no night shifts in most units, fascinating procedures, and rising demand driven by GCC's growing GI disease burden.

70%
H. pylori prevalence
in some GCC populations
AED 15K
Top ERCP scrub nurse
salary in UAE
07:00
Typical start time —
home by early afternoon
CGRN
Gold-standard GI nursing
certification (SGNA)
5–6
Cases per list —
structured workload

GCC GI Disease Landscape

The GCC has one of the highest burdens of gastrointestinal disease in the world, driven by diet, lifestyle change, and unique epidemiology — creating constant demand for skilled endoscopy nurses.

🦠
H. pylori — Very High Prevalence
Prevalence reaches 60–70% in certain GCC populations. Routine CLO testing (urease test) during OGD is standard. Eradication therapy and follow-up endoscopy create high case volume.
🎗️
Colorectal Cancer
Saudi Arabia has the highest colorectal cancer rate in the Arab world. National screening programmes are expanding in UAE, Saudi, and Qatar — driving colonoscopy volume significantly.
🩸
Upper GI Bleeding
High NSAID use for musculoskeletal pain, combined with H. pylori and peptic ulcer disease, makes upper GI bleeding a common emergency endoscopy indication across all GCC countries.
🔥
GERD — Epidemic Levels
Very high prevalence linked to late-night eating, spicy food, obesity, and carbonated drink consumption. Barrett's oesophagus surveillance endoscopy is increasing as a result.
🍚
NAFLD / MASLD
Fatty liver disease is at epidemic levels in GCC due to high-carbohydrate/sugar diets and sedentary lifestyles. Upper GI and liver-related endoscopy (varices, hepatology) is growing rapidly.
🌿
IBD — Rapidly Rising
Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis were historically rare in GCC but are rising sharply with westernisation. IBD surveillance colonoscopy and ileoscopy are increasingly common.

Top GI & Endoscopy Centres in GCC

🇸🇦
King Faisal Specialist Hospital
Riyadh — advanced ERCP, EUS, IBD centre
🇶🇦
Hamad Medical Corporation
Qatar — national GI & endoscopy services
🇦🇪
Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi
Abu Dhabi — JCI accredited, full GI suite
🇦🇪
American Hospital Dubai
Dubai — high-volume private endoscopy unit

Endoscopy Procedures

From routine gastroscopy to complex ERCP and advanced therapeutics — endoscopy nurses assist across the full spectrum of gastrointestinal procedures.

🔭 Upper GI Endoscopy (OGD / Gastroscopy)

The most common endoscopy procedure in GCC. Involves passage of a flexible endoscope through the mouth, oesophagus, stomach, and duodenum. Performed under conscious sedation or topical pharyngeal anaesthesia.

Diagnostic Indications:

  • Dyspepsia, reflux, epigastric pain investigation
  • Dysphagia — assess for stricture or malignancy
  • Unexplained anaemia — check for GI blood loss
  • H. pylori testing (CLO/urease test on antral biopsy)
  • Barrett's oesophagus surveillance
  • Coeliac disease biopsy (duodenal mucosa)

Therapeutic Indications:

  • Varices banding — band ligation of oesophageal varices
  • Haemostasis — adrenaline injection, clips, APC for bleeding
  • PEG insertion (percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy)
  • Oesophageal dilatation — balloon or Savary dilator
  • Polypectomy of gastric or duodenal polyps
  • Foreign body removal
ℹ️ Nursing key: Ensure topical lignocaine spray (10%) applied to oropharynx if no sedation. Lateral positioning of patient, suction ready, bite guard in place. Monitor swallowing and gag post-procedure before oral intake.

🔬 Lower GI Endoscopy (Colonoscopy)

Examination of the entire large bowel from rectum to caecum (and terminal ileum if ileoscopy performed). Requires full bowel preparation. The cornerstone of colorectal cancer screening programmes now launching across GCC.

Indications:

  • Colorectal cancer screening (age 45–50 start in GCC guidelines)
  • Change in bowel habits / rectal bleeding investigation
  • IBD surveillance (UC, Crohn's colitis)
  • Polyp surveillance after previous polypectomy
  • Anaemia of unknown origin
  • Diarrhoea — biopsy for microscopic colitis

Therapeutic:

  • Polypectomy — cold snare, hot snare, piecemeal
  • Haemostasis — clips, APC for bleeding
  • Colonic stent insertion for malignant obstruction
  • Balloon dilatation of strictures
  • Biopsy of mucosal lesions throughout colon
  • Sigmoid volvulus decompression
⚠️ Bowel prep adequacy: Assess preparation quality using Boston Bowel Preparation Scale or describe using Bristol scale analogy. Inadequate prep (score <6) may require repeat procedure. Document carefully.

