1. "Why Is This Patient Being Sent Here?": Communication from Urgent Care to the Emergency Department.
- Author
-
Gardner, Rebekah, Choo, Esther K., Gravenstein, Stefan, and Baier, Rosa R.
- Subjects
- *
OUTPATIENT medical care , *EMERGENCY medicine , *MEDICAL communication , *MEDICAL referrals , *MEDICAL informatics , *ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *CLINICS , *COMMUNICATION , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONTINUUM of care , *COOPERATIVENESS , *HOSPITAL admission & discharge , *HOSPITAL emergency services , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEDICAL personnel , *QUALITY assurance , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
Background: Despite patients' increasing use of urgent care centers (UCC), little is known about how urgent care clinicians communicate with the emergency department (ED).Objectives: To assess ED clinicians' perceptions of the quality and consistency of communication when patients are referred from UCCs to EDs.Methods: Emergency medicine department chairs distributed a brief, electronic survey to a statewide sample of ED clinicians via e-mail. The survey included multiple-choice and free-text questions focused on types of communication desired and received from UCCs, types of test results available on transfer, and suggestions for improvement.Results: Of 199 ED clinicians, 102 (51.3%) responded. More than four out of five respondents "somewhat" or "strongly agreed" that each of the following would be helpful: a telephone call, the reason for referral, specific concern, a copy of the chart, and UCC contact information. However, ED clinicians reported not consistently receiving these: only a fifth (21.6%) of clinicians reported receiving the specific concern for their last 5 patients transferred from a UCC, and 34.3% recalled receiving a copy of the chart. Overall, 54.9% reported receiving laboratory test results "often or almost always," 49.0% electrocardiograms, and 44.1% imaging reports. Qualitative analysis revealed several themes: incomplete data when patients are referred; barriers to discussion between ED and urgent care clinicians; and possible solutions to improve communication.Conclusions: Our findings highlight variation in communication from UCCs to EDs, indicating a need to improve communication standards and practices. We identify several potential ways to improve this clinical information hand-off. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF