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- Michael J Donnelly, Janelle M Clauser, and Neil J Weissman.
- J Grad Med Educ. 2012 Sep 1;4(3):381-4.
IntroductionThe medical literature shows evidence of numerous initiatives to improve inpatient physician handoffs. In contrast, handoffs of ambulatory patients to incoming interns or junior residents at the end of residency are an area of potential concern that has been overlooked.ObjectivesTo examine handoffs of high-risk ambulatory patients by outgoing residents to junior colleagues and to compare current practice to a standard handoff process. We hypothesized the intervention would lead to increases in the number and quality of ambulatory care handoffs.MethodsFourteen graduating internal medicine and combined internal medicine-pediatrics residents who practiced at an academic continuity clinic were randomized to an intervention or a control group. E-mail instructions were sent asking the intervention group to write a handoff note using the clinic's electronic medical record system. The e-mail included a detailed outline of information to incorporate and highlight features of the electronic medical record that would facilitate the process. The handoff notes of the intervention and control group were independently evaluated and scored for quality using a predetermined point system.ResultsSix of the 7 residents (86%) in the intervention group completed 19 handoff notes; none of the residents in the control group completed handoff notes. Most of the handoffs provided a brief paragraph or 2 of background information on the patient and then focused on issues needing short-term follow-up during the coming months.ConclusionsThe standardized handoff process implemented via simple e-mail instructions increased the number of outpatient handoffs at the completion of residency. Further study with a larger number of residents, identification and removal of barriers to the handoff process, and correlation of handoffs to clinical outcomes are key next steps.
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