🩻 ERCP (Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography)

The most complex endoscopy procedure requiring a side-viewing duodenoscope. Combines endoscopy with fluoroscopy to visualise and treat the bile ducts and pancreatic duct. Requires a specially trained scrub nurse — highest paid endoscopy role.

Diagnostic:

  • Choledocholithiasis (bile duct stones) — biliary obstruction
  • Malignant biliary stricture — stent insertion for palliation
  • Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) assessment
  • Pancreatic duct pathology — chronic pancreatitis, IPMN

Therapeutic:

  • Sphincterotomy — opening sphincter of Oddi
  • Stone extraction — balloon sweep, Dormia basket
  • Biliary stent insertion — plastic or SEMS (self-expanding)
  • Pancreatic stent insertion
  • Nasobiliary drain placement

Key Complications (Post-ERCP Monitor):

  • Post-ERCP pancreatitis — most common (3–5%). Amylase at 6h post-procedure
  • Perforation — retroperitoneal or duodenal
  • Bleeding — post-sphincterotomy haemorrhage
  • Cholangitis — fever, jaundice, RUQ pain (Charcot's triad)
  • Contrast reaction — rare but monitor
🚨 Post-ERCP: monitor amylase/lipase at 6h, observe for abdominal pain, fever, jaundice. Keep nil-by-mouth until pain-free and tolerating fluids.

🔊 EUS (Endoscopic Ultrasound)

Combines endoscopy with high-frequency ultrasound probe at the tip of the scope to visualise structures beyond the GI wall — lymph nodes, pancreas, bile ducts, liver, adrenals. Highly specialised nursing role.

Indications:

  • Pancreatic mass staging and FNA (fine needle aspiration)
  • Submucosal lesion assessment (GIST, carcinoid)
  • Lymph node sampling for staging
  • Bile duct stone detection
  • Coeliac plexus neurolysis for pain management
  • Cyst drainage (EUS-guided pseudocyst)

Nursing Specialisation:

  • Handle EUS scope (larger, more fragile than standard endoscope)
  • Prepare FNA needles (22G, 25G) — flush with saline
  • Pass cytology slides or cell-block containers to cytopathologist (rapid on-site evaluation)
  • EUS-guided therapy: coeliac block, drainage procedures
  • Deeper sedation often required — TIVA/propofol common

💊 Capsule Endoscopy

A wireless capsule (the size of a large vitamin pill) containing a camera, light source, battery, and transmitter. Swallowed by the patient — travels through the entire small bowel over 8 hours. Primary use: small bowel investigation (missed by OGD and colonoscopy).

Indications:

  • Obscure GI bleeding — small bowel source
  • Crohn's disease assessment of small bowel extent
  • Small bowel tumour / polyp detection
  • Coeliac disease follow-up

Nursing Role:

  • Full bowel prep (clear fluids 24h + laxative) for best image quality
  • Apply sensor belt / electrode patches to abdomen
  • Initialise PillCam or Olympus capsule — confirm activation (flashing)
  • Educate patient: no food for 2h, light meal at 4h, avoid MRI during recording
  • Download data after 8–10h, prepare for gastroenterologist review
  • Contraindicated in known strictures / swallowing difficulty

⚡ Advanced Therapeutic Endoscopy

Complex procedures beyond standard polypectomy — requires experienced therapeutic endoscopy nurses familiar with specialised equipment and longer procedure times.

EMR (Endoscopic Mucosal Resection):

  • Lifts lesion with submucosal injection (saline ± adrenaline ± dye)
  • Snare resection of lifted mucosa en bloc or piecemeal
  • Nurse role: prepare injection needles, appropriate dye (indigo carmine, methylene blue), ensure diathermy settings correct
  • Haemostasis clips, APC on standby

ESD (Endoscopic Submucosal Dissection):

  • En bloc resection of large flat lesions — technically demanding
  • Longer procedure (1–3+ hours)
  • Specialised ESD knives: IT knife, Flush knife, Hook knife
  • CO2 insufflation mandatory to reduce perforation risk
  • Higher complication rate — nurse must be expert in haemostasis

