| Literature DB >> 30866908 |
Christine Maria Schwarz1, Magdalena Hoffmann2,3, Petra Schwarz4, Lars-Peter Kamolz1, Gernot Brunner1, Gerald Sendlhofer1,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The medical discharge letter is an important communication tool between hospitals and other healthcare providers. Despite its high status, it often does not meet the desired requirements in everyday clinical practice. Occurring risks create barriers for patients and doctors. This present review summarizes risks of the medical discharge letter.Entities:
Keywords: Discharge letter; Discharge summary; Hospital discharge; Patient safety; Risk; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30866908 PMCID: PMC6417275 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-019-3989-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Criteria for inclusion and exclusion of studies
| Criteria | Inclusion | Exclusion |
|---|---|---|
| Time period | January 2008– May 2018 | Before 2008 |
| Language | German, English | Other languages |
| Setting | Studies with adults | No studies in pediatric settings |
| Type of studies | Primary studies | Reports, commentaries, letters |
| Aim: to identify risks of the medical discharge letter | Literature points out possible risks or challenges of the medical discharge letter | Literature does not cover challenges or risks in terms of the medical discharge letter |
Included studies
| Author/ Country/ Year study published/Reference | Study design | Outcome | Source of potential risk to patient safety |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mehta, England (2017) [ | Before and after longitudinal study design, retrospective analysis of discharge summaries for completeness ( | Introduction of a NewEDS (New Electronic Discharge System). | Risk of delay |
| Maher, Ireland (2013) [ | Experimental study (involving fourth-year medical students) ( | Introduction CLAS (Cork Letter-Writing Assessment Scale) checklist; quality of discharge letters written by medical students. | Lack of education |
| O’Leary, USA (2009) [ | Survey of medical specialists (outpatient practice), satisfaction with timeliness and quality of summary ( | Presence or absence of 16 components with a summary score for completeness and timeliness, clarity and overall quality using (5-point Likert scales). | Lack of quality |
| Weiskopf, USA (2013) [ | Comparison of completeness of EHR (electronic health record) and Physical Classification score in randomly selected patients ( | Relationship between EHR (Electronic Health Record) completeness and patient health status. | Risk of lack of information |
| Grimes, Ireland (2008) [ | Observational study of cardiology patients admitted over a 3-month period during which a pharmacist prospectively recorded details of medication inconsistencies ( | Discrepancies in medication documentation at discharge. | Risk of lack of information |
| Chan, Australia (2014) [ | Interventional study. Transfer of electronic data to the discharge summary program improved discharge summary completion rates; reduction in overtime costs ( | 1.) Time spent working on discharge summaries. | Risk of delay |
| Lehnbom, Australia (2014) [ | Retrospective analysis of paper and electronic discharge summaries ( | Completeness of medication information, medication changes during the admission, impact of incomplete information on continuity of care. | Risk of lack of information |
| Bergkvist, Sweden (2009) [ | Longitudinal study with an intervention group and a control group; clinical pharmacists reviewed and gave feedback to the physician on the discharge summary before patient discharge using a structured checklist. Interventional group: ( | Quality of the discharge summary including the medication report and reduction of medication errors in the transition from hospital to primary and community care. | Risk of low quality |
| Yemm, England (2014) [ | Anonymous survey ( | Ranking discharge summary key content and characteristics in order of importance (f.e. Accuracy, Completeness, Timeliness, Grammar, Medication changes…). | Risk of low quality |
| Uitvlugt, The Netherlands (2015) [ | Observational study ( | Number and percentage of complete medication-related information in the discharge letter and the GP-overview were compared to the TPC- (Transitional Pharmaceutical Care) overview. | Risk of lack of information |
| Shivji, England (2015) [ | Interventional study, prospective review of electronic discharge summaries over a 6-week period, post-intervention review of discharge summaries, and a further review of discharge summaries was performed after 12 months ( | Improvement in discharge summaries and communication with primary care; increasing the content of discharge summaries. | Risk of low quality |
| Cresswell, England (2015) [ | Interventional study; electronic inpatient discharge documentation (eIDD); documentation of changes to medications and follow-up ( | Implementation of interactive teaching sessions for first year doctors, design of an e-learning module, implementation of new electronic patient record system. | Risk of lack of education |
| Ooi, Australia (2017) [ | Interventional study; retrospective audits of discharge summaries were conducted at baseline and after implementation of the Discharge Medication Management Summary (DMMS) ( | Accuracy of medication change information communicated to GPs; GP satisfaction and feasibility of a pharmacist-prepared Discharge Medication Management Summary (DMMS). | Risk of delay |
