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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study
Development of a structured year-end sign-out program in an outpatient continuity practice.
- Ann R Garment, Wei Wei Lee, Christina Harris, and Erica Phillips-Caesar.
- Division of General Internal Medicine, New York University-Langone Medical Center, New York, NY, USA.
- J Gen Intern Med. 2013 Jan 1;28(1):114-20.
BackgroundIn an effort to prevent medical errors, it has been recommended that all healthcare organizations implement a standardized approach to communicating patient information during transitions of care between providers. Most research on these transitions has been conducted in the inpatient setting, with relatively few studies conducted in the outpatient setting.ObjectivesTo develop a structured transfer of care program in an academic outpatient continuity practice and evaluate whether this program improved patient safety as measured by the documented completion of patient care tasks at 3 months post-transition.DesignGraduating residents and the corresponding incoming interns inheriting their continuity patient panels were randomized to the pilot structured transfer group or the standard transfer group. The structured transfer group residents were asked to complete written and verbal sign-outs with their interns; the standard transfer group residents continued the current standard of care.ParticipantsThirty-two resident-intern pairs in an academic internal medicine residency program in New York City.Main MeasuresThree months after the transition, study investigators evaluated whether patient care tasks assigned by the graduating residents had been successfully completed by the interns in both groups. In addition, follow-up appointments, continuity of care and house officer satisfaction with the sign-out process were evaluated.Key ResultsAmong patients seen during the first 3 months, the clinical care tasks were more likely to be completed by interns in the structured group (73 %, n = 49) versus the standard group (46 %, n = 28) (adjusted OR 3.21; 95 % CI 1.55-6.62; p = 0.002). This was further enhanced if the intern who saw the patient was also the assigned primary care provider (adjusted OR 4.26; 95 % CI 1.7-10.63; p = 0.002).ConclusionsA structured outpatient sign-out improved the odds of follow-up of important clinical care tasks after the year-end resident clinic transition. Further efforts should be made to improve residents' competency with regard to sign-outs in the ambulatory setting.
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