Equipment Nurse Must Know:

  • Olympus ESG-300 or similar electrosurgical generator settings
  • Endocut, Forced Coag, Spray Coag mode differences
  • CO2 insufflation pump setup (Olympus UCR)
  • Haemostatic forceps (coagrasper) vs standard biopsy forceps
  • Transparent cap attachment — essential for ESD
  • Specimen retrieval: retrieval net, specimen board, pinning technique for histopathology orientation

🫁 Bronchoscopy (Airway Endoscopy)

Although bronchoscopy is primarily a respiratory/pulmonology procedure, many endoscopy units in GCC house bronchoscopy suites alongside GI suites. Endoscopy-trained nurses frequently cross-over to assist with bronchoscopy.

Indications:

  • Haemoptysis investigation
  • Pulmonary mass / mediastinal lymph node biopsy (EBUS)
  • BAL (bronchoalveolar lavage) for infection
  • Foreign body removal from airway
  • Endobronchial tumour treatment

Cross-Training Points for GI Endoscopy Nurses:

  • Bronchoscope is narrower and longer than GI scope — handle differently
  • Topical lignocaine (4%) to airway — nurse prepares and administers under protocol
  • Higher oxygen requirements — ensure nasal cannula or mask O2 running throughout
  • Reprocessing: same AER process as GI scopes but bronchoscope channel sizes differ — check brush size
  • SpO2 and ETCO2 monitoring critical throughout

Clinical Skills for Endoscopy Nurses

Endoscopy nursing demands a precise technical skillset across patient preparation, sedation monitoring, specimen handling, and equipment management.

💊 Bowel Preparation — Patient Instructions & Assessment +

Bowel prep is critical for colonoscopy quality — inadequate preparation is the most common reason for repeat procedures and missed lesions.

Common Preparations Used in GCC:

  • Sodium Picosulphate (Picolax / Picoprep): Two sachets — first evening before, second morning of procedure. Mix in 150ml water. Patient must drink 2–3L clear fluids. Popular in UAE and Qatar private centres.
  • Polyethylene Glycol — High Volume (Klean-Prep / GoLYTELY): 4L consumed over 4–6h the day before. Less palatable but highly effective. Preferred in IBD patients and those with slow transit.
  • Polyethylene Glycol — Low Volume (Moviprep / Plenvu): 2L + 1L clear fluids. Better tolerated. Split-dose (evening before + morning of) gives best results.
  • Magnesium Citrate: Used occasionally in combination with dietary restriction.

Dietary Restriction (Day Before Procedure):

  • Low-residue diet: white rice, white bread, eggs, fish, chicken — NO vegetables, fruits, seeds, high-fibre foods
  • Clear fluids from midday: water, clear apple juice, clear broth, black tea/coffee, jelly (not red/purple)
  • Nil by mouth from midnight (or 6h pre-procedure)

Assessing Adequacy of Prep (Bristol Stool Scale):

  • Type 6–7 (watery/liquid, yellow-clear) = excellent preparation ✓
  • Type 5 (soft blobs) = adequate but borderline
  • Type 3–4 (formed stool present) = inadequate — consider rescheduling or rescue prep enemas

Boston Bowel Prep Scale (BBPS): Scores 0–9 (3 segments × 0–3). Score ≥6 with no segment score 0 = adequate for colonoscopy to proceed.

💉 Conscious Sedation Administration & Monitoring +

Sedation in GCC endoscopy: Practice varies by country and facility. UAE/Qatar private hospitals often use anaesthesiologist-administered propofol (TIVA). Saudi government hospitals may use nurse-administered midazolam/fentanyl under physician direction.

Common Sedation Agents:

  • Midazolam (Dormicum): 2–5mg IV titrated. Anxiolytic, amnesic. Onset 2–3min. Reversal: Flumazenil (Anexate) 0.2mg IV, repeat every 60s to max 1mg. Short duration — re-sedation risk.
  • Fentanyl: 50–100mcg IV for analgesia. Used with midazolam. Reversal: Naloxone (Narcan) 0.4mg IV — may repeat every 2–3min. Duration shorter than fentanyl — monitor for re-narcotisation.
  • Propofol (Diprivan): 1–2.5mg/kg induction, 4–8mg/kg/h maintenance. Anaesthesiologist or CRNA-administered only in most GCC hospitals. Rapid onset/offset. No reversal agent.
  • Pethidine (Meperidine): Used in some older Saudi protocols. Being phased out in most centres.

