|
|
|||||||||||
Newham Centre for Mental Health, Glen Road, London E13 8SP
Royal London Hospital, London
North East London Mental Health Trust, Ilford
|
|
Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
To examine and attempt to improve the recording of information within psychiatric discharge summaries in an adult psychiatry department, by means of audit and feedback. Psychiatric discharge summaries from an acute adult psychiatric department were examined to determine the recording of ten selected items. Following feedback and discussion, the audit was repeated after 6 months.
RESULTS
Fifty-one discharge summaries were examined on the first occasion and 53 on the second. There was considerable variability in the standard of recording across the selected items, but the patterns of recording were similar at both stages. No improvement was found in the recording of information at the second audit.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
Audit and feedback alone may have little effect in changing clinical practice. This study examines the experience of undertaking clinical audit from a trainees perspective, illustrates barriers to change and highlights the possible limitations of audit as a clinical tool.
|
|
Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Several studies have examined the views of health care professionals on clinical audit. An overview by Johnston et al (2000) noted that perceived benefits include improved communication between professional groups and increased professional satisfaction and knowledge, whereas potential disadvantages include diminished clinical ownership, fear of litigation and professional isolation. Although clinical audit should form an essential part of junior doctors training, little has been published on the views of the junior doctors who take part in it. A postal survey of junior doctors showed that although 74% of their sample had been involved in audit, a large proportion of projects did not conform to good practice and only 12% carried out a further audit (Greenwood et al, 1997). These findings were echoed in a more recent study which found that often activities that were labelled as audit were methodologically poor and that this could produce a negative attitude among junior doctors towards the process (Nettleton & Ireland, 2000). This paper describes an audit completed by a specialist registrar in order to demonstrate the kind of project that can successfully be undertaken by trainees.
|
|
Method |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The discharge summary is potentially a valuable document for the psychiatric team, providing detailed information concerning a patients hospital admission, previous clinical history and potential risk factors for the patient and those involved in his or her care. However, I.C. noted that not infrequently important information on drug, alcohol and forensic histories was missing. The discharge summary should also provide details of a patients admission to the general practitioner, but several studies have identified deficiencies in their quality in this respect. These mainly concern timeliness, accuracy and length (Macauley et al, 1996; Wilson et al, 2001; Foster et al, 2002). In a survey of the views of general practitioners on psychiatric discharge summaries (Dunn & Burton, 1999), their top five headings in terms of importance were:
Another survey of the views of hospital physicians, junior doctors and general practitioners ranked medication on discharge, significant results of investigations (both positive and negative) and follow-up arrangements particularly highly (Solomon et al, 1995). In addition to the above items, the inclusion of an ICD-10 diagnosis on the discharge summary was thought to be important because it is used by coding departments for statistical information about the service. The following ten headings were therefore selected for the study: diagnosis; ICD-10 compatible diagnosis; drug history; alcohol history; smoking history; forensic history; results of blood tests; physical examination; medication on discharge; and follow-up arrangements.
The audit cycle
The first part of the audit took place between October and December 1999.
Fifty-one consecutively produced discharge summaries for patients aged 18-65
years discharged from acute adult psychiatric wards were examined (by I.C.).
Part 1 summaries were included only if they were incorporated as part of the
final discharge summary (Part 1 summaries provide an initial account of the
history and mental state examination and are produced shortly after
admission). The patients were under the care of eight consultants and the
summaries had been written by nine junior doctors. Information under each
heading was scored as being present or absent, or a note was made if it was
recorded as See previous discharge summary. No attempt was made
to ascertain the accuracy of the information recorded. A standard of 100% was
set for the recording of all the items.
|
|
Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
The audit was repeated between May and July 2000. Fifty-three summaries were examined on this occasion. These summaries were produced by a new cohort of junior doctors, but these were the ones who had received the results of the original audit early in their posts and who were subject to the subsequent recommendations. The audit was carried out towards the end of the senior house officers 6-month posting to allow sufficient time for changes in practice to be realised.
