Guidelines to exchange information between hospital physicians and general practitioners for patients with complex problems, e.g., patients with cancer or older frail patients, include some additional elements. In the HASP, for example, for patients who had a (new) diagnosis of cancer, a time out procedure is recommended to consider all treatment options. No information is given about information exchange addressing end-of-life care for patients with advanced cancer or another life limiting disease.
Cancer is one of the most common causes of death. In the Netherlands, in 2018 a total of 46.657 persons died from cancer which was almost one third (30%) of the total of deceased persons in that year (Statistics Netherlands [CBS] Statline, 2020). Therefore, end-of-life care often concerns patients with cancer. Transitions between care settings of patients with cancer and other diseases in the last 6 months of life are common (Bekelman et al., 2016; Mercadante et al., 2016; van den Block et al., 2015). Most transfers in the last 3 months of life involve admission to or discharge from a hospital (van den Block et al., 2015). A timely and adequate hospital discharge letter is even more crucial for these patients, because treatment goals and preferences for care may change in the last phase of life (Hoare et al., 2015; Shin et al., 2016; Stegmann et al., 2021). Knowledge about the patient's medical condition and about decisions and agreements regarding medical treatment can support the general practitioner in addressing the patient's care needs (Haggerty et al., 2003). Other studies found that the majority of all patients with cancer would prefer to talk with their general practitioner about end-of-life issues and also value support from their general practitioner in making treatment decisions (Noteboom et al., 2021). Stegmann et al. found that patients with incurable cancer preferred their healthcare professional to take the initiative for this conversation (Stegmann et al., 2020). These findings make adequate information exchange and communication regarding treatment goals and preferences of patients with a limited life expectancy even more important.
Therefore, we performed a retrospective medical record review to examine the timeliness and quality of the hospital discharge letter for patients with a limited life expectancy who are discharged after a hospitalisation. We assessed how many days after discharge the hospital discharge letter was sent to the general practitioner. We also studied whether the hospital discharge letter included information about the patient's prognosis and agreements with the patient and family about treatment, care and medication, and compared this to whether and how these topics were described in the patient's medical record.
2 METHODS 2.1 Design and study populationWe conducted a retrospective medical record study in the Maasstad Hospital, a large teaching hospital in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. Records of patients of age 18 years or older were included if the patient had been admitted to the hospital at least once during the period 1 January to 1 July 2017 and had died within a year after discharge from the hospital, had one of the following diagnoses: incurable malignancy, heart failure, kidney failure or lung failure, and had gone home upon discharge from the hospital. We selected records that included a hospital discharge letter to the patient's general practitioner. In case the patient had been admitted more than once during the study period, we collected data on the last hospitalisation that preceded death. We defined ‘home’ as the place where the patient used to live before the hospital admission. Exclusion criteria were as follows: a stay in the hospital of less than 24 h and death during the hospitalisation.
A total of 1,283 patients were admitted at least once to the hospital during the study period. From these 1,283 patients, a total of 277 patients had died within 1 year after their (last) hospital discharge, according to the municipal death registry. For 242 out of these 277 deceased patients, the hospital's administration system indicated that a discharge letter had been sent to their general practitioner. Patients did not receive a copy of the letter. These 242 patients were randomly assigned a sequential study number, and odd numbers were selected for this study. Out of 121 selected patients, 13 were excluded because they turned out not to comply with the inclusion criteria: The discharge letter was not found in the hospital medical record, or patients had not gone home upon their discharge (Figure 1). Two data collectors were trained in collecting data for this study using a self-developed questionnaire.
Flow chart of inclusion
2.2 Data collectionWe developed a questionnaire for the data collection based on guidelines for hospital discharge letters (Hesselink et al., 2012; NHG-FMS-kerngroep Revisie HASP, 2017; van Seben et al., 2019) and on literature about continuity of care of patients in the last phase of life (den Herder-van der Eerden et al., 2017; Heyland et al., 2013, 2017).