Monitoring Requirements:

  • Continuous SpO2 pulse oximetry — alert at <92%
  • ECG continuous monitoring
  • Non-invasive BP every 5 minutes (or 3min in elderly/comorbid)
  • Respiratory rate observation
  • ETCO2 (capnography) increasingly used especially for propofol
  • BIS (Bispectral Index) monitor for depth of anaesthesia when propofol used

Oxygen Supplementation: Nasal cannula 2–4L/min is standard. Consider face mask if SpO2 drops. Have ambu-bag and airway adjuncts immediately available.

📊 Sedation Scoring — Ramsay & MOAA/S Scales +

Ramsay Sedation Scale (RSS): The most widely used scale in GCC endoscopy units for documenting sedation depth.

  • 1 — Anxious and agitated or restless, or both
  • 2 — Cooperative, orientated, and tranquil (target for conscious sedation)
  • 3 — Responsive to commands only
  • 4 — Brisk response to glabella tap or loud auditory stimulus
  • 5 — Sluggish response to glabella tap — ALERT: approaching deep sedation
  • 6 — No response — ALERT: general anaesthesia level

MOAA/S Scale (Modified Observer's Assessment of Alertness/Sedation): Used during propofol sedation in many private GCC hospitals.

  • 5 — Responds readily to name in normal tone (awake)
  • 4 — Lethargic response to name in normal tone
  • 3 — Response to name after loud/repeated calling
  • 2 — Response only after mild prodding or shaking
  • 1 — Response only to trapezius squeeze
  • 0 — No response — anaesthesia level

Target for GI endoscopy: RSS 2–3 or MOAA/S 3–4 (cooperative, responding to voice, tolerating procedure).

🔧 Endoscope Handling — Cleaning, Disinfection & Storage +

Endoscope reprocessing is the #1 infection control priority in endoscopy. All endoscopy nurses must be competent in the full reprocessing cycle.

High-Level Disinfectants (HLD) Used in GCC:

  • Glutaraldehyde 2% (Cidex): Traditional, effective, but toxic — PPE mandatory (gloves, eye protection, apron, mask). Well-ventilated area required. Minimum contact time 20–45min depending on protocol.
  • Ortho-Phthalaldehyde (OPA / Cidex OPA): Safer than glutaraldehyde, faster acting (5–12min contact time). Less vapour toxicity. Now preferred in many GCC hospitals.
  • Peracetic acid systems: Used in AER systems — more environmentally friendly.

Leak Testing: Mandatory before each immersion in HLD. Connect leak tester, pressurise scope, submerge in water — observe for bubbles. Any leak = scope removed from service immediately.

Drying and Storage: After AER cycle, dry all channels with pressurised air, hang vertically in ventilated cabinet, caps removed. No horizontal storage in cases — promotes residual moisture and Pseudomonas growth.

🧪 Specimen Handling — Biopsy, Formalin & CLO Test +

Accurate specimen handling is a patient safety issue — mislabelled specimens or incorrect fixation can lead to wrong diagnoses.

Standard Biopsy Handling:

  • Receive biopsy forceps specimen from endoscopist — deposit gently in 10% neutral buffered formalin container (do not use saline or water)
  • Label container immediately: patient name, MRN, date, site of biopsy (oesophagus / fundus / antrum / duodenum etc.)
  • Multiple biopsy sites = separate labelled containers
  • Volume of formalin = at least 10x volume of tissue
  • Histology request form: match patient demographics, clinical indication, endoscopic findings, site of biopsy

CLO Test (Campylobacter-Like Organism Test / Rapid Urease Test for H. pylori):

  • Antral biopsy placed in CLO test kit (gel changes from yellow to pink/red if H. pylori urease present)
  • Read at 1h (rapid) and 24h (confirm) — document both readings
  • Sensitivity 85–95% — false negatives if patient on recent PPI, antibiotics, bismuth
  • Store kit at room temperature — refrigeration reduces sensitivity

ESD/EMR Specimen Pinning: Large resection specimens should be pinned on foam board mucosal-side up, oriented to indicate proximal/distal/lateral margins. Photograph before formalin fixation. Critical for pathological assessment of clear margins.

