Kljakovic Marjan, Abernethy David, de Ruiter Ingrid
Wellington School of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand.
Inform Prim Care. 2004;12(4):227-34.
To describe the transfer of patient information from hospital to general practice and compare the quality of coding of patient diagnoses in hospital and general practice systems.
Wellington Hospital and patients registered with 12 general practitioners (GPs) from two local computerised general practices. Discharge and outpatient letters for the period June to August 2003 were analysed and diagnostic coding compared between letters and electronic health records (EHR) in hospital and general practice. A questionnaire was sent to 167 consultants and 112 GPs from Wellington city region with a 71% response rate.
GPs received 55% of 284 discharge letters and 97% of 612 outpatient letters with a mean time of 9.4 days (range 0-70 days) and 14 days (range 0-120 days). The mean number of diagnostic codes recorded in discharge letters was 2.9 per letter, in the GPs' EHR 0.9 per letter, and in the hospital EHR 3.5 per letter. GPs were sent new diagnostic information in 30% of discharge and 36% of outpatient letters. There was more coding agreement between GPs' EHR and discharge letters than between the hospital EHR and discharge letters (65% versus 35%). GPs duplicated coding for 71% of all letters, and 74% of diagnoses were coded within the classification section of the GPs' EHR. More GPs than hospital doctors coded patient diagnoses (85% versus 15%), had any formal training in coding (25% versus 2%), and thought coding improved patient care (75% versus 50%). Most doctors in both groups experienced considerable delay of information flow and favoured an electronic transfer of information.
There is delay in information flow from hospital to general practice and poor comparison of diagnostic coding across the two systems. Attitudinal differences and inefficient coding practices will need to be addressed to produce an integrated information system between hospital and general practice.
描述患者信息从医院向全科医疗的传递情况,并比较医院和全科医疗系统中患者诊断编码的质量。
惠灵顿医院以及在两家当地计算机化全科医疗诊所注册的12位全科医生(GP)的患者。分析了2003年6月至8月期间的出院信和门诊信,并比较了医院和全科医疗中信件与电子健康记录(EHR)之间的诊断编码。向惠灵顿市地区的167位顾问医生和112位全科医生发送了问卷,回复率为71%。
全科医生收到了284封出院信中的55%以及612封门诊信中的97%,接收出院信的平均时间为9.4天(范围0 - 70天),接收门诊信的平均时间为14天(范围0 - 120天)。出院信中记录的诊断编码平均每封信为2.9个,全科医生的电子健康记录中每封信为0.9个,医院电子健康记录中每封信为3.5个。在30%的出院信和36%的门诊信中,全科医生收到了新的诊断信息。全科医生的电子健康记录与出院信之间的编码一致性高于医院电子健康记录与出院信之间的一致性(65%对35%)。全科医生对所有信件中71%进行了重复编码,74%的诊断在全科医生电子健康记录的分类部分进行了编码。进行患者诊断编码的全科医生多于医院医生(85%对15%),接受过编码方面正规培训的全科医生多于医院医生(25%对2%),并且认为编码能改善患者护理的全科医生多于医院医生(75%对50%)。两组中的大多数医生都经历了信息流的显著延迟,并且赞成信息的电子传递。
从医院到全科医疗存在信息流延迟,并且两个系统之间的诊断编码比较不佳。需要解决态度差异和低效的编码做法,以建立医院和全科医疗之间的综合信息系统。