We collected data on the following patient characteristics: gender, age at death, diagnosis, whether the hospital admission had been planned, reason for the hospital admission, duration of the hospital admission in days, discharge destination, months of survival of the patient after the hospital admission.
The hospital discharge letter was checked for presence of following items: the date the patient was admitted to the hospital, the duration of the hospital admission, the patient entry route for hospitalisation, the discharge destination, a concise conclusion or diagnosis, the care and interventions during the hospitalisation, guidance for care at home, use of medication at the time of discharge, medication that was stopped during the hospitalisation and (outpatient) clinical follow-up appointments.
We also checked whether patients' limited life expectancy was addressed during the hospitalisation, by looking for notes on these items in their medical file: indications of the patient's limited life expectancy, discussions and agreements with patient and family about preferences for treatment and care, for example, documentation of a do-not-resuscitate order (DNR-order), advance care directives completed by the patient or information whether the palliative care expert team had been involved.
Furthermore, we assessed when the hospital discharge letter had been sent and whether the hospital physician had contacted the patients' general practitioner by telephone before the patient's discharge.
2.3 Data analysisThe results are presented by descriptive statistics. The association between presence of information on patients' limited life expectancy in the medical record or the hospital discharge letter and characteristics of patients was tested for statistical significance with Pearsons' chi-square test. Data were analysed using the statistical program SPSS version 25.
3 RESULTS 3.1 Patient characteristicsOne hundred and eight patients were included in our study. The median age when they died was 74, and 53% were male. Fifty-four percent of patients had incurable cancer (17% lung cancer, 6% haematologic or lymphoid cancer, 31% another type of solid tumour), 22% had lung failure, 12% heart failure, and 13% another diagnosis. For 82% of the patients, their hospital admission was unplanned, and for 84%, symptom management was the reason for hospital admission. Fifty-one percent of all patients died within 3 months after their hospital admission (Table 1).
TABLE 1. Patients' demographics and disease characteristics Total (n = 108) n (%) Gender Male 57 (52.8) Female 51 (47.2) Age at death 18–40 years 0 (0.0) 40–60 years 11 (10.2) 60–80 years 64 (59.3) ≥80 years 33 (30.6) Diagnosis Cancer 58 (53.7) Lung failure (COPD, interstitial lung disease) 24 (22.2) Heart failure 13 (12.0) Kidney failure 11 (10.2) Other 2 (1.9) Hospital admission was Unplanned 89 (82.4) Planned 19 (17.6) Reason for hospitalisation Symptom management 91 (84.3) Other 17 (15.7) Duration of hospital admission in days (median, range) 6 (1–32) Discharge destination Home 96 (88.9) Nursing home 2 (1.9) Other (e.g. home of family member) 10 (9.3) Survival after hospital admission 0–3 months 55 (50.9) 3–6 months 20 (18.5) 6–9 months 19 (17.6) 9–12 months 14 (13.0) 3.2 Timeliness of the discharge letterFor 6% of all patients, the hospital discharge letter was sent within 2 days upon discharge; for 29%, between 2 and 6 days; for 23%, between 7 and 13 days; and for 38%, it was sent 14 days or more after discharge. For three patients, the discharge letter was sent before discharge; for two patients, the date the discharge letter was sent was unclear. For six patients, the hospital physician had contacted the patient's general practitioner by telephone to notify that the patient was coming home after a hospital admission.
3.3 General information in the hospital discharge letterAll discharge letters included information about the date patient was admitted to hospital, and most included information on the duration of the hospital admission (94%), the discharge destination (87%), a concise diagnosis or conclusion (94%) and the care and interventions during the hospitalisation (81%). Guidance for care at home (63%), a description of the entry route through which the patient was admitted to the hospital (32%), and information on outpatient follow-up appointments (68%) were less often present (Table 2). Furthermore, for 87% of all patients, the letter included information about the medication used, and for 71% of all patients, it included information about medication that was stopped during the hospitalisation (Table 2).