🛒 Equipment Preparation — Trolley Set-Up & Diathermy +

Standard OGD Trolley Set-Up:

  • Upper GI endoscope (confirmed scope number, cleaned, tested)
  • Bite guard, lubricating gel, gauze swabs
  • Biopsy forceps (2.8mm channel size)
  • Formalin pots labelled (minimum 4 for systematic antral/body/fundus/duodenum biopsies)
  • CLO test kits ×2 (antrum + corpus)
  • Syringe with saline flush
  • Suction device connected and tested
  • Lignocaine throat spray 10% (if no sedation)

Diathermy (Electrosurgical Unit) Setup:

  • Ensure patient plate electrode (dispersive pad) is applied to clean, dry skin — maximum contact area, over large muscle mass
  • Connect all cables before procedure — avoid coiling near patient
  • Confirm diathermy mode with endoscopist: Endocut Q/I (polypectomy), Forced Coag (haemostasis), Soft Coag (APC), Spray Coag
  • CO2 insufflation vs air: CO2 mandatory for therapeutic procedures — absorbed 100x faster, reduces perforation pain and distension risk

Emergency Equipment Always Available in Endoscopy: Airway adjuncts (Guedel airways, LMA), defibrillator, adrenaline 1:10,000 IV, reversal agents, intubation kit, code blue contact clearly displayed.

🛏️ Post-Procedure Care & Discharge Criteria +

Recovery Phase Monitoring:

  • Continuous SpO2 and HR until fully alert (Ramsay 1–2)
  • BP at 15min intervals for first 30min post-sedation
  • Assess swallowing before oral fluids if OGD with throat spray
  • Observe for early complications: bleeding, abdominal pain, perforation signs

Discharge Criteria (Conscious Sedation — PADSS / Modified Aldrete):

  • SpO2 ≥95% on room air
  • Stable vital signs — HR, BP within 20% of baseline
  • Ramsay score 1–2 (orientated, responding normally)
  • Tolerating oral fluids without nausea/vomiting
  • Ambulatory without dizziness — able to dress independently
  • Responsible adult escort arranged (no driving self after sedation)

Post-Polypectomy Discharge Instructions:

  • Avoid NSAIDs and anticoagulants for 5–7 days (per endoscopist instruction)
  • Low-residue diet for 48h after large polypectomy
  • Return immediately if: rectal bleeding, severe abdominal pain, fever, rigors
  • Outpatient follow-up appointment for histology results (typically 2–3 weeks)

Endoscope Reprocessing

Endoscope reprocessing is the single most important infection control activity in any endoscopy unit. Failure can result in patient-to-patient transmission of life-threatening pathogens.

⚠️ Critical Patient Safety Issue — Global #1 Endoscopy Infection Risk

The 2015 ERCP-associated CRE (Carbapenem-Resistant Enterobacteriaceae) outbreak in multiple US hospitals — linked to duodenoscope reprocessing failures — killed patients and led to global regulatory changes. Strict reprocessing protocols are now mandated by DHA (Dubai), MOH Saudi Arabia, and JCI standards in all GCC endoscopy centres.

Manual Cleaning — The 5-Step Pre-Clean (Bedside)

1

Wipe External Surface

Immediately after procedure, wipe the insertion tube with a damp cloth/gauze soaked in enzymatic detergent solution. Do this BEFORE the body fluids dry on the scope.

2

Suction Enzymatic Solution Through Channels

Aspirate enzymatic detergent through suction/biopsy channel minimum 250ml. Then flush air through to expel residue. Attach water-resistant cap.

3

Transport to Reprocessing Room

Transport in closed, labelled container — do NOT carry exposed scopes through corridors. Separate clean and dirty scope areas in all GCC-standard endoscopy units.

4

Leak Test Before Immersion

MANDATORY before any immersion in water or disinfectant. Connect leak tester, pressurise to manufacturer's specification, submerge in water, check all flexion angles and insertable portion for bubbles. Positive leak = remove from use immediately, contact Olympus/Pentax/Fujinon service.

5

Manual Cleaning — Enzymatic Soak & Brush

Immerse in enzymatic solution (as per manufacturer). Brush all accessible channels with correctly sized brush (channel diameter specific). Count brush strokes — document. Rinse thoroughly with water. Proceed to AER or manual HLD soak.

