Hammad Eman A, Wright David John, Walton Christine, Nunney Ian, Bhattacharya Debi
Department of Biopharmaceutics and Clinical Pharmacy, School of Pharmacy, University of Jordan, Amman, 11942, Jordan.
Br J Clin Pharmacol. 2014 Dec;78(6):1453-64. doi: 10.1111/bcp.12463.
Poor communication of clinical information between healthcare settings is associated with patient harm. In 2008, the UK National Prescribing Centre (NPC) issued guidance regarding the minimum information to be communicated upon hospital discharge. This study evaluates the extent of adherence to this guidance and identifies predictors of adherence.
This was an audit of discharge summaries received by medical practices in one UK primary care trust of patients hospitalized for 24 h or longer. Each discharge summary was scored against the applicable NPC criteria which were organized into: 'patient, admission and discharge', 'medicine' and 'therapy change' information.
Of 3444 discharge summaries audited, 2421 (70.3%) were from two teaching hospitals and 906 (26.3%) from three district hospitals. Unplanned admissions accounted for 2168 (63.0%) of the audit sample and 74.6% (2570) of discharge summaries were electronic. Mean (95% CI) adherence to the total NPC minimum dataset was 71.7% [70.2, 73.2]. Adherence to patient, admission and discharge information was 77.3% (95% CI 77.0, 77.7), 67.2% (95% CI 66.3, 68.2) for medicine information and 48.9% (95% CI 47.5, 50.3) for therapy change information. Allergy status, co-morbidities, medication history and rationale for therapy change were the most frequent omissions. Predictors of adherence included quality of the discharge template, electronic discharge summaries and smaller numbers of prescribed medicines.
Despite clear guidance regarding the content of discharge information, omissions are frequent. Adherence to the NPC minimum dataset might be improved by using comprehensive electronic discharge templates and implementation of effective medicines reconciliation at both sides of the health interface.
医疗机构之间临床信息沟通不畅与患者伤害相关。2008年,英国国家处方中心(NPC)发布了关于出院时需沟通的最低限度信息的指南。本研究评估了对该指南的遵守程度,并确定了遵守情况的预测因素。
这是一项对英国一个初级医疗信托机构中接收的、住院24小时或更长时间患者的出院小结的审核。每个出院小结根据适用的NPC标准进行评分,这些标准分为:“患者、入院和出院”、“药物”和“治疗变更”信息。
在审核的3444份出院小结中,2421份(70.3%)来自两家教学医院,906份(26.3%)来自三家地区医院。非计划入院占审核样本的2168份(63.0%),74.6%(2570份)的出院小结为电子形式。对NPC最低数据集总内容的平均(95%置信区间)遵守率为71.7%[70.2, 73.2]。对患者、入院和出院信息的遵守率为77.3%(95%置信区间77.0, 77.7),药物信息的遵守率为67.2%(95%置信区间66.3, 68.2),治疗变更信息的遵守率为48.9%(95%置信区间47.5, 50.3)。过敏状态、合并症、用药史和治疗变更理由是最常遗漏的信息。遵守情况的预测因素包括出院模板质量、电子出院小结和较少的处方药物数量。
尽管有关于出院信息内容的明确指南,但遗漏情况仍很常见。通过使用全面的电子出院模板以及在医疗界面两端实施有效的药物核对,可能会提高对NPC最低数据集的遵守率。