TABLE 2. Information present in the hospital discharge letter Items addressed in the hospital discharge letter n = 108 (%) Date patient was admitted to hospital 108 (100.0) Duration of hospital admission 101 (93.5) Patient entry route for hospitalisationa 35 (32.4) Discharge destination 94 (87.0) A concise diagnosis or conclusion 101 (93.5) Care and interventions during the hospitalisation 87 (80.6) Guidance for care at home 68 (63.0) Current medication use 94 (87.0) Medication stopped during the hospital admissionb 77 (71.3) Any (outpatient) follow-up appointments or treatments 73 (67.6) a For 35 patients (32.4%), the information in the discharge letter about the entry route for hospitalisation was clear; for 24 patients (22.2%), it was not clear; for 49 patients (45.4%), the discharge letter included no information about the patient's entry route for hospitalisation. b For 19 patients (17.6%), medication was stopped during the hospital admission, but this was not mentioned in the discharge letter. For 12 patients (11.1%), no medication was stopped during the hospital admission, and no information was mentioned in the discharge letter. 3.4 Information on patients' limited life expectancy in the medical record and the hospital discharge letterWe found information regarding a limited life expectancy in the medical record for 76 (70%) of all patients, whereas for 57 (53%) of patients, this information was found in the hospital discharge letter (Table 3). For 28 (26%) of all patients the limited life expectancy was explicitly mentioned in the medical record, compared with 21 (19%) of all patients for whom we found such information in the hospital discharge letter. Whether preferences for treatment and care had been discussed with the patient and/or family was documented in the medical record of 52 (48%) of the patients, compared with 28 (26%) of the patients for whom the hospital discharge letter included this information. Information regarding agreements that had been made with the patient and/or family about treatment limitations or discontinuation of treatment was documented in the medical record of 69 (64%) of all patients, compared with 55 (51%) of the hospital discharge letters. Whether any advance care directives were completed by the patient was documented in the medical record of 2 (2%) of the patients compared with 1 (1%) of the hospital discharge letters. For 32 (30%) of all patients, no information about a limited life expectancy was found in the medical record, and for 51 (47%), no such information was found in the hospital discharge letter. Furthermore, information about involvement of the palliative care expert team was present in both the medical record and the discharge letter for 5% of all patients.
TABLE 3. Extent to which patients' limited life expectancy was addressed in the medical record and hospital discharge letter Items addressed In hospital medical record In hospital discharge letter n = 108 n (%) Any information about patients' limited life expectancy 76 (70.4) 57 (52.8) Yes, by indicating a life expectancy of max. days/weeks/months/1 year 2 (1.9) 0 (0.0) Yes, by indicating that care was oriented at symptom control or palliative needs 26 (24.1) 21 (19.4) 48 (44.4) 36 (33.3) 52 (48.1) 28 (25.9) If yes, items discusseda : Potential treatment limitation or discontinuation 38 (35.2) Symptom control/comfort care 21 (19.4) 4 (3.7) 1 (0.9) 69 (63.9) 55 (50.9) If yes, items addressed in agreementa : 63 (58.3) 46 (42.6) No artificial respiration 57 (52.8) 45 (41.7) 53 (49.1) 42 (38.9) 14 (13.0) 4 (3.7) 6 (5.6) 9 (8.3) 2 (1.9) 1 (0.9) a Multiple answers possible. b ‘Other’ includes no antitumor treatment, no treatment of infections, no dialysis, no blood transfusion, no defibrillation, no readmission to the hospital and no life-prolonging treatment.Information about the limited life expectancy was present in the medical record of 50 patients (91%) who died within 3 months, and for 26 patients (49%) who died after more than 3 months (p < 0.01). In the hospital discharge letter, this information was present for 36 patients (66%) who died within 3 months after their hospital admission, and for 21 patients (40%) who died after more than 3 months (p < 0.01) (Table 4). In the hospital discharge letter, we also more often found information about a limited life expectancy for patients with cancer compared to patients with other diseases, but this difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.090). The extent to which patients' limited life expectancy was addressed in the medical record, and discharge letter was not associated with other patient characteristics.