🤖
Automated Endoscope Reprocessor (AER)
  • Most GCC hospitals use AER machines (Olympus ETD, Medivators DSD-Edge, Soluscope)
  • Load scope correctly — ensure all channel connectors attached properly
  • AER cycle: detergent wash → rinse → HLD soak (OPA/peracetic acid) → purge → final rinse → alcohol flush → air dry
  • Full cycle time: typically 25–35 minutes
  • Document each cycle: scope serial number, AER ID, time, operator, chemical lot number, chemical concentration (test strips)
  • Daily AER maintenance: run cleaning cycle empty, check filters, chemical levels, water quality (0.2 micron filtered water required)
🦠
Pathogens if Reprocessing Fails
  • Pseudomonas aeruginosa — biofilm former, thrives in moist channels. Most common reprocessing outbreak pathogen
  • CRE (ERCP duodenoscopes) — elevator mechanism design flaw allowed CRE transmission in major US outbreaks
  • Helicobacter pylori — transmission between patients via inadequately reprocessed gastroscopes
  • HBV, HCV — theoretical risk with gross reprocessing failures
  • New duodenoscope designs (disposable elevator caps, single-use duodenoscopes) now available — some GCC hospitals adopting
🥽 PPE During Manual Reprocessing: Chemical-resistant gloves (nitrile minimum), splash-proof goggles or face shield, waterproof apron, closed-toe shoes. Chemical splash from glutaraldehyde/OPA causes severe eye/skin injury. Ensure adequate ventilation — never work in poorly ventilated reprocessing rooms with glutaraldehyde without extraction fans and air monitoring.

ERCP Nursing — Special Focus

ERCP is the most complex endoscopy procedure and commands the highest nursing salary premium in GCC. The scrub nurse role demands expert instrument knowledge, calm under pressure, and acute complication recognition.

🏆 Why ERCP Nurses Earn Premium Salaries

  • Procedure can last 45–180 minutes — requires sustained concentration and anticipation
  • Fluoroscopy environment — nurse must understand radiation safety (lead apron, thyroid shield)
  • Complex instrument handling — 20+ different accessories, all passed precisely through scope channel
  • High stakes: complications can be life-threatening — nurses must identify and respond rapidly
  • Short supply of experienced ERCP scrub nurses globally — GCC hospitals actively recruit internationally

ERCP Instruments — Nurse Must Know

Sphincterotome (Papillotome)

Wire-tipped catheter with cutting wire. Nurse controls tension — endoscopist cuts. Pass pre-loaded. Varieties: standard, precut (needle-knife), short-nose.

Contrast Injection Catheter

Straight or angled tip for contrast media injection into bile duct. Nurse prepares syringe with diluted contrast (50% iodinated contrast in saline). Avoid air bubbles — can mimic stones on fluoroscopy.

Balloon Extraction Catheter

Balloon inflated in bile duct above stone, then swept down to extract. Nurse controls balloon inflation with 1–4ml air. Know different balloon sizes (8mm, 12mm, 15mm, 18mm).

Dormia Basket

Wire basket for stone retrieval. Mechanical lithotripsy basket for large stones (crush then extract). Nurse opens/closes basket on command — listen carefully to endoscopist instructions.

Biliary Stent Delivery System

Plastic stents (7Fr, 10Fr) or SEMS (self-expanding metal stents). Nurse loads stent on delivery catheter over guidewire. Requires precise wire control — guidewire must not be pulled during stent deployment.

Guidewire

0.035" or 0.025" hydrophilic or standard wire. Nurse holds wire steady, advances or retracts on command. Never let go of wire end — loss of access = restart from beginning. Hydraulic wire holder device used in some units.

Cholangioscope (SpyGlass)

Thin scope passed through ERCP scope into bile duct for direct visualisation. Nurse controls irrigation pump, assists with SpyBite biopsy forceps passage — highly specialised.

Mechanical Lithotripter

For very large bile duct stones. Wire basket + handle that allows crushing force. Nurse cranks handle steadily — reassuring patient throughout. Rarely needed but nurse must know setup.

