| Literature DB >> 23958371 |
Miriam Hartveit1, Olav Thorsen, Eva Biringer, Kris Vanhaecht, Benedicte Carlsen, Aslak Aslaksen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In most Western countries, the referral letter forms the basis for establishing the priority of patients for specialised health care and for the coordination of care between the services. To be able to define the quality of referral letters, the potential impact of the quality on the organisation of care, and to improve the quality of the letters, we need a multidimensional definition of the ideal content. The study's aim was to explore what information is seen as most important and should be included in referral letters from primary care to specialised mental health care to facilitate prioritisation and planning of treatment and follow-up of the patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23958371 PMCID: PMC3751904 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-13-329
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
The first two steps in quality improvement
| Frequency | Large patient population [ |
| Importance | Large suffering, large impact on society [ |
| Complexity | Many stakeholders, inter-organisational |
| Insufficiently effective, efficient, accessible, acceptable/patient-centred, equitable, and/or safe care [ | Risk of incorrect prioritisation of patients and inappropriate care [ |
| Expected improvement potential [ | Studies reveal that referral letters in general and within mental health care lack important information [ |
| Explore existing knowledge [ | Literature review revealed no evidence-based recommended standard for content of referral letters to specialised mental health care |
| If not sufficient knowledge: Define recommended practice | Structured group interview using the method Language Processing [ |
| A. Involve valid perspectives [ | Including: |
| Professional | Health professionals from primary care (GPs and mental health nurses) and from specialist mental health care (psychiatrist and trained psychologists) |
| Patient/client | Patient representatives from Mental Health Patient Organisation |
| Organisational | Operating managers within specialist mental health care. |
| B. Make feasible [ | Delphi process to determine the most important content. Exclusion of themes where less than 75% of participants have rated them as highly important [ |
The theoretical framework for the method employed in this study.
Figure 1The reduction process.
Figure 2Suggested content of referral letters to specialised mental health care.