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The Discharge Summary: What PCP’s and coders want. J Rush Pierce Jr , MD, MPH Lenny Noronha, MD Hospitalist Best Practices Conference November 20, 2009. Objectives. Clarify the purpose of the DC summary: 1min Review the literature, our practice: 5 min
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The Discharge Summary: What PCP’s and coders want J Rush Pierce Jr, MD, MPH Lenny Noronha, MD Hospitalist Best Practices Conference November 20, 2009
Objectives • Clarify the purpose of the DC summary: 1min • Review the literature, our practice: 5 min • Assess needs of pcp’s, coders, other readers: 12 minutes • Initiate discussion of UNM Best Practices for current ward structure: 30 minutes PLEASE COMPLETE SURVEY DURING THIS PROGRAM
Purposes of discharge summary • Accurately record what happened in the hospital • Assist colleagues with care of patient in the future (pcp, DC fu clinic, ER, etc) • Concise report for hospital coders in quality and billing • Assist auditors, demographers, researchers
Are discharge summaries complete? - Australian study • 80% had chief complaint • 40% listed PCP • 35% listed pending lab • 40% listed complications that occurred in hospital • 80% listed discharge meds J Qual Cl Pract 2001:21:104
Are discharge summaries timely and complete? (US meta analysis) • Only 30% d/c summ available to PCP at time of first post discharge visit • Only 40% have compete list of discharge meds • 50% contain consultants recs JAMA 2007; 297:834
Are discharge summaries accurate?Boston studies • In pts referred to SNF’s medication discrepancy between DCs and transfer form identified in 52% of admissions. CV drugs, opiates, psych meds, hypoglycemics, antibiotics, and anticoags accounted for 50% of descrepancies (JGIM 2009;24:630) • In pts discharged to rehab on coumadin, only 16% had info about indication, duration, monitoring, and follow-up (Jt Comm Qual Patient Saf 2008;34:460)
Do discharge summaries assist transition with outstanding tests? • In pts with outstanding tests, only 25% DS recorded any outstanding test, and only 13% recorded all outstanding tests. 10% outstanding test were actionable JGIM 2009:24:1002
Do discharge summaries assist transition with incomplete w/u? Arch Intern Med 2007;167:1305
Discharge summaries - what do PCP’s want? JAMA 2007; 297:834
What do we tell our residents? (Medical Records sheet) • Reason for hospitalization (principal diagnosis) • Secondary diagnoses • Significant findings during hospitalization • Procedures performed • Care, treatment, and services provided • Patient’s condition at discharge • Instructions to the patient and family
What do we tell our residents? (Survival guide) • Pt name and MR# • Attending name, service, date of admit, d/c, and dictation • Admit (primary and secondary) and d/c diagnoses • Procedures and dates • Brief H& P, refer them to full H&P • Hospital course by problem list • Complications and description • D/C meds and doses • F/U with dates and times • Recommendations/precautions • Cc to PCP, any subspecialty service
What do we tell our residents? (Instructions on Wiki) • Dates of Admission and Discharge • Discharging Attending, Resident, and Intern • Final Primary and All Secondary Diagnoses • Brief HPI: Presenting problem that precipitated hospitalization with key admission findings and test results • Brief Hospital Course by Problem - “How we worked it up, how we treated it, what’s the future plan” • Including key findings, procedure results, and abnormal test results • Sub-Specialist Recommendations • Reconciled Discharge Medication - New or Changed Dose Medications, Continued Meds from Admission, Stopped Meds • Functional Status at Discharge and Discharge Destination • Follow-up Plan - Follow up Appointment within 2 weeks • Suggested Management Plan • Pending Labs or Test • Any Anticipated Problems and Suggested Interventions with documentation of patient education (smoking cessation) and understanding
What do coders look for? PLEASE COMPLETE A SURVEY DURING THIS PROGRAM !
2 separate sets of coders Provider Coding Facility Coding Hospital employees CCS Certif coding specialist Quality -> UHC Expected mortality Severity of illness Hospital reimbursement MS-DRG • Private company • Take a % of collections • CPC • Certif professional coder
What to coders look for in the dc summary? UNMMG (provider) UNMH (facility) Was it done? Was it billed? Principle dx Secondary diagnoses MCC, CC’s POA conditions? • Was it done? • Was it billed? • > 30 min? Both groups look for Obs/Inpt Status
MCC/CC • Announced 2007 by CMS, in place since 10/1/08 • MS-DRG’s go into: • DRG w MCC (major complication/comorbidity) • DRG w CC (complication/comorbidity) • DRG w/o MCC DRGs w MCCs RAISE EXPECTED MORTALITY!!!
Common Medicine Examples* MCC CC Systolic CHF Uti, urosepsis Dehydration • Acute systolic CHF • Sepsis • Acute kidney injury, ARF * Complete list on Hospitalist Wiki
Bacteremia: asympt lab result Septicemia: symptoms, but not meeting SIRS Sepsis: infection c symptoms meeting SIRS, culture not required Severe sepsis: with organ dysfx (i.e. AKI, hepatitis, altered mental status) Septic shock: with hypotension not responsive to initial IV fluids Sepsis Reminder
CMS “Never Events” IPPS FY2008 • Catheter-associated uti • Pressure ulcer (stage 3 or 4) • Vascular catheter infection • Hosp acquired injuries (falls, etc) • Preventable object left in surgery • Air embolism • Blood incompatibility
CMS “Never Events” IPPS FY2009 • Manifestations of poor glycemic control • DKA • Nonketotic hyperosmolar/Hypoglycemic coma • DVT/PE p TKA/THA • Surgical site infections • Mediastinitis after CABG • Bariatric surgery • Ortho spine/neck/shoulder/elbow
Discharge summary – questions to address • What should our model discharge summary look like? • Do we need a standardized DCS “time out”? • How extensively should faculty modify resident d/c summaries? • Should all summaries be done on day of dc? • Who does it when the intern is off/clinic? HAVE YOU COMPLETED YOUR SURVEY?