Literature DB >> 23118409

Searching for the missing pieces between the hospital and primary care: mapping the patient process during care transitions.

Julie K Johnson1, Jeanne M Farnan, Paul Barach, Gijs Hesselink, Hub Wollersheim, Loes Pijnenborg, Cor Kalkman, Vineet M Arora.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Safe patient transitions depend on effective communication and a functioning care coordination process. Evidence suggests that primary care physicians are not satisfied with communication at transition points between inpatient and ambulatory care, and that communication often is not provided in a timely manner, omits essential information, or contains ambiguities that put patients at risk.
OBJECTIVE: Our aim was to demonstrate how process mapping can illustrate current handover practices between ambulatory and inpatient care settings, identify existing barriers and facilitators to effective transitions of care, and highlight potential areas for quality improvement.
METHODS: We conducted focus group interviews to facilitate a process mapping exercise with clinical teams in six academic health centres in the USA, Poland, Sweden, Italy, Spain and the Netherlands.
FINDINGS: At a high level, the process of patient admission to the hospital through the emergency department, inpatient care, and discharge back in the community were comparable across sites. In addition, the process maps highlighted similar barriers to providing information to primary care physicians, inaccurate or incomplete information on referral and discharge, a lack of time and priority to collaborate with counterpart colleagues, and a lack of feedback to clinicians involved in the handovers.
CONCLUSIONS: Process mapping is effective in bringing together key stakeholders and makes explicit the mental models that frame their understanding of the clinical process. Exploring the barriers and facilitators to safe and reliable patient transitions highlights opportunities for further improvement work and illustrates ideas for best practices that might be transferrable to other settings.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23118409     DOI: 10.1136/bmjqs-2012-001215

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMJ Qual Saf        ISSN: 2044-5415            Impact factor:   7.035


  25 in total

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2.  Preventing gatekeeping delays in the diagnosis of rare diseases.

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5.  Hospital discharge of elderly patients to primary health care, with and without an intermediate care hospital - a qualitative study of health professionals' experiences.

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8.  Combining qualitative and quantitative operational research methods to inform quality improvement in pathways that span multiple settings.

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9.  Improving patient discharge and reducing hospital readmissions by using Intervention Mapping.

Authors:  Gijs Hesselink; Marieke Zegers; Myrra Vernooij-Dassen; Paul Barach; Cor Kalkman; Maria Flink; Gunnar Öhlen; Mariann Olsson; Susanne Bergenbrant; Carola Orrego; Rosa Suñol; Giulio Toccafondi; Francesco Venneri; Ewa Dudzik-Urbaniak; Basia Kutryba; Lisette Schoonhoven; Hub Wollersheim
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10.  Identifying improvements to complex pathways: evidence synthesis and stakeholder engagement in infant congenital heart disease.

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