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Improving the quality of discharge summaries: implementing updated Academy of Medical Royal Colleges standards at a district general hospital

Quality of documentation is harder to quantify and incentivise, but it has a significant impact on patient care. Good discharge summaries facilitate continuity between secondary and primary care. The junior doctors’ forum led this project to improve the quality of electronic discharge summaries (eDS...

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Autores principales: May-Miller, Hannah, Hayter, Joanne, Loewenthal, Lola, Hall, Louis, Hilbert, Rebecca, Quinn, Michael, Pearson, Nicola, Patel, Alisha, Law, Rebekah
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: British Publishing Group 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4645815/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26734325
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjquality.u207268.w2918
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author May-Miller, Hannah
Hayter, Joanne
Loewenthal, Lola
Hall, Louis
Hilbert, Rebecca
Quinn, Michael
Pearson, Nicola
Patel, Alisha
Law, Rebekah
author_facet May-Miller, Hannah
Hayter, Joanne
Loewenthal, Lola
Hall, Louis
Hilbert, Rebecca
Quinn, Michael
Pearson, Nicola
Patel, Alisha
Law, Rebekah
author_sort May-Miller, Hannah
collection PubMed
description Quality of documentation is harder to quantify and incentivise, but it has a significant impact on patient care. Good discharge summaries facilitate continuity between secondary and primary care. The junior doctors’ forum led this project to improve the quality of electronic discharge summaries (eDS). Baseline measurement revealed significant room for improvement. We measured the quality of 10 summaries per month (across all inpatient specialties), against 23 indicators from the revised Academy of Medical Royal Colleges (AoMRC) standards (2013) that were prioritised by GPs as a “minimum dataset”. Junior doctors felt that the Trust's dual eDS systems were responsible for great variation in quality. This was confirmed by the results of a comparison audit of the systems in April 2014: one system greatly outperformed the other (57% mean compliance with iSoft clinical management (iCM) based system vs. 77% with InfoPath-based system). We recommended that the Trust move to a single eDS system, decommissioning the iCM-based system, and this proposal was approved by several Trust committees. We worked with information services, junior doctors, general practitioners and hospital physicians to develop and implement a generic template to further improve compliance with AoMRC standards. In August 2014, the iCM-based system was withdrawn, the new template went live, and training was delivered, coinciding with the changeover of junior doctors to minimise disruption. Median compliance increased from 66.7% to 77.8%. Quality of discharge summaries had improved across the specialties. There was a reduction in the number of complaints and positive qualitative feedback from general practitioners and junior doctors. Completion of discharge summaries within 24 hours was not affected by this change. There is still more to be done to improve quality; average compliance with the full AoMRC standards (39 indicators) is 59.5%. With the approval of the Trust executive committee further plan, do, study, act (PDSA) cycles are underway, working to improve the remaining specialty-specific templates.
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spelling pubmed-46458152016-01-05 Improving the quality of discharge summaries: implementing updated Academy of Medical Royal Colleges standards at a district general hospital May-Miller, Hannah Hayter, Joanne Loewenthal, Lola Hall, Louis Hilbert, Rebecca Quinn, Michael Pearson, Nicola Patel, Alisha Law, Rebekah BMJ Qual Improv Rep BMJ Quality Improvement Programme Quality of documentation is harder to quantify and incentivise, but it has a significant impact on patient care. Good discharge summaries facilitate continuity between secondary and primary care. The junior doctors’ forum led this project to improve the quality of electronic discharge summaries (eDS). Baseline measurement revealed significant room for improvement. We measured the quality of 10 summaries per month (across all inpatient specialties), against 23 indicators from the revised Academy of Medical Royal Colleges (AoMRC) standards (2013) that were prioritised by GPs as a “minimum dataset”. Junior doctors felt that the Trust's dual eDS systems were responsible for great variation in quality. This was confirmed by the results of a comparison audit of the systems in April 2014: one system greatly outperformed the other (57% mean compliance with iSoft clinical management (iCM) based system vs. 77% with InfoPath-based system). We recommended that the Trust move to a single eDS system, decommissioning the iCM-based system, and this proposal was approved by several Trust committees. We worked with information services, junior doctors, general practitioners and hospital physicians to develop and implement a generic template to further improve compliance with AoMRC standards. In August 2014, the iCM-based system was withdrawn, the new template went live, and training was delivered, coinciding with the changeover of junior doctors to minimise disruption. Median compliance increased from 66.7% to 77.8%. Quality of discharge summaries had improved across the specialties. There was a reduction in the number of complaints and positive qualitative feedback from general practitioners and junior doctors. Completion of discharge summaries within 24 hours was not affected by this change. There is still more to be done to improve quality; average compliance with the full AoMRC standards (39 indicators) is 59.5%. With the approval of the Trust executive committee further plan, do, study, act (PDSA) cycles are underway, working to improve the remaining specialty-specific templates. British Publishing Group 2015-05-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4645815/ /pubmed/26734325 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjquality.u207268.w2918 Text en © 2015, Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial License, which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non commercial and is otherwise in compliance with the license. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/legalcode
spellingShingle BMJ Quality Improvement Programme
May-Miller, Hannah
Hayter, Joanne
Loewenthal, Lola
Hall, Louis
Hilbert, Rebecca
Quinn, Michael
Pearson, Nicola
Patel, Alisha
Law, Rebekah
Improving the quality of discharge summaries: implementing updated Academy of Medical Royal Colleges standards at a district general hospital
title Improving the quality of discharge summaries: implementing updated Academy of Medical Royal Colleges standards at a district general hospital
title_full Improving the quality of discharge summaries: implementing updated Academy of Medical Royal Colleges standards at a district general hospital
title_fullStr Improving the quality of discharge summaries: implementing updated Academy of Medical Royal Colleges standards at a district general hospital
title_full_unstemmed Improving the quality of discharge summaries: implementing updated Academy of Medical Royal Colleges standards at a district general hospital
title_short Improving the quality of discharge summaries: implementing updated Academy of Medical Royal Colleges standards at a district general hospital
title_sort improving the quality of discharge summaries: implementing updated academy of medical royal colleges standards at a district general hospital
topic BMJ Quality Improvement Programme
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4645815/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26734325
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjquality.u207268.w2918
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