Post-ERCP Complication Monitoring

🔴 Post-ERCP Pancreatitis (Most Common — 3–5%)
Amylase/lipase >3x upper limit at 24h post-procedure. Symptoms: central/epigastric pain radiating to back, nausea, vomiting. Check amylase at 6h post-procedure — if elevated + pain, admit for IV fluids, analgesia, nil by mouth. Prophylaxis: rectal indomethacin 100mg pre-procedure (standard in many GCC centres), aggressive IV hydration with Ringer's lactate.
🩸 Post-Sphincterotomy Bleeding
Usually occurs during or immediately post-sphincterotomy. Manage endoscopically with adrenaline injection, coagulation, or clips. Delayed bleeding (up to 14 days post-ERCP) can occur — educate patient to return for dark/tarry stools or haematemesis. INR must be ≤1.5 pre-ERCP.
🌡️ Cholangitis / Sepsis
Occurs if contrast injected into obstructed bile system without adequate drainage achieved. Charcot's Triad: RUQ pain + fever + jaundice. Reynolds' Pentad (severe): + hypotension + altered consciousness. Start IV antibiotics immediately (ciprofloxacin or piperacillin-tazobactam). Culture blood.
💨 Perforation
Rare (0.1–0.6%) but life-threatening. Retroperitoneal perforation from sphincterotomy presents with back/flank pain and surgical emphysema. Duodenal perforation from scope tip — acute abdominal signs. CT abdomen urgently. Surgical consult. Keep nil by mouth, IV access × 2, fluid resuscitation.

Conscious Sedation Monitoring Tool

Enter observations at each time point to generate a colour-coded sedation monitoring chart. Alerts will flag abnormal values automatically.

Endoscopy Sedation Observation Chart Generator
Select a time point, enter patient observations, then click "Add Reading". Repeat for each time point. The chart will colour-code values and flag alerts.

Observations — Pre-Procedure

Salary Guide 2025

Endoscopy nurses earn competitive tax-free salaries in the GCC. ERCP scrub nurses command a premium due to the scarcity of this skill. Crucially — most endoscopy units operate weekdays only, day shifts only.

💡 Lifestyle Advantage of Endoscopy

  • No night shifts in most GCC endoscopy units (07:00–15:00 typical schedule)
  • No weekends in many units — some units do Saturday half-day only
  • Day-case model: patients in and out same morning — manageable workload
  • No on-call in most private endoscopy centres (emergency endoscopy done by inpatient teams)
  • Combined with tax-free salary = excellent work-life-financial balance
Role UAE (AED/month) Saudi (SAR/month) Qatar (QAR/month) Kuwait (KWD/month) Benefits Typical
Endoscopy Nurse (Staff) 9,000 – 11,500 8,000 – 10,500 9,000 – 11,000 500 – 650 KWD Housing, transport, annual flight
ERCP Scrub Nurse (Premium) 12,000 – 15,000 11,000 – 14,000 12,000 – 15,000 700 – 900 KWD Housing, transport, flight + ERCP premium
Endoscopy Charge Nurse 13,000 – 16,000 12,000 – 15,000 13,000 – 16,000 800 – 950 KWD Housing, transport, 2 flights, education budget
Endoscopy Educator / CNS 14,000 – 17,000 13,000 – 16,000 14,000 – 17,000 850 – 1,050 KWD Housing, transport, 2 flights, CPD funding
Endoscopy Department Manager 17,000 – 22,000 15,000 – 20,000 17,000 – 22,000 1,000 – 1,300 KWD Full package + performance bonus
Reprocessing Technician (GI) 6,000 – 8,500 5,500 – 8,000 6,000 – 8,500 380 – 500 KWD Housing, transport, flight

All salaries tax-free. Ranges reflect experience level, hospital tier (government vs JCI private), and package components. ERCP premium assumes verified ERCP scrub competency. Data indicative for 2025.

Working in Endoscopy in GCC

Understanding the cultural and operational context of GCC endoscopy units is essential for a smooth transition.

Typical Daily Schedule
07:00 — Unit opens, scopes checked, lists prepared
07:30 — First patient admitted, consent, IV access, pre-assessment
08:00 — First endoscopy begins
08:00–13:00 — 5–6 cases per list (OGD ~20min, colonoscopy ~30–45min)
13:00–15:00 — Recovery, discharge, reprocessing, documentation, unit clean
15:00 — Off duty
🕌
Gender Segregation (Saudi Arabia)
Many Saudi government hospitals operate gender-segregated endoscopy lists. Male endoscopists with male patients in one list; female endoscopist + female nursing team for female patients. As a nurse, you may be assigned to a specific team. Some private hospitals in Saudi (particularly JCI-accredited) are less strictly segregated. Always clarify during interview.
🌙
Ramadan Adjustments
Colonoscopy during Ramadan requires careful prep counselling:
  • Patients take bowel prep after Iftar (sunset) — evening prep schedule
  • Procedure booked for early morning before hunger becomes significant
  • OGD: schedule first morning slot — patient has been fasting overnight
  • Sedation consent: patients may be reluctant — cultural sensitivity essential
  • Staff prayer schedules — coordinate with charge nurse for breaks

Patient Preparation Instructions

English — Colonoscopy Prep Summary
Day before procedure: Eat only low-fibre foods (white rice, eggs, white bread) until midday. From midday — clear liquids only (water, clear juice, broth). No solid food after midday.