The results of the two audits are shown in Figure 1. There was no statistically significant difference between the first and second audits for any item. Indeed, the patterns of information recording were very similar at both times, despite the fact that the results reflected the performance of two different groups of junior doctors.
|
|
Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The similarity in the patterns of information recording between the two groups was the most interesting finding in this study, and may point to another explanation for the overall finding of no improvement - that is, that junior doctors may use their predecessors work as a template when producing discharge summaries and therefore repeat the same mistakes. If this is the case, there remains a further opportunity for intervention and change.
Although the results of this project were in some ways disappointing, review of previously published work showed that they were not altogether unsurprising, Cochrane reviews concluded that although audit and feedback can be effective in improving the performance of health care providers, the effects are generally small to moderate (Thomson OBrien et al, 2000a), even when complementary measures are also used (Thomson OBrien et al, 2000b).
Although no improvement in practice was achieved from this audit, I.C. was able to reflect on the positive aspects of the experience, which are likely to be relevant to other trainees. First, the project was undertaken in her first specialist registrar post, which allowed plenty of time for the audit and reaudit to be completed and written up during her training. Second, the project was her own idea and was felt to be relevant and clinically important, which helped with motivation to complete it. Third, data collection was kept simple. The relevant information was easy to access, a yes/no answer method was used and no personal or clinical data were recorded. Finally, the timing of the feedback was planned to allow enough time for change before reaudit.
It is not easy to modify the clinical practice of health care professionals, and perhaps clinical audit does not hold all the answers. However, through carrying out a well-designed and planned audit, the trainee can gain a valuable insight into a process that is promoted as a major tool for monitoring and effecting change in our clinical practice.
|
|
Acknowledgments |
|---|
|
|
References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
FOSTER, D. S., PATERSON, C. & FAIRFIELD, G. (2002) Evaluation of immediate discharge documents - room for improvement? Scottish Medical Journal, 47, 77-79.[Medline]
GREENWOOD, J. P., LINDSAY, S. J., BATIN, P. D., et al (1997) Junior doctors and clinical audit. Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of London, 31, 648 -651.[Medline]
JOHNSTON, G., CROMBIE, I. K., DAVIES, H.T., et al
(2000) Reviewing audit: barriers and facilitating factors for
effective clinical audit. Quality in Health Care,
9, 23-36.
MACAULEY, E. M., COOPER, G. C., ENGESET, J., et al (1996) Prospective audit of discharge summary errors. British Journal of Surgery, 83, 788 -790.[Medline]
NETTLETON, J. & IRELAND, A. (2000) Junior doctors views on clinical audit - has anything changed? International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance: Leadership in Health Service, 13, 245 -253.
SOLOMON, J. K., MAXWELL, R. B. & HOPKINS, A. P. (1995) Content of a discharge summary from a medical ward: views of general practitioners and hospital doctors. Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of London, 29, 307 -310.[Medline]
THOMSON OBRIEN, M. A., OXMAN, A. D., DAVIS, D. A., et al (2000a) Audit and feedback: effects on professional practice and health care outcomes. Cochrane Library, issue 2. Oxford: Update Software.
THOMSON OBRIEN, M. A., OXMAN, A. D., DAVIS, D. A., et al (2000b) Audit and feedback versus alternative strategies: effects on professional practice and health care outcomes. Cochrane Library, issue 2. Oxford: Update Software.
WILSON, S., RUSCOE, W., CHAPMAN, M., et al (2001) General practitioner-hospital communications: a review of discharge summaries.Journal of Quality in Clinical Practice, 21, 104 -108.[CrossRef][Medline]
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
C. G. Evans, C. d'Souza, P. Reynolds, C. Linton, L. Nukalapati, and A. Swarnkar Audit of availability and awareness of guidelines for the management of confusion in older patients on general wards Psychiatr. Bull., April 1, 2008; 32(4): 143 - 145. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| British Journal of Psychiatry | Advances in Psychiatric Treatment | All RCPsych Journals |