| Literature DB >> 28049470 |
Miriam Hartveit1,2,3, Kris Vanhaecht4,5,6,7, Olav Thorsen8, Eva Biringer4, Kjell Haug8, Aslak Aslaksen8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Communication between involved parties is essential to ensure coordinated and safe health care delivery. However, existing literature reveals that the information relayed in the referral process is seen as insufficient by the receivers. It is unknown how this insufficiency affects the quality of care, and valid performance measures to explore it are lacking. The aim of the present study was to develop quality indicators to detect the impact that the quality of referral letters from primary care to specialised mental health care has on the quality of mental health services.Entities:
Keywords: Mental health services; Process assessment (health care); Quality indicators, health care; Quality of health care; RAND appropriateness method; Referral and consultation
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28049470 PMCID: PMC5209847 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-016-1941-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
The steps in the RAND/UCLA appropriateness method and the present study
| The steps in the RAND/UCLA appropriateness method [ | The steps in the present study |
|---|---|
| Focus group interviews including patient representatives, managers and health professionals | |
| Systematic literature review | Systematic literature review |
| Generate preliminary indicators | Preliminary indicators generated from both focus group interviews and literature review |
| Selection of expert panel | Selection of experienced specialists and researchers in specialised mental health care |
| Presentation of existing evidence and individual rating (postal) | Panel meeting with oral presentation of existing evidence with opportunity for individual reflections before discussion and assessment of the preliminary indicators |
| Panel meeting with presentation of the first rating, discussion and assessment of the preliminary indicators | |
| Analysis of final rating | The groups’ assessments and categorising of the indicators were analysed by two researchers individually |
| Development of recommended indicators | Development of a ranked list of indicators |
Criteria for indicators used by the expert panels
| Criteria for indicators used by the expert panels [ | |
|---|---|
| Validity: | The extent to which the indicator accurately represents the concept being assessed |
| Reliability: | The degree of trustworthiness of the data collected by the indicator |
| Sensitivity to change: | The degree to which the indicator is affected by change in the quality of referral letters |
| Acceptability: | The degree to which stakeholders find the indicator relevant |
| Feasibility: | The extent to which it is possible to gather data within defined frames such as economic, legal and time constraints |
| Simple and communicable: | The degree to which the results are easy to communicate and understood by the intended audience |
Fig. 1Illustration of the study
Description of the four recommended indicators
| 1. TIMELY ACCESS | |
|---|---|
| Rationale and definitions | To ensure timely access for all referred patients, prioritisation of patients is needed. Priority of a referred patient is determined by a specialist based on severity of the condition and urgency because of social factors. It is defined by maximum (medically) acceptable waiting time (see footnotea). Scarce information in referral letters implies a risk of incorrectly assigned priority. A review of the priority based on information from the first consultations can give an indication of the correctness of the first priority decision. Correct priority is defined as equal indications of acceptable waiting time in both instances, with waiting time divided into four categories. |
| Numerator | Number of referrals where there is a match between the priority given based on the referral letter and the priority seen as correct retrospectively based on 1–3 consultations. |
| Denominator | Number of all referrals. |
| Methodological challenges | Long waiting time implies a larger risk for changes in the patient’s mental state. It is therefore recommended to explore the impact of time between the first and second priority-settings. Guidelines for deciding acceptable waiting time must be clearly defined, and a common understanding of these among the specialists is needed. |
| Possible approaches for quality improvements | There may be disagreement between stakeholders (e.g., the patient, specialists and the GP) on optimal prioritisation of patients and acceptable waiting time. Data on the waiting time that is seen as acceptable by the referring GP and the patient, in addition to the specialists’ assessments, will provide a fuller picture of ‘correct prioritisation of patients’. |
| 2. DELAY IN PROCESS OF ASSESSING THE REFERRAL | |
| Rationale and definitions | If referral letters lack necessary information, initiatives to collect additional information, such as contacting the referring GP or the patient, can postpone the assessment of the referral. Then, sending a response letter to the patient and the referring GP is correspondingly delayed. High quality referral letters are expected to include enough information for priority setting without delay. Delay in the process of priority is defined as not sending the response letter after the first assessment because of insufficient referral information. |
| Numerator | Number of response letters sent after first assessment of the referral. |
