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      Processing discharge summaries in general practice: a qualitative interview study with GPs and practice managers

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          Abstract

          Background

          Discharge summaries are essential for communicating patient information from secondary care to general practice on hospital discharge. Although there has been extensive research into their design and completion in secondary care, very little is known about primary care processing of these documents.

          Aim

          To explore what general practice staff think are the factors associated with failure to respond to actions requested in discharge summaries and what practices do to mitigate this.

          Design & setting

          Semi-structured interviews were undertaken with primary care staff in three geographical regions of England.

          Method

          Interviews with 10 practice managers and 10 GPs (one of each at each of the 10 practices) were undertaken to explore management of discharge summaries.

          Results

          Five themes emerged from the interviews. The 'secondary care factors' theme describes participants’ perspectives on the design of summaries, which are inconsistent and often require improvement. The 'safety features of processing systems' theme focuses on document handling in primary care. A theme devoted to 'medicines reconciliation' followed. 'Error and harm as a result of faulty processing' is a theme describing ‘human error’ and other factors that participants believed contributed to failure to respond to requested actions. Finally, the 'strategies for safety improvement' theme describes initiatives to prevent failures of safer transitions of care.

          Conclusion

          Correct processing of discharge summaries is essential to ensure patients experience a safe transition of care and not just a hospital discharge. Based on the interview findings, strategies to mitigate against faults in the processing of discharge summaries have been suggested to enhance safer transitions of care.

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          Most cited references33

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          Medication reconciliation during transitions of care as a patient safety strategy: a systematic review.

          Medication reconciliation identifies and resolves unintentional discrepancies between patients' medication lists across transitions in care. The purpose of this review is to summarize evidence about the effectiveness of hospital-based medication reconciliation interventions. Searches encompassed MEDLINE through November 2012 and EMBASE and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials through July 2012. Eligible studies evaluated the effects of hospital-based medication reconciliation on unintentional discrepancies with nontrivial risks for harm to patients or 30-day postdischarge emergency department visits and readmission. Two reviewers evaluated study eligibility, abstracted data, and assessed study quality. Eighteen studies evaluating 20 interventions met the selection criteria. Pharmacists performed medication reconciliation in 17 of the 20 interventions. Most unintentional discrepancies identified had no clinical significance. Medication reconciliation alone probably does not reduce postdischarge hospital utilization but may do so when bundled with interventions aimed at improving care transitions.
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            The contribution of latent human failures to the breakdown of complex systems.

            Several recent accidents in complex high-risk technologies had their primary origins in a variety of delayed-action human failures committed long before an emergency state could be recognized. These disasters were due to the adverse conjunction of a large number of causal factors, each one necessary but singly insufficient to achieve the catastrophic outcome. Although the errors and violations of those at the immediate human-system interface often feature large in the post-accident investigations, it is evident that these 'front-line' operators are rarely the principal instigators of system breakdown. Their part is often to provide just those local triggering conditions necessary to manifest systemic weaknesses created by fallible decisions made earlier in the organizational and managerial spheres. The challenge facing the human reliability community is to find ways of identifying and neutralizing these latent failures before they combine with local triggering events to breach the system's defences. New methods of risk assessment and risk management are needed if we are to achieve any significant improvements in the safety of complex, well-defended, socio-technical systems. This paper distinguishes between active and latent human failures and proposes a general framework for understanding the dynamics of accident causation. It also suggests ways in which current methods of protection may be enhanced, and concludes by discussing the unusual structural features of 'high-reliability' organizations.
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              Qualitative case study methodology: study design and implementation for novice researchers

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                BJGP Open
                BJGP Open
                bjgpoa
                bjgpoa
                BJGP Open
                Royal College of General Practitioners
                2398-3795
                23 January 2019
                April 2019
                23 January 2019
                : 3
                : 1
                : bjgpopen18X101625
                Affiliations
                [1 ] deptNIHR Career Progression Fellow, Division of Primary Care, School of Medicine , University of Nottingham , Nottingham, UK
                [2 ] deptNIHR Career Progression Fellow, Division of Primary Care , University of Warwick , Coventry, UK
                [3 ] deptNIHR Career Progression Fellow , NIHR School for Primary Care Research , Oxford, UK
                [4 ] deptPrincipal Research Fellow, Division of Primary Care, School of Medicine , University of Nottingham , Nottingham, UK
                [5 ] deptSenior Research Fellow, Division of Primary Care, School of Medicine , University of Nottingham , Nottingham, UK
                [6 ] deptProfessor, Centre for Primary Care , University of Manchester , Manchester, UK
                [7 ] deptDirector, NIHR Greater Manchester Patient Safety Translational Research Centre , University of Manchester , Manchester, UK
                [8 ] deptProfessor , NIHR School for Primary Care Research , Oxford, UK
                [9 ] deptDean of the School of Medicine and Professor of Primary Health Care, Division of Primary Care, School of Medicine , University of Nottingham , Nottingham, UK
                [10 ] deptProfessor , NIHR School for Primary Care Research , Oxford, UK
                Author notes
                Article
                01625
                10.3399/bjgpopen18X101625
                6480858
                31049407
                f74074a7-ef86-463e-8bb0-342f89e3fca0
                Copyright © The Authors

                This article is Open Access: CC BY license ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

                History
                : 03 May 2018
                : 20 August 2018
                Categories
                Research

                patient safety,education and standards,qualitative research,research methods,care of the elderly,patient groups

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