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Clinical audit of the inclusion of the Lester Tool details in discharge documents at Foss Park Hospital, York

AIMS: Patients with serious mental health illnesses die on average 15–20 years before the rest of the general population. Anti-psychotic medication, lifestyle and difficulty accessing healthcare services all have a detrimental effect on their life expectancy. To improve outcomes for these patients t...

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Autores principales: Jones, Kayleigh, McIlrae, Shona, Ball, Karen, Tahir, Rohma
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8770355/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2021.265
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author Jones, Kayleigh
McIlrae, Shona
Ball, Karen
Tahir, Rohma
author_facet Jones, Kayleigh
McIlrae, Shona
Ball, Karen
Tahir, Rohma
author_sort Jones, Kayleigh
collection PubMed
description AIMS: Patients with serious mental health illnesses die on average 15–20 years before the rest of the general population. Anti-psychotic medication, lifestyle and difficulty accessing healthcare services all have a detrimental effect on their life expectancy. To improve outcomes for these patients the Lester Tool; a method to assess the cardiovascular health of patients and implement change, was developed. Including the Lester Tool information in discharge letters allows transfer of information to other care providers (mainly GP's) who can implement and monitor any interventions made, improving outcomes for our patients. With this in mind, discharge documents should contain all of the information listed in the Lester Tool. We aimed to check if 100% of data required by the Lester Tool is included in discharge documents of the inpatients at Foss Park Hospital. METHOD: 20 patients from each of the male and female wards at Foss Park hospital, discharged in September or October 2020, were identified. A review of the discharge documents established whether the smoking status, BMI, ECG, blood pressure and blood results of each patient were recorded. RESULT: Of the 40 discharges, none had 100% compliance. On average across both wards; only 23% of the Lester tool information was included in the documents. On the female ward, 40% had none of data recorded, while on the male ward, 15% had none of the data recorded. Across both wards, not a single patient had details about their cholesterol ratio recorded, only 50% of BMI's were recorded and only 27% had a smoking status included. CONCLUSION: Our results have shown that compliance with the Lester Tool falls short of what is expected. As a result, information about the physical health of our patients is not being communicated effectively with other care providers. This in turn can prevent patients being offered interventions needed to improve their cardiovascular health. Identifying this shortcoming in the transfer of information will allow us to educate the staff in our organisation and ensure that all the necessary physical health details will be included in future discharge documents. The result being improved outcomes and longer life expectancy of patients with serious mental illnesses, satisfying the purpose of the Lester Tool.
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spelling pubmed-87703552022-01-31 Clinical audit of the inclusion of the Lester Tool details in discharge documents at Foss Park Hospital, York Jones, Kayleigh McIlrae, Shona Ball, Karen Tahir, Rohma BJPsych Open Audit AIMS: Patients with serious mental health illnesses die on average 15–20 years before the rest of the general population. Anti-psychotic medication, lifestyle and difficulty accessing healthcare services all have a detrimental effect on their life expectancy. To improve outcomes for these patients the Lester Tool; a method to assess the cardiovascular health of patients and implement change, was developed. Including the Lester Tool information in discharge letters allows transfer of information to other care providers (mainly GP's) who can implement and monitor any interventions made, improving outcomes for our patients. With this in mind, discharge documents should contain all of the information listed in the Lester Tool. We aimed to check if 100% of data required by the Lester Tool is included in discharge documents of the inpatients at Foss Park Hospital. METHOD: 20 patients from each of the male and female wards at Foss Park hospital, discharged in September or October 2020, were identified. A review of the discharge documents established whether the smoking status, BMI, ECG, blood pressure and blood results of each patient were recorded. RESULT: Of the 40 discharges, none had 100% compliance. On average across both wards; only 23% of the Lester tool information was included in the documents. On the female ward, 40% had none of data recorded, while on the male ward, 15% had none of the data recorded. Across both wards, not a single patient had details about their cholesterol ratio recorded, only 50% of BMI's were recorded and only 27% had a smoking status included. CONCLUSION: Our results have shown that compliance with the Lester Tool falls short of what is expected. As a result, information about the physical health of our patients is not being communicated effectively with other care providers. This in turn can prevent patients being offered interventions needed to improve their cardiovascular health. Identifying this shortcoming in the transfer of information will allow us to educate the staff in our organisation and ensure that all the necessary physical health details will be included in future discharge documents. The result being improved outcomes and longer life expectancy of patients with serious mental illnesses, satisfying the purpose of the Lester Tool. Cambridge University Press 2021-06-18 /pmc/articles/PMC8770355/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2021.265 Text en © The Author(s) 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Audit
Jones, Kayleigh
McIlrae, Shona
Ball, Karen
Tahir, Rohma
Clinical audit of the inclusion of the Lester Tool details in discharge documents at Foss Park Hospital, York
title Clinical audit of the inclusion of the Lester Tool details in discharge documents at Foss Park Hospital, York
title_full Clinical audit of the inclusion of the Lester Tool details in discharge documents at Foss Park Hospital, York
title_fullStr Clinical audit of the inclusion of the Lester Tool details in discharge documents at Foss Park Hospital, York
title_full_unstemmed Clinical audit of the inclusion of the Lester Tool details in discharge documents at Foss Park Hospital, York
title_short Clinical audit of the inclusion of the Lester Tool details in discharge documents at Foss Park Hospital, York
title_sort clinical audit of the inclusion of the lester tool details in discharge documents at foss park hospital, york
topic Audit
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8770355/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2021.265
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