| Denominator | Number of all referral letters assessed. |
| Methodological challenges | Contextual differences may affect the validity (e.g., the tradition for collecting additional information may vary between units). |
| Possible approaches for quality improvements | If the decision is made individually and not by regular assessment meeting, a more informative indicator, such as mean number of days delayed, can be used. |
| 3. WAITING TIME FOR HIGH PRIORITY PATIENTS | |
| Rationale and definitions | To select the patients most in need, the present study recommended defining severity according to symptoms or situation rather than diagnosis. Severity can be determined by the existence of a combination of the following severity factors: severe mental illness/psychosis, risk of suicide, risk to others, in care of children, substance abuse and younger than 23 years [ |
| Numerator | Median waiting time for patients with three or more severity factors. |
| Denominator | Median waiting time of all patients. |
| Methodological challenges | The cut-off at three severity factors currently lacks empirical support. There is a risk of false positive and false negative findings, as the presence of three severity factors does not always indicate a greater severity than the presence of two factors. |
| Possible improvements of the indicator | It is recommended to explore whether three is the most appropriate cut-off for the severity factors to define patients who should have less waiting time. Further, exploration of each factor’s impact can reveal whether the factors should be weighted to reduce the risk of false negative or false positive findings. |
| 4. APPROPRIATENESS OF REFERRAL | |
| Rationale and definitions | High quality referral letters include information about necessary tests, examinations and treatment efforts that were conducted prior to the referral. The quality of referral letters is therefore expected to be positively correlated with the appropriateness of the referral. ‘Appropriate referral’ is defined as referrals assessed by the receiving specialist as appropriate on a dichotomous variable (Yes/No). |
| Numerator | Number of appropriate referrals. |
| Denominator | Number of all referrals. |
| Methodological challenges | The sensitivity to change is limited for dichotomous variables. There might be disagreement between primary care and specialised mental health care with regard to appropriateness. This indicator represents only the specialist health care provider’s perspective of appropriateness of referrals. |
| Possible improvements of the indicator | The reliability of an ordinal variable should be tested. The potential disagreement between service providers on the appropriateness of a referral can be explored. |
aAccording to the legal rights for patients in Norway, all patients referred to specialised health care are prioritised by a specialist. High priority which entails a legal right to health care with a (medically) defined deadline for when health care should be provided; low priority, which means the patient will receive health care, but there is no guarantee as to when it will be provided; or no priority, which means the patient is not in need of specialised mental health care. The assessment is usually done on the basis of the referral letter, but more information can be gathered
Description of the 12 indicators that were not recommended
| Rationale and definitions | Numerator Denominator | Methodological challenges and possible improvements | |
|---|---|---|---|
| INDICATORS FOUND ACCEPTABLE/IN NEED OF ADJUSTMENTS | |||
| 1. Rejected referrals | Insufficient referral information makes the specialists less confident in their decisions on whether the referral request should be rejected or not. High quality referral letters can better enable specialists to reject patients not in need of specialised mental health care (instead of seeing them to be “on the safe side”) than can those of low quality. Rejected referral is defined as referral assessed by a specialist as not meeting the criteria for receiving specialised mental health care. | No. rejected referrals No. referrals (total) | Different potential confounding factors. We lack a definition of the optimal number of rejected referrals. Calibration of what the goal should be within different health care systems is needed. A careful exploration to ensure that the rejected referrals are the right ones is essential. |
| 2. Aborted episodes of care | Less informative referral letters can result in incorrect access to specialised health care. This is often detected during the first consultations and the patient is then discharged. Aborted episode of care is defined as terminated by the service after ≤ 3 consultations because of incorrect access to specialised mental health care. | No. episodes of care aborted after ≤ 3 consultations No. episodes of care started | Risks of false positive findings as some episodes of care are completed in 3 or fewer consultations. |
| 3. Severity in high priority patient groupa (severity factors) | High quality referral letters can enable specialists to prioritise patients most in need, as defined by the existence of several ‘severity factors’. ‘Severity factors’ are defined as severe mental illness, risk of suicide, risk to others, care for children, substance abuse and being younger than 23 yearsb. | No. patients with 3 or more severity factors in the high priority group No. all patients in high priority group | Risk of both false positive and false negative findings as the existence of 3 factors does not necessarily indicate a larger severity than 2 factors. |
