• Southern medical journal · Aug 2021

    Improving the Quality of Inpatient Discharge Instructions: An Evaluation and Implementation of Best Practices.

    • Benjamin A Rodwin, Victor P Bilan, Craig G Gunderson, and Naseema B Merchant.
    • From the Department of Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, the VA Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, Connecticut, and the Jefferson University School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
    • South. Med. J. 2021 Aug 1; 114 (8): 445-449.

    ObjectivesLittle is known about whether improving the quality of written discharge instructions can result in improved readmission rates and whether there are differences in the quality of discharge instructions based on provider and patient characteristics. We set out to determine provider characteristics associated with high quality discharge instructions and whether redesigned discharge instructions would lead to improvement in their quality and reduce hospital readmission rates.MethodsWe instituted sequential interventions of educational outreach and a redesigned discharge instructions template and evaluated their quality using 11 metrics based on established best practices and subsequent 30-day readmission rates.ResultsIn total, 225 randomly selected charts were reviewed during a 15-month period. An average of 5.36 quality metrics were completed before our interventions, which increased to 5.61 after educational outreach and 7.16 after the template was redesigned. The risk standardized 30-day readmission rate fluctuated from a baseline of 10.48% to 12.71% and 10.97% following each intervention, respectively. Medical students completed significantly more quality metrics than interns, residents, or attendings (P < 0.05 for all) and residents completed significantly more than attendings (P = 0.014).ConclusionsAlthough an education intervention was ineffective in improving discharge instruction quality, a redesigned discharge instructions template did improve the quality of patient discharge instructions. Neither intervention led to a meaningful change in readmission rates. We also found significant differences in the quality of discharge instructions based on the level of training of the author of the discharge instructions.

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