| Belleli, Australia (2013) [ | Retrospective study; audit of receipt rates, timeliness and the quality of discharge summaries for 49 admissions in an urban general practice ( | Receipt rates, timeliness and the quality of discharge summaries. | Risk of low quality Risk of lack of information |
| Wernick, New Zealand (2016) [ | Single-centre, non-blinded, randomised crossover study ( | Minimising the use of medical terminology in medical correspondence→ improved patient understanding and better anxiety/depression scores. | Risk of low patient understanding |
| Heaton, England (2008) [ | Web-based survey; UK medical students and recent graduates about undergraduate training to prescribe and confidence about meeting the relevant competencies (students graduating in 2006–2008 from 25 UK medical schools) ( | To gather opinions from UK medical students and recent graduates about their undergraduate training to prescribe. | Risk of lack of education |
| Choudry, USA (2015) [ | Scales [Flesch–Kincaid grade level (FKGL) and Flesch reading ease scores (FRES)] for evaluating readability of medical information ( | Assessment of the health literacy of trauma discharge summaries. | Risk of low patient understanding |
| Li, Australia (2013) [ | Retrospective study on discharge summaries, ( | Determination of the relation of readmission of general medical patients to either the existence of a discharge summary or the timeliness of its dispatch. | Risk of delay |
| Horwitz, USA (2013) [ | Prospective cohort study, patients discharged home after hospitalization for acute coronary syndrome, heart failure, or pneumonia ( | Timeliness of dictation, transmission of the summary to appropriate outpatient clinicians; conduction of a comprehensive quality assessment of discharge summaries. | Risk of delay |
| Were, USA (2009) [ | Retrospective study of a randomly selected sample, patients discharged from two large academic medical centers with pending test results ( | To determine the adequacy with which hospital discharge summaries document tests with pending results and the appropriate follow-up providers. | Risk of delay |
| Perren, Switzerland (2009) [ | Prospective observational review of discharge summaries ( | Evaluation the incidence and types of drug omissions and unjustified medications in the discharge summary; assessment of their potential impact on patient health. | Risk of lack of information |
| Tong, Australia (2017) [ | Unblinded, cluster randomised, controlled investigation of medication management plans for patients discharged after an inpatient stay in a general medical unit (Control group | Reduction of the rate of medication errors through pharmacists completing medication management plans in the discharge summary. | Risk of low quality |
| Greer, USA (2016) [ | Cross-sectional review of inpatient hospital medical records ( | To assess the presence and quality of hospital discharge communication about AKI (Acute Kidney Injury). | Risk of low quality |
| Gilmore-Bykovskyi, USA (2018) [ | Retrospective cohort study ( | To assess the relationship between the omission of a responsible clinician/clinic for follow-up care from the hospital discharge summary and poor outcomes for patients transferred to sub-acute care. | Risk of lack of information |
| Carlsson, Sweden (2012) [ | Prospective, descriptive study (N = 15). | Accuracy and continuity of discharge information for patients with eating difficulties after stroke. | Risk of delay |
| Walz, USA (2011) [ | Retrospective cohort study. Stroke, hip fracture, and cancer patients discharged from a single large academic medical center to sub-acute care, 2003–2005 ( | To determine the prevalence and nature of lab tests pending at hospital discharge and their inclusion within hospital discharge summaries for common sub-acute care populations. | Risk of delay |
| Polyzotis, Canada (2013) [ | Cross-sectional study, | To investigate receipt of Cardiac Rehabilitation (CR) discharge summaries by PCPs, as well as timing, and satisfaction with and perceptions of CR summaries. | Risk of delay |
| Garcia, Norway (2017) [ | Randomly selected discharge summaries, evaluation of the medication information (N = 60). | To audit the quality of medication information in discharge summaries and explore factors associated with the quality. | Risk of low quality |
| Monfort, France (2016) [ | Prospective and retrospective study design ( | To assess the completeness of medication information in the medical records, discrepancies between medications noted on the Best Possible Medication at Discharge List (BPMDL) and those prescribed on the discharge order, and the value of the BPMDL for stakeholders. | Risk of lack of information |
Fig. 1Flow chart literature search strategy
Major risk factors of the medical discharge letter and improvements to reduce risk factors
| Risks factors of the medical discharge letter | Suggestions for improvement |
|---|---|
| Delayed delivery | Introduction of electronic transfer systems |
| Quality, lack of information | Training in writing medical discharge letters |
| Education in writing medical discharge letters | Integration of writing medical discharge letters in study and teaching (checklists, workshops) |
| Lack of patient understanding | Translation of medical terms, formulation of a (patient-centered) medical discharge letter. |