• J Gen Intern Med · Sep 2009

    Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study

    Electronic versus dictated hospital discharge summaries: a randomized controlled trial.

    • David M Maslove, Richard E Leiter, Joshua Griesman, Corinne Arnott, Ophyr Mourad, Chi-Ming Chow, and Chaim M Bell.
    • Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
    • J Gen Intern Med. 2009 Sep 1;24(9):995-1001.

    BackgroundPatient care transitions are periods of enhanced risk. Discharge summaries have been used to communicate essential information between hospital-based physicians and primary care physicians (PCPs), and may reduce rates of adverse events after discharge.ObjectiveTo assess PCP satisfaction with an electronic discharge summary (EDS) program as compared to conventional dictated discharge summaries.DesignCluster randomized trial.ParticipantsFour medical teams of an academic general medical service.MeasurementsThe primary endpoint was overall discharge summary quality, as assessed by PCPs using a 100-point visual analogue scale. Other endpoints included housestaff satisfaction (using a 100-point scale), adverse outcomes after discharge (combined endpoint of emergency department visits, readmission, and death), and patient understanding of discharge details as measured by the Care Transition Model (CTM-3) score (ranging from 0 to 100).Results209 patient discharges were included over a 2-month period encompassing 1 housestaff rotation. Surveys were sent out for 188 of these patient discharges, and 119 were returned (63% response rate). No difference in PCP-reported overall quality was observed between the 2 methods (86.4 for EDS vs. 84.3 for dictation; P = 0.53). Housestaff found the EDS significantly easier to use than conventional dictation (86.5 for EDS vs. 49.2 for dictation; P = 0.03), but there was no difference in overall housestaff satisfaction. There was no difference between discharge methods for the combined endpoint for adverse outcomes (22 for EDS [21%] vs. 21 for dictation [20%]; P = 0.89), or for patient understanding of discharge details (CTM-3 score 80.3 for EDS vs. 81.3 for dictation; P = 0.81)ConclusionAn EDS program can be used by housestaff to more easily create hospital discharge summaries, and there was no difference in PCP satisfaction.

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