| 4. Realism in expectation toward specialised mental health care | The realism of expectations toward specialised health care formulated in the referral letter, as assessed by the receiving specialist, can be an indicator for the common understanding of the responsibilities of various services. Degree of realism is assigned a score (0–3). | No. letters with score 2 or 3 No. all referral letters | Uncertainty regarding the causal chain. Some of the present letters do not specify expectations (= missing data). |
| 5. Supportive information gathering | Different initiatives by the specialist to gather additional information are needed when referral letters do not convey the information necessary to decide if and when specialised health care should be conducted. Supportive information gathering is defined as extra activities, such as contacting the referring GP or the patient, conducted by the specialised health care because of insufficient information in the referral letter. | No. activities No. referral letters | Contextual variation in the tradition of collecting additional information is a confounding factor. Very high or very low results should be interpreted with caution. A qualitative exploration of the specialists’ reasons for collecting (or not collecting) additional information is recommended when initiatives are almost always or never taken. |
| INDICATORS FOUND UNACCEPTABLE | |||
| 6. Severity in high priority patient groupa (diagnosis) | High quality referral letters can better enable specialists to select the patients most in need than can referral letters of low quality. | No. patients with diagnosis of severe illness No. all patients | The diagnosis is not a valid indicator for the degree of need for specialised mental health care. |
| 7. Common understanding of the coordinated care plan | High quality referral letters may facilitate a common understanding of the overall plan for the coordinated care among the involved service providers. A survey where involved professionals tick off the interventions/services they think are involved in each patient’s care plan will reveal the degree of common understanding. | No. plans with a high degree of agreement No. all plans | The integrated plan is not usually defined on the basis of the referral information. Low feasibility. |
| 8. Adequate specialist response (referring GP) | High quality referral letters include a well-defined request that can better facilitate an adequate response than can low quality referral letters. Adequate response is defined as 2 or 3 on an ordinal scale from 0 to 3, assessed by the referring GP. | No. letters with score 2 or 3 No. all referral letters | The response depends on factors in addition to the GP’s request, reducing the validity. Many referral letters do not include a concrete, explicit request, negatively affecting the feasibility. |
| 9. Adequate specialist response (patient) | High quality referral letters include a well-defined request that can better facilitate an adequate response than can low quality referral letters. Adequate response is defined as 2 or 3 on an ordinal scale from 0 to 3 on the adequacy of the specialised health care response assessed by the referred patient. | No. letters with score 2 or 3 No. all referral letters | As for indicator 8. Patient involvement in defining the referral letter is often limited (i.e., the patient is seldom fully aware of, or may not fully agree to, the formulated request), reducing the validity. |
| 10. Time to decide priority | Specialists are expected to spend less time assessing high quality referral letters than low quality referral letters. Time is defined as minutes used for assessing the referral letter including time for gathering extra information. | Minutes to decide priority No. referral letters | The decision is often made step by step including individual assessment and interdisciplinary discussion in the team, negatively affecting the feasibility. Long letters can be of high quality but take more time to read. |
| 11. Attendance to first consultation | Informative referral letters can enable facilitation of the first consultation to the patient’s needs, reducing the risk of non-attendance. | No. non-attending patients No. all patients for first consultation | Several confounding factors expected. Limited sensitivity. |
| 12. Attendance to consultations in first 3 months | High quality referral letters can be associated with less drop-out in the first 3 months of treatment by enabling facilitation, compared with low quality referral letters. | No. drop-out in first 3 months No. all patients completing 3 months of treatment | As for indicator 11. Facilitation is usually based on information provided by the patient rather than by the referral letter. |
aAccording to the legal rights for patients in Norway, all patients referred to specialised health care are prioritised by a specialist and given high priority, which entails a legal right to health care with a (medically) defined deadline for when health care should take place; low priority, which means the patient will receive health care, but there is no guarantee as to when it will be conducted; or no priority, which means the patient is not in need of specialised mental health care. The assessment is usually done on the basis of the referral letter, but more information can be gathered
bIn the Norwegian health care system, patients under 23 years old with a substance abuse problem are, by law, given priority when referred to specialised mental health care