| Literature DB >> 28491308 |
Meredith Gilliam1,2, Sarah L Krein1,2, Karen Belanger1, Karen E Fowler1, Derek E Dimcheff1,2, Gabriel Solomon1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Incomplete or delayed access to discharge information by outpatient providers and patients contributes to discontinuity of care and poor outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Medication reconciliation; discharge summary; patient safety
Year: 2017 PMID: 28491308 PMCID: PMC5406115 DOI: 10.1177/2050312117701053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SAGE Open Med ISSN: 2050-3121
Comparison of the content of the electronic notes available at the time of discharge (pre-June 2012 patient discharge instructions note vs post-June 2012 combined discharge summary note).
| Patient discharge instructions note (pre-June 2012) | Combined discharge summary note (post-June 2012) |
|---|---|
| Discharge date | Admission/discharge dates |
| Reason for admission | Reason for admission and primary/secondary diagnoses |
| – | Discharge destination |
| Identification of inpatient provider(s) and primary care provider | Identification of inpatient provider(s) and primary care provider |
| Red flags for patient to return to care, for CHF only | Red flags for patient to return to care for numerous conditions, pre-templated |
| Discharge medication list, with optional section to list changes from admission medication list | Discharge medication list organized by continued medications, discontinued medications, changed medications; allergies |
| List of follow-up appointments | List of follow-up appointments |
| Issues for outpatient providers to follow up[ | Issues for outpatient providers to follow up |
| Diet and activity restrictions[ | Diet and activity restrictions |
| – | Area for patients to write questions for their physicians |
| – | Hospital course, with relevant studies and procedures |
| – | Pending tests |
| – | Discharge day physical exam |
| Patient’s cognitive status (four categories of impairment)[ | Patient’s cognitive status (four categories of impairment) |
| Flags for special risk groups: substance use disorder | Flags for special risk groups: suicide attempt, substance use disorder, functional impairment |
| Automatic generation of referral order to anticoagulation clinic, substance use disorder clinic (if relevant) | Automatic generation of referral order to anticoagulation clinic, substance use disorder clinic (if relevant) |
| Influenza immunization status[ | Influenza immunization status |
| Hospital phone number | Hospital phone number |
CHF: congestive heart failure.
Content was optional and frequently omitted.
Figure 1.Percentage of discharged patients with a discharge summary note available in the electronic chart by the time of first follow-up contact (phone call or clinic visit), before and after combined discharge summary note implementation.
Outpatient provider use of and satisfaction with the new discharge note and procedure.
| Outpatient providers (n = 22) | |
|---|---|
| Always or almost always review the discharge summary prior to the post-discharge primary care appointment | 90% |
| Prefer the new discharge summary to the traditional discharge summary | 90% |
| Satisfied with the new discharge summary | 90% |
| Rate the information contained in the new discharge summary as comprehensive | 86% |
| Find it helpful that residents complete the discharge summary at the time of discharge | 100% |
| Find having the discharge summary completed at the time of discharge helpful with managing future appointments | 86% |
Figure 2.Average hours from decision to discharge patient to discharge note entry in medical record system.