Welcome Guest | Login | Register | Why Register?
HOME | CONTACT | NEWS | DOCUMENT LIBRARY | FEATURES | COMMENT & ANALYSIS | EVENTS | RESEARCH REPORTS | CASE STUDIES

Discharge letter targets will create two-tier care

Tags: contract   NHS Alliance   Quality  

07 Jan 2008

The NHS Alliance claims government targets for discharge letters will create a two tier system on a critical patient safety issue because the obligation will not apply to most foundation trusts.

The organisation, which represents PCTs and GP practices, has been campaigning to improve the timeliness and quality of discharge summaries and last year called for better uptake of electronic discharge summaries.

The Department of Health’s Operating Framework for 2008/2009 includes new obligations on acute trusts to deliver discharge summaries more promptly from April 1 2008 with summaries to be delivered within 72 hours up to March 2009, within 48 hours between April 2009 and March 2010 and within 24 hours after April 1 2010.

However the NHS Alliance says the obligations will not apply to most foundation trusts as those with existing three year contracts will not have to meet the targets until their current contract runs out.

Dr Mike Dixon, chairman of the NHS Alliance and a GP in Collumpton, Devon, said discharge summaries were as much a part of patient care as a surgical procedure or diagnostic test.

He added: “It is unacceptable – and potentially dangerous – to fail to ensure that all patients receive the same standard of care.

“It is impossible for GPs to treat patients properly when they do not know the results of diagnostic tests, what treatment has been given in hospital or what medication has been prescribed. Yet we are in danger of accepting a two-tier system. Foundation Trusts, meant to be the best, can avoid meeting the most up to date standards in providing essential discharge information.”

A survey of 650 practices conducted by the NHS Alliance last year found that that 70 per cent of practices experience severely delayed discharge summaries either very regularly or fairly regularly. The Alliance said IT would be a better and quicker way of delievering discharge summaries in future.

Fiona Bar

Related articles

E-discharge summaries needed, say GPs 

© 2007 E-HEALTH-MEDIA LTD. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Reader's Comments
Add a comment
Reader's Comments

1

we are all equal, but some are more equal than others

09 Jan 08 12:01

Foundation Trusts can do no evil

because if they were exposed as having the same problems as everyone else - where would the political advantage be for politicians to boast of?

Makes sense to me.


2

FTs not the problem

14 Jan 08 10:01

In my patch, the FTs have been keen to work with us to implement discharge summaries. The block has been the empty promises from CfH that we won't need them as the future is rosy, with everyone on an integrated system.

GP system suppliers have been too busy responding to CfH requirements to develop their systems to cover this area, so our development has been severely slowed.

Any danger of CfH listening ?

Search
News Features Jobs Newsletters
Most commented
Most commented
Research reports
Research reports
Top jobs
More
Top jobs

Featured_recruiters
Featured_recruiters