Increasing PCP and Hospital Medicine Physician Verbal Communication During Hospital Admissions

Author:

Zackoff Matthew W.1,Graham Camille23,Warrick Denise2,Pulda Kathleen4,Gosdin Craig5,Simpson Blair5,Marischen Jessica6,Bunch Paul27,Vossmeyer Michael5,Mussman Grant M.5

Affiliation:

1. Critical Care Medicine, Department of Pediatrics and

2. Divisions of General and Community Pediatrics,

3. Mid-City Pediatrics Inc, Cincinnati, Ohio; and

4. Physician Priority Link, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio;

5. Hospital Medicine, and

6. Physician Services, and

7. Springdale-Mason Pediatric Associates Inc, Cincinnati, Ohio

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: During hospital admission, communication between primary care physicians (PCPs) and hospital medicine (HM) physicians provides an opportunity for collaboration. Two-way communication facilitates collaboration by allowing the receiver to ask and respond to questions. At our institution, most HM-to-PCP communication occurred by telephone call after discharge. Our specific aim was to increase the percentage of patients for whom a telephone conversation occurred between HM and PCPs during hospital admission from 40% to >80%. METHODS: An improvement team that included PCPs and HM physicians redesigned the process for communication with PCPs to emphasize collaboration during hospitalization. Interventions were used to target key drivers of information transparency, PCP and HM provider buy-in, the value of early call initiation, process standardization, accommodating provider availability, and preoccupation with failure. We used improvement-science methods and run charts to measure our progress and attain our goal. RESULTS: The median weekly percentage of patients with a phone call completed during hospitalization increased from 40% to 85% at the satellite campus and 40% to 80% at the main campus. In addition to the standardized use of a telephone operator system to route calls and follow-up on unplaced calls, critical interventions included feedback on PCP call preferences to providers and the provider script for calls. CONCLUSIONS: PCPs and HM physicians applied quality-improvement methodology to ensure reliable HM-PCP communication during hospital admission. Interventions to facilitate communication between providers and learners (who may otherwise have limited interaction), such as the scripting of phone calls and feedback from PCPs to HM physicians, were important for success.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics,General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

Reference18 articles.

1. Guiding principles for pediatric hospital medicine programs;Section on Hospital Medicine;Pediatrics,2013

2. Pediatric hospitalists and primary care providers: a communication needs assessment;Harlan;J Hosp Med,2009

3. The incidence and severity of adverse events affecting patients after discharge from the hospital;Forster;Ann Intern Med,2003

4. Prevalence and clinical significance of medication discrepancies at pediatric hospital admission;Coffey;Acad Pediatr,2009

5. Hospital admission medication reconciliation in medically complex children: an observational study;Stone;Arch Dis Child,2010

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