Health Information Management Services, Sunshine Coast-Wide Bay Health Service District-Southern Cluster, PO Box 487, Nambour QLD 4560, Australia.
Health Inf Manag. 2010;39(1):8-16. doi: 10.1177/183335831003900103.
General practitioners (GPs) are an integral part of the multidisciplinary team that care for patients with lung cancer. It is essential that patient information including results of tests, management plans, treatment, and follow-up arrangements are communicated between hospital-based carers and the community-based GP. The aim of this study was to explore GPs' views about the information they need from hospital-based health professionals in the management of their patients with lung cancer. This exploration is undertaken within the context of a multidisciplinary model of care, a relatively new concept in service delivery for cancer patients. Data were collected using a questionnaire that was distributed to the population of 433 GPs from one Australian regional Division of General Practice. Questions related to from whom, what, when and how GPs would like to receive information from the multidisciplinary hospital-based lung cancer team. GPs reported that they wanted information from all members of the multidisciplinary hospital-based lung cancer team, not just physicians. The key triggers for communication included: any change in the patient's condition; following initial outpatient visit; at admission and discharge; and following treatment milestones. Both medical and social information were seen as important to GPs and there was strong support to receive information electronically. This study illustrates the desire by GPs to receive information from all members of the hospital-based lung cancer team if it is relevant to the ongoing care of their patient. Technology-enabled solutions, such as an electronic multidisciplinary discharge summary, the electronic health record and the person-controlled electronic health record, offer strategies to improve both timeliness and access to information.
全科医生(GP)是多学科团队的重要组成部分,负责照顾肺癌患者。至关重要的是,医院医护人员与社区 GP 之间应交流患者信息,包括检查结果、管理计划、治疗和随访安排。本研究旨在探讨全科医生对他们在管理肺癌患者时从医院医护人员那里获得的信息的看法。这种探索是在多学科护理模式的背景下进行的,这是癌症患者服务提供的一个相对较新的概念。通过问卷调查收集数据,该问卷分发给来自澳大利亚一个地区全科医生分部的 433 名全科医生。问题涉及全科医生希望从多学科医院肺癌团队中的哪些人、获得哪些信息、何时以及如何获得信息。全科医生表示,他们希望从多学科医院肺癌团队的所有成员那里获得信息,而不仅仅是医生。沟通的关键触发因素包括:患者病情的任何变化;门诊初始就诊后;入院和出院时;以及治疗里程碑后。医疗和社会信息对全科医生都很重要,强烈支持以电子方式接收信息。本研究表明,如果与患者的持续护理相关,全科医生希望从医院肺癌团队的所有成员那里获得信息。技术支持的解决方案,如电子多学科出院总结、电子病历和个人控制的电子病历,提供了改善信息及时性和获取信息的策略。