TABLE 4. Extent to which patients' limited life expectancy was addressed in medical record and the hospital discharge letter according to patient characteristics Hospital medical record included information on patients' limited life expectancy Hospital discharge letter included information on patients' limited life expectancy Yes n (%) No n (%) p valuea Yes n (%) No n (%) p valuea Age at death 0.416 0.508 Up to 80 years (n = 75) 51 (68.0) 24 (32.0) 38 (50.7) 37 (49.3) 80 years and older (n = 33) 25 (75.8) 8 (24.2) 19 (57.6) 14 (42.4) Diagnosis 0.616 0.090 Cancer (n = 58) 42 (72.4) 16 (27.6) 35 (60.3) 23 (39.7) Non-cancer (n = 50) 34 (68.0) 16 (32.0) 22 (44.0) 28 (56.0) Hospital admission was 0.062 0.125 Unplanned (n = 89) 66 (74.2) 23 (25.8) 50 (56.2) 39 (43.8) Planned (n = 19) 10 (52.6) 9 (47.4) 7 (36.8) 12 (63.2) Reason for hospitalisation 0.086 0.116 Symptom management (n = 91) 67 (73.6) 24 (26.4) 51 (56.0) 40 (44.0) Other (n = 17) 9 (52.9) 8 (47.1) 6 (35.3) 11 (64.7) Duration of hospital admission in days 0.520 0.408 1–6 days (n = 59) 40 (67.8) 19 (32.2) 29 (50.9) 30 (50.8) 7 days and longer (n = 49) 36 (73.5) 13 (26.5) 28 (57.1) 21 (42.9) Survival after hospital admission 0.000 0.007 0–3 months (n = 55) 50 (90.9) 5 (9.1) 36 (65.5) 19 (34.5) 3–12 months (n = 53) 26 (49.1) 27 (50.9) 21 (39.6) 32 (60.4) a Pearson's chi-squared test. 4 DISCUSSIONWe studied the quality of hospital discharge letters for patients who went home after a hospitalisation within 1 year before they died. In our population, half of the patients were diagnosed with incurable cancer, and one third had lung or heart failure. Most patients were admitted to the hospital for symptom management. For most patients in our study, many items as suggested in guidelines were documented in the hospital discharge letters, e.g., concise conclusion or diagnosis (94%) and current medication (87%). However, there is room for improvement for the items ‘clinical care plan’ (81%) and ‘suggestion for care plan at home’ (63%). A major area of concern is the time of sending the discharge letter. In our study, the discharge letter was sent within 2 days after discharge for only 6% of all patients, whereas guidelines in the Netherlands prescribe that this should be done within 24 h after discharge (NHG-FMS-kerngroep Revisie HASP, 2017; van Seben et al., 2019).
For two thirds of all patients (70%), hospital physicians had documented information about patients' limited life expectancy, such as poor prognosis, discussed preferences for treatment and care, and had agreements about treatment limitations (e.g., DNR-orders) in the medical record. However, in half of all patients, this information was not addressed in the hospital discharge letter.
Several studies have emphasised the importance of adequate care transitions for patients with a limited life expectancy going home after a hospital admission (Flierman et al., 2020; Killackey et al., 2020; van Diemen-Steenvoorde, 2015). The discharge process and information exchange between healthcare professionals in the hospital and at home are known to be complex and often suboptimal. Studies on continuity of care are mainly qualitative and describe the perspectives of healthcare professionals or patients and their family or relatives. Only a few studies focus on the actual content or timeliness of the information exchange in discharge letters for patients with several diseases, more or less clearly also including patients with a limited life expectancy (Flierman et al., 2020; van Seben et al., 2019).
It is obvious that not all patients can be recognised as having a limited life expectancy,
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