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CQC criticises discharge summaries

Tags: CQC   Discharge summaries   GP   GPs   Medicines   PCTs   Safety  

27 Oct 2009

The Care Quality Commission has warned that the NHS may be failing to prevent harm to patients by failing to share information when they move between services.

The findings come in a report by the watchdog called ‘Managing patients’ medicines after discharge from hospital’, based on a national study that visited 12 primary care trusts and surveyed 280 of their GP practices.

Eight out of ten (81%) of the practices surveyed said that when hospitals sent them discharge summaries details of medicines were incomplete or inaccurate “all of the time” or “most of the time.”

The study also found that: “Information shared between GPs and hospitals when a patient moves between services is often patchy, incomplete and not shared quickly enough.”

Only 53% of GPs said that summaries were received in time to be useful for a patient’s first follow-up GP appointment.

Cynthia Bower, chief executive of the CQC, said: “It is important that basic systems to share essential patient details are working effectively to get the right information to clinicians at the right time to minimise risks.

“It is clear from this study that services have some way to go before this routinely happens in the way it should.”

In April 2008, a new national standard was introduced to make sure that acute hospitals send discharge summaries to GPs within 24 hours by April 2010.

The deadline means that most trusts will need to send discharge summaries electronically. Failure to meet the deadline could incur financial penalties.

In its report, the CQC endorses the electronic exchange of information: “The CQC advocates the roll-out of an IT system suitable for sharing information in a more effective way.”

Bower said: “People have a right to expect clinicians to know details about each stage of their care, and in this day and age they are right to do so.

“There needs to be a change of attitude in the NHS in recognising how important it is for clinicians to pass the baton smoothly between services in order to offer person-centred, integrated care.”

The report also criticises the NHS for allowing non-clinical staff to update GP records. In 17% of the GP practices surveyed, patients’ notes were updated by managerial or clerical staff.

Although doctors checked cases, the CQC says there is not enough evidence to assess the extent or quality of this oversight.

In two thirds of the PCTs visited, there were no systems in place for monitoring whether discharge summaries were reviewed and patient notes updated effectively within practices.

The study also found problems with the information provided to hospitals by GPs. Ninety eight per cent of GP practices claimed that they provided hospitals with a list of all medicines currently prescribed to patients in non-emergency cases.

However, analysis showed that a quarter were not providing information on previous drug reactions, that 14% did not provide information on co-morbidities and that 11% did not mention known allergies.

Link: Managing patients’ medicines after discharge from hospital

Sarah Bruce

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Reader's Comments
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Reader's Comments

1

So what happens now?

29 Oct 09 13:10

So what happens now?

Will the CQC instruct acute care chief executives to ensure a safe and accurate electronic discharge system is in place by xxxx date? Or will nothing much happen until the next CQC review?

By the way, if an acute trust doesn't receive an accurate GP referral document including allergies and current medications within, say, 48 hours of admission then should the acute care hospital be able to "fine" the GP / PCT for not providing this essential information?

What is good for the Goose is good for the Gander...


2

Would e-prescribing in hospitals help?

maryhawking@tigers.demon.co.uk

02 Nov 09 08:11

As a GP, I am receiving electronic discharge letters - and I wish the CQC had looked at the details of the problems instead of the PCT and GP views on the results..

The TTOs (to take out medication) leave a lot to be desired from the recipients and, I would think, the patient/parent/carers' point of view.

For example, in an infant, the TTOs included "ranitidine" (without a formulation) dose in mgs, instructions "oral" and no quantity diswpensed (so no way of knowing when a new prescription would be needed).

Ranitidine comes as a syrup with a strength of 75mg per 5cc - not an easy calculation into from mgs!

The reason given was that hospitals don't prescribe against individual patients - so TTOs need to be entered individually, not imported from the record - as they are in GP systems.

The CQC is right to criticise: will the criticism encourage full use of the pharmacy systems, with the huge change in ways of working this would appear to need?

PS poster 1: if you could arrange to inform GPs when their patients were admitted, you could probably set up a system of receiving information on up to date medication: GP systems usually hold complete records for the medication they are prescribing.


3

ttos and e-discharge

02 Nov 09 14:11

Mary,

Most hospitals of my acquaintance now use e-prescribing for TTOs, although L&D may not be one of those. This becomes part of the patients record held electronically in house. Most also have some kind of initiative to send this electronically to GPs on discharge, for which GPs can self identify. The problem is how to do this? email? secure website? structured message to GP system?

With there being no standard a GP can and does end up having to look in 3 or 4 different places for information from different hospitals, which advances the situation not one bit.

Of course, if you want to try and have a sensible conversation about how to do this, you immediately fall foul of the security obsessives and the lack of central direction


4

Ref:ttos and e-discharge

maryhawking@tigers.demon.co.uk

05 Nov 09 12:11

 

"02 Nov 09 14:47

Mary,

Most hospitals of my acquaintance now use e-prescribing for TTOs,"

Could you give examples? My information was that the *systems* were capable of e-prescribing, but that few if any hospitals used e-prescribing while in the hospital, so TTOs could not be linked within the hospital pharmacy system to individual patients - which would obviously be the best solution.

Are we talking about the same function?

As far as GPs receiving electronic discharge leters electonically differently from different hospitals, yes, it is a problem and standards would be useful, but the most important element is the ability to import the electronic document into the electronic record without having to print out and scan, and that the GP system should display these documents in the same place as the other documents.

However the information is transmitted, the TTOs need to pass through a qualified human brain before being re-issued..

 

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