| Literature DB >> 31711500 |
Katharine Weetman1, Jeremy Dale2, Emma Scott2, Stephanie Schnurr3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Discharge letters are crucial during care transitions from hospital to home. Research indicates a need for improvement to increase quality of care and decrease adverse outcomes. These letters are often sent from the hospital discharging physician to the referring clinician, typically the patient's General Practitioner (GP) in the UK, and patients may or may not be copied into them. Relatively little is known about the barriers and enablers to sending patients discharge letters. Hence, the aim of this study was to investigate from GP, hospital professional (HP) and patient perspectives how to improve processes of patients receiving letters and increase quality of discharge letters. The study has a particular focus on the impacts of receiving or not receiving letters on patient experiences and quality of care.Entities:
Keywords: Communication; Continuity of care; Discharge letter; Hospital discharge; Mixed methods
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31711500 PMCID: PMC6849198 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-019-4612-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
List of search terms
| 1. Discharge communication | |
| 2. Discharge summary(ies) | |
| 3. Discharge letter(s) | |
| 4. Discharge planning | |
| 5. Secondary to primary care communication | |
| 6. Patient discharge | |
| 7. Hospital GP communication | |
| 8. Hospital specialist discharge communication | |
| 9. Information sent to GPs following discharge | |
| 10. Discharge documents for GPs | |
| 11. Hospital discharge letters | |
| 12. Discharge documents | |
| 13. Discharge information | |
| 14. Hospital to primary care/family physician communication | |
| 15. Discharge information for GPs | |
| 16. Discharge information for family/primary care physicians | |
| 17. Communication following patient discharge | |
| 18. Discharge process | |
| 19. Communication AND discharge | |
| 20. Electronic discharge medicine information | |
| 21. Integrated care information communication to GPs | |
| 22. Hospital discharge information communication |
Summary of scoping review findings
| Discharge communication area | Summary of main findings from scoping review |
|---|---|
| 1. Mode, timing and medium of letters | Discharge letters are not always received by physicians in an adequate timeframe. Quality impacts and ethical and legal implications of technological interventions and affordances of electronic communication need further research. |
| 2. Letter content | Discharge letters do not always contain sufficient detail relative to content components considered important to recipients e.g. diagnosis. Reasons for content variation, despite availability of guidelines, needs further research as well as better understanding of content items and details important to those involved in discharge communication. |
| 3. Patients receiving letters | Patients receiving discharge letters, where there is no identified risk of this being harmful, is currently considered to be good practice. However, patients do not always receive letters. Reasons for this inconsistency and variation was unclear and needs further research. The format of patient letters vary, and include patient personalised letters and receiving a copy of the letter sent to the GP. The implications of these differing letter forms in terms of cost-benefit analysis and patient outcomes are indeterminate and require further research. |
| 4. Letter form | A variety of letter forms may be used for discharge communication, such as dictated letter forms and structured discharge summary templates. Future research should assess feasibility and implications of interventions for integrating more standardised systems. |
| 5. Letter authorship | There are potential issues with junior doctors and inexperienced practitioners producing discharge letters without adequate support. Support interventions such as training may increase discharge quality. Further research is needed to design, implement and evaluate feasible and sustainable training and support interventions. |
| 6. Letter quality related to safety implications | Poor quality of discharge communication can pose risks to patient safety. Vulnerable groups such as those with medically complex needs, the elderly, those with low health literacy, and those with a lack of social or family support may be particularly at risk. Further research is needed to understand the needs of these groups and how risks to patient safety can be reduced through improved communication quality. |
| 7. Medication information | Adequate details regarding medication information, particularly changes to medication, are not always included in discharge letters or clear to recipients. Further research should look at feasible and sustainable interventions for improving communication of medication information. |
Fig. 1Discharge communication quartet
Fig. 2Recruitment and uptake assumptions for target of 30 “quartets”
Study inclusion and exclusion criteriaa
| Inclusion criteria | • NHS adult (18+ years) patients discharged from a hospital following an episode of inpatient or outpatient care. |
| • Patient registered with the participating GP practice. | |
| • Patient treated at and discharged from a hospital within Warwickshire, Coventry, Rugby, Herefordshire or Worcestershire. | |
| • Cases where written discharge communication has been sent to the patient’s GP. | |
| Exclusion criteria | • Age < 18 years. |
| • Patients who lack capacity to give informed consent to participate in the study (e.g. Alzheimer’s) or are deemed by the GP to be unsuitable for participation (e.g. end of life). | |
| • Patients discharged to providers or units other than their GP (e.g. discharge from hospital to a rehab unit). | |
| • Discharge communication from mental health services. | |
| • Communication about individuals who are considered unable to participate in an interview or focus group or survey conducted in English. | |
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aAll criteria apply to phase I letters and phase II for patients with only those in bold applying to GPs in phase I and hospital professionals in phase III