-
Make sure the patient and/or his or her caregivers understand the important diagnoses or issues that necessitated the admission to the hospital. Use the teach-back method to make sure the patient understands, and supply brochures, handouts, or illustrations to help reinforce the concepts. Make sure to dictate these diagnoses into the discharge document.
-
Summarize the pertinent medical history and the key physical findings in discharge documentation. For instance, for a patient with CHF and pulmonary fibrosis, it would be important to note that even when the patient was clinically no longer in a CHF exacerbation, there were still crackles on the lung examination due to fibrosis.
-
Include the dates of hospital admission and discharge with a brief narrative of the hospitalization. Novice doctors often spend most of their time on this part of their discharge summary, when in reality it is the least read section. Be brief and problem oriented.
-
List the procedures done and key lab results in the discharge summary. Do not create an unreadable “data dump” by including all available information—make a decision about what to include based on the patient's active problems. For instance, that a patient's creatinine remained normal for 10 days only needs to be mentioned once, but the evolving INR and changing warfarin doses for new-onset atrial fibrillation should be mentioned in detail.
-
Include a medication list, broken down into previous medications and current medications. Call attention to medications that have been stopped, had their doses changed, or have been added. List not only the medications but their indications as well. Finally, make sure to “de-autosubstitute” medications. For instance, if your hospital automatically changes your patient's omeprazole to an equivalent dose of esomeprazole, make sure his or her medication list at discharge lists his or her home medication, omeprazole, as his or her PPI. Failure to do so can result in harmful (and expensive) medication class duplication.
-
If your patient was seen by specialists, include a list of them in the discharge summary. Make sure to list the names of the attending physicians and the problem for which they saw the patient. “Patient was seen by Dr. Friend of GI for peptic ulcer disease” is much more informative than “Patient was seen by GI.”
-
If you spent time educating a patient or family on a medical issue, indicate that in the discharge documentation. “Since patient was new to warfarin, we discussed eating a vitamin K–consistent diet and supplied a handout” can help the PCP know education needs remain for the patient.
-
Describe the patient's functional and mental status at discharge, so that the PCP knows if the patient's “baseline” has changed. If changes have been made in the DNR status or advanced directives, make sure to describe them. If the patient is being sent to an extended care facility (ECF) or home with assistance, note that in the summary.
-
List all the follow-up appointments and recommendations in the discharge document so that both the PCP and the patient (who may receive this information by way of written prescription or a printed list at discharge) know future plans. By doing this, you make it easy for the PCP to be on the lookout for follow-up information, and make it easier to help the patient comply with follow-up recommendations.
-
Call special attention to the patient's critical follow-up needs. The last section of the discharge document should be a bulleted list of important follow-up issues. Using the patient from our opening scenario as an example, it is clear that a summary statement in a discharge summary that said “Important Follow-up Issue: Per Dr. Friend of GI, this patient can re-start his warfarin therapy in 6 weeks barring further issues” would have prevented the medical error that was made.
-
Include the name of the attending physician in the hospital and contact information. Patients meet many new people during their hospital stays, and few can name their attending physicians. Providing this information is crucial to facilitating good communication between the hospital team and the patient's outpatient team.
-
Give or send the patient a copy of the discharge summary. This is vitally important for patients who have yet to establish with a PCP or who are from out of town. On a very literal level, the only way to ensure that a patient arrives at an outpatient appointment with all pertinent information is to place the information in the patient's hands.