GP perspectives on hospital discharge letters: an interview and focus group study

Author:

Weetman Katharine,Dale Jeremy,Spencer Rachel,Scott Emma,Schnurr Stephanie

Abstract

Background Written discharge communication following inpatient or outpatient clinic discharge is essential for communicating information to the GP, but GPs’ opinions on discharge communication are seldom sought. Patients are sometimes copied into this communication, but the reasons for this variation, and the resultant effects, remain unclear.AimTo explore GP perspectives on how discharge letters can be improved in order to enhance patient outcomes.Design & settingThe study used narrative interviews with 26 GPs from 13 GP practices within the West Midlands, England.MethodInterviews were transcribed and data were analysed using corpus linguistics (CL) techniques.ResultsElements pivotal to a successful letter were: diagnosis, appropriate follow-up plan, medication changes and reasons, clinical summary, investigations and/or procedures and outcomes, and what information has been given to the patient. GPs supported patients receiving discharge letters and expounded a number of benefits of this practice; for example, increased patient autonomy. Nevertheless, GPs felt that if patients are to receive direct discharge letter copies, modifications such as use of lay language and avoidance of acronyms may be required to increase patient understanding.ConclusionGPs reported that discharge letters frequently lacked content items they assessed to be important; GPs highlighted that this can have subsequent ramifications on resources and patient experiences. Templates should be devised that put discharge letter elements assessed to be important by GPs to the forefront. Future research needs to consider other perspectives on letter content, particularly those of patients.

Publisher

Royal College of General Practitioners

Subject

Family Practice

Reference77 articles.

1. Royal College of Physicians (2019) Improving discharge summaries – learning resource materials. 20 Mar 2020. https://www.rcplondon.ac.uk/guidelines-policy/improving-discharge-summaries-learning-resource-materials.

2. Department of Health (2003) Copying letters to patients: good practice guidelines. 7 May 2020. https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20120504030618/http://www.dh.gov.uk/prod_consum_dh/groups/dh_digitalassets/@dh/@en/documents/digitalasset/dh_4086054.pdf.

3. Department of Health (2000) The NHS Plan: A Plan for Investment a Plan for Reform (DH, London).

4. The Academy of Medical Royal Colleges (2018) Please, write to me: writing outpatient clinic letters to patients. 20 Mar 2020. https://www.aomrc.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/Please_write_to_me_Guidance_010918.pdf.

5. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (2012) Patient experience in adult NHS services: improving the experience of care for people using adult NHS services [NICE clinical guideline 138]. 23 Apr 2020. https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg138.

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