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Substance Misuse Service, South Downs Health NHS Trust, Brighton
Substance Misuse Service, South Downs Health NHS Trust, 26 Ditchling Road, Brighton BN1 4SF, Department of Addictive Behaviour and Psychological Medicine, St George's Hospital Medical School, London SW17 0RE, e-mail: hugh.williams1{at}sussexpartnership.nhs.uk
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Abstract |
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To improve the quality of correspondence by identifying what general practitioners (GPs) regarded as the important attributes in patient letters from a substance misuse service. A postal questionnaire survey was carried out to determine the views of general practitioners in Brighton and Hove City.
RESULTS
Responses were obtained from 32 out of 45 GP surgeries (71%) and indicated that correspondence should be prompt, concise and regular. An assessment summary, management plan and clear medication prescribing arrangements between primary and secondary services were considered particularly important.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
New quality standards for correspondence to GPs have been implemented by the Brighton Substance Misuse Service. These might be of interest to other such services.
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Introduction |
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The aim of this study was to identify what GPs regarded as desirable components and attributes of correspondence from our substance misuse service. It was intended that information gleaned from the survey and by other methods would help improve the quality of the service's written communication.
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Method |
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A postal questionnaire survey of general practices in Brighton and Hove City was undertaken in June 2005. For each practice a single senior representative (e.g. senior partner) was selected for inclusion and contacted by post. A cover letter explained the rationale of the survey and requested the recipient's cooperation. Questionnaires were sent out in two phases, with non-respondents contacted by a single telephone call 2 weeks later.
The study questionnaire contained a single open question, What do GPs want in correspondence from the substance misuse service? A small list of prompts invited possible consideration of issues such as timeliness, length, style, structure and content. A single blank A4-size space was provided for free-text responses. An undertaking was given that no individual practice or practitioner would be identified in any published findings.
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Results |
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| Box 1. Quality standards for correspondence from substance misuse
services to general practitioners Format
Content
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Discussion |
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Predictably, and in keeping with previous studies, our GPs identified a summary of assessment, management plan and details of medication, a contact person and follow-up arrangements as most desirable attributes of correspondence from the substance misuse service. Shorter correspondence does not appear to necessarily result in loss of information (Blakey et al, 1997) and our GPs placed particular emphasis on brevity, timeliness and frequency of written correspondence.
By far the most frequent comments related to medication. Specifically GPs wanted to know what medications were to be prescribed by the substance misuse service, what medications were to be prescribed by the GP and, equally importantly, what medications GPs should not prescribe for patients. This appeared to be particularly pertinent in the case of benzodiazepine prescribing. Such emphasis on clear communication around prescribing arrangements and responsibilities is apt in view of some patients' drug-seeking behaviour and the need to avoid the potentially serious problem of double scripting.
A large number of respondents wanted not only notification of but also reasons for discharge of patients from specialist services. This probably reflects an increasing propensity of some GPs to take on and prescribe for patients who have failed with (or been failed by!) secondary services.
The Brighton and Hove Substance Misuse Service has now implemented the survey findings into new service standards and guidelines on the quality, frequency and content of future correspondence to GPs (Box 1). Despite an acceptable response rate, our results may not be generalisable elsewhere but our study might merit replication by other drug services.
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Conclusions |
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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DUNN, J. & BURTON, S. (1999) GPs' views on
discharge summaries. Psychiatric Bulletin,
23, 355
-357.
HICKMAN, M., HIGGINS,V., HOPE,V., et al
(2004) Injecting drug use in Brighton, Liverpool and London: best
estimates of prevalence and coverage of public health indicators.
Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health,
58, 766
-771.
REYNOLDS, D. (1999) GPs' views on discharge summaries
and new patient assessment letters. Psychiatric
Bulletin, 23, 693
-694.
SCOTT, A., MITCHELL, C. & LOGAN E. (2004) An audit of consultant physicians' reply letters for referral to clinics in a tertiary teaching hospital. Internal Medicine Journal, 34, 31-37.[CrossRef][Medline]
WHITE,T. & MARRIOTT S. (2004) Using evidence-based
dissemination and implementation strategies to improve routine communication
between general practitioners and community mental health teams.
Psychiatric Bulletin,
28, 8-11.
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