Evening before (6pm): Take first sachet of Picolax/Picoprep mixed in 150ml water. Drink an extra glass of clear fluid with each hour after.

Morning of procedure (6am): Take second sachet. Do not eat anything. You may drink clear water up to 2 hours before your appointment.

Bring: Loose comfortable clothing. A companion to take you home — you cannot drive after sedation.
تعليمات تحضير القولون — عربي
قبل يوم من الإجراء: تناول الأطعمة قليلة الألياف (أرز أبيض، بيض، خبز أبيض) حتى الظهر. من الظهر — سوائل صافية فقط (ماء، عصير صافٍ، مرق).

مساء اليوم السابق (الساعة 6م): تناول الكيس الأول من بيكولاكس مذاباً في 150 مل ماء. اشرب كوباً من السوائل الصافية كل ساعة بعده.

صباح يوم الإجراء (الساعة 6ص): تناول الكيس الثاني. لا تأكل شيئاً. يمكنك شرب الماء الصافي حتى ساعتين قبل موعدك.

هام: أحضر معك شخصاً بالغاً لمرافقتك للمنزل — لا يجوز قيادة السيارة بعد المهدئات.

Career Path & Certifications

Endoscopy offers a clear, rewarding career progression. The CGRN certification from SGNA is the global gold standard recognised by top GCC hospitals.

Career Progression Ladder

General Medical/Surgical Nurse

2+ years general ward or medical nursing. Foundation in patient assessment, IV therapy, basic procedural assistance.

Junior Endoscopy Nurse

Entry into endoscopy unit. Supervised experience in OGD, colonoscopy. Learns reprocessing, sedation monitoring, specimen handling. 12–18 months to competency.

Endoscopy Nurse (Competent)

Independent practice in all standard procedures. May begin ERCP scrub training. Pursue CGRN certification. 2–4 years experience.

Senior Endoscopy Nurse / ERCP Scrub Nurse

Expert in all procedures including ERCP, EUS. Mentors junior staff. CGRN certified. Leads complex lists independently. 4–7 years experience.

Endoscopy Charge Nurse

Unit leadership, roster management, quality indicators, competency assessment. Liaises with endoscopists and management. 7+ years.

Endoscopy Nurse Educator / CNS

Develops training programmes, competency frameworks, reprocessing standards. Leads guideline implementation. Post-graduate qualification beneficial.

Endoscopy Department Manager

Full department operational responsibility. Budget management, JCI compliance, staff development, equipment procurement. BSN/MSN required in most GCC hospitals at this level.

Key Certifications

CGRN — Certified Gastroenterology Registered Nurse Gold Standard
Offered by SGNA (Society of Gastroenterology Nurses and Associates). Requires 2 years GI/endoscopy experience + 75 contact hours. 4-hour computer exam. Valid 5 years — 75 CEU for renewal. Highly valued by GCC hospitals — salary premium 10–15%.
BLS (Basic Life Support) Mandatory
AHA or RC(UK) BLS mandatory for all endoscopy nurses in GCC. Valid 2 years. Must be current before starting work — arrange renewal before contract start date.
ACLS (Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support) Strongly Recommended
Required for nurses in endoscopy units administering or monitoring sedation in most JCI-accredited GCC hospitals. AHA certification preferred. Sedation emergencies require ACLS competency.
Conscious Sedation Certification Unit-Specific
Most GCC endoscopy units have their own in-house competency programme for sedation monitoring. Covers: sedation agents, monitoring, reversal agents, MOAA/S and Ramsay scoring, emergency response. Annual renewal.
GI Reprocessing Technician Certification Recommended
IAHCSMM (International Association of Healthcare Central Service Materiel Management) offers GI reprocessing-specific certification. Demonstrates competency in endoscope decontamination — increasingly required by DHA and JCIA auditors.
Radiation Safety (ERCP) ERCP Units
Required for all staff working in fluoroscopy environments. Covers: lead apron use, thyroid shield, dosimeter badge, minimising scatter radiation exposure. Local regulatory training (DHA, HAAD, MOH Saudi) required.