Jones Christine D, Vu Maihan B, O'Donnell Christopher M, Anderson Mary E, Patel Snehal, Wald Heidi L, Coleman Eric A, DeWalt Darren A
Hospital Medicine Section, Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Colorado, Denver, Aurora, CO, USA,
J Gen Intern Med. 2015 Apr;30(4):417-24. doi: 10.1007/s11606-014-3056-x. Epub 2014 Oct 15.
Care coordination between adult hospitalists and primary care providers (PCPs) is a critical component of successful transitions of care from hospital to home, yet one that is not well understood.
The purpose of this study was to understand the challenges in coordination of care, as well as potential solutions, from the perspective of hospitalists and PCPs in North Carolina.
We conducted an exploratory qualitative study with 58 clinicians in four hospitalist focus groups (n = 32), three PCP focus groups (n = 19), and one hybrid group with both hospitalists and PCPs (n = 7).
Interview guides included questions about care coordination, information exchange, follow-up care, accountability, and medication management. Focus group sessions were recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed in ATLAS.ti. The constant comparative method was used to evaluate differences between hospitalists and PCPs.
Hospitalists and PCPs were found to encounter similar care coordination challenges, including (1) lack of time, (2) difficulty reaching other clinicians, (3) lack of personal relationships with other clinicians, (4) lack of information feedback loops, (5) medication list discrepancies, and (6) lack of clarity regarding accountability for pending tests and home health. Hospitalists additionally noted difficulty obtaining timely follow-up appointments for after-hours or weekend discharges. PCPs additionally noted (1) not knowing when patients were hospitalized, (2) not having hospital records for post-hospitalization appointments, (3) difficulty locating important information in discharge summaries, and (4) feeling undervalued when hospitalists made medication changes without involving PCPs. Hospitalists and PCPs identified common themes of successful care coordination as (1) greater efforts to coordinate care for "high-risk" patients, (2) improved direct telephone access to each other, (3) improved information exchange through shared electronic medical records, (4) enhanced interpersonal relationships, and (5) clearly defined accountability.
Hospitalists and PCPs encounter similar challenges in care coordination, yet have important experiential differences related to sending and receiving roles for hospital discharges. Efforts to improve coordination of care between hospitalists and PCPs should aim to understand perspectives of clinicians in each setting.
成年住院医师与初级保健提供者(PCP)之间的护理协调是实现从医院到家庭成功护理过渡的关键组成部分,但目前对此尚未得到充分理解。
本研究旨在从北卡罗来纳州住院医师和初级保健提供者的角度,了解护理协调中的挑战以及潜在的解决方案。
我们对58名临床医生进行了一项探索性定性研究,其中包括四个住院医师焦点小组(n = 32)、三个初级保健提供者焦点小组(n = 19)以及一个由住院医师和初级保健提供者组成的混合小组(n = 7)。
访谈指南包括有关护理协调、信息交流、后续护理、责任追究和药物管理的问题。焦点小组会议进行了录音,逐字转录,并在ATLAS.ti中进行分析。采用持续比较法评估住院医师和初级保健提供者之间的差异。
发现住院医师和初级保健提供者面临类似的护理协调挑战,包括(1)时间不足,(2)难以联系到其他临床医生,(3)与其他临床医生缺乏个人关系,(4)缺乏信息反馈回路,(5)药物清单差异,以及(6)对于待办检查和家庭健康护理的责任不明确。住院医师还指出,在非工作时间或周末出院后难以获得及时的随访预约。初级保健提供者还指出(1)不知道患者何时住院,(2)没有用于出院后预约的医院记录,(3)在出院小结中难以找到重要信息,以及(4)当住院医师在未告知初级保健提供者的情况下更改药物时感到被轻视。住院医师和初级保健提供者确定了成功护理协调的共同主题为(1)加大对“高危”患者护理协调的力度,(2)改善彼此之间的直接电话联系,(3)通过共享电子病历改善信息交流,(4)加强人际关系,以及(5)明确界定责任。
住院医师和初级保健提供者在护理协调方面面临类似的挑战,但在医院出院的发送和接收角色方面存在重要的经验差异。改善住院医师和初级保健提供者之间护理协调的努力应旨在了解每种情况下临床医生的观点。