A novel curriculum to train physician assistant students how to write effective discharge summaries

Background: Physician assistants (PAs) are an integral part of inpatient care teams, but many PAs do not receive formal education on authoring discharge summaries. High-quality discharge summaries can mitigate patient risk during transitions of care by improving inter-provider communication. Objecti...

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Main Authors: Kahli E. Zietlow, Megan Gillum, Sarah L. Hale, April Stouder, Melinda Blazar, Nicholas M Hudak, David Ming
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-01-01
Series:Medical Education Online
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10872981.2019.1648944
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spelling doaj-b6a9ce951cf744c2b8b8292cbb95b5992020-11-25T02:37:03ZengTaylor & Francis GroupMedical Education Online1087-29812019-01-0124110.1080/10872981.2019.16489441648944A novel curriculum to train physician assistant students how to write effective discharge summariesKahli E. Zietlow0Megan Gillum1Sarah L. Hale2April Stouder3Melinda Blazar4Nicholas M Hudak5David Ming6Duke University Medical CenterHospital Medicine Programs, DUMCDUMCDUMCDUMCDUMCHospital Medicine Programs, DUMCBackground: Physician assistants (PAs) are an integral part of inpatient care teams, but many PAs do not receive formal education on authoring discharge summaries. High-quality discharge summaries can mitigate patient risk during transitions of care by improving inter-provider communication. Objective: To understand the current state of discharge summary education at our institution, and describe a novel curriculum to teach PA students to write effective discharge summaries. Design: Students completed a pre-survey to assess both knowledge and comfort levels regarding discharge summaries. They wrote a discharge summary and received feedback from two evaluators, an inpatient provider (IPP) familiar with the described patient and a simulated primary care provider (PCP). Students completed a post-survey reassessing knowledge and comfort. Results: Prior to instituting this curriculum, the majority of students (92.9%) reported rarely or never receiving feedback on discharge summaries. Eighty-four of 88 (95.5%) eligible students participated. There was discordance between IPP and simulated PCP feedback on their assessment of the quality of discharge summaries; simulated PCPs gave significantly lower global quality ratings (7.9 versus 8.5 out of 10, p = 0.006). Key elements were missing from >10% of discharge summaries. Student response was favorable. Conclusion: Clinically relevant deficiencies were common in students’ discharge summaries, highlighting the need for earlier, structured training. IPPs and simulated PCPs gave discordant feedback, emphasizing differing needs of different providers during transitions of care. This novel curriculum improved students’ knowledge and confidence.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10872981.2019.1648944discharge summariescurriculum developmentphysician assistantsfeedbacktransitions of care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kahli E. Zietlow
Megan Gillum
Sarah L. Hale
April Stouder
Melinda Blazar
Nicholas M Hudak
David Ming
spellingShingle Kahli E. Zietlow
Megan Gillum
Sarah L. Hale
April Stouder
Melinda Blazar
Nicholas M Hudak
David Ming
A novel curriculum to train physician assistant students how to write effective discharge summaries
Medical Education Online
discharge summaries
curriculum development
physician assistants
feedback
transitions of care
author_facet Kahli E. Zietlow
Megan Gillum
Sarah L. Hale
April Stouder
Melinda Blazar
Nicholas M Hudak
David Ming
author_sort Kahli E. Zietlow
title A novel curriculum to train physician assistant students how to write effective discharge summaries
title_short A novel curriculum to train physician assistant students how to write effective discharge summaries
title_full A novel curriculum to train physician assistant students how to write effective discharge summaries
title_fullStr A novel curriculum to train physician assistant students how to write effective discharge summaries
title_full_unstemmed A novel curriculum to train physician assistant students how to write effective discharge summaries
title_sort novel curriculum to train physician assistant students how to write effective discharge summaries
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Medical Education Online
issn 1087-2981
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Background: Physician assistants (PAs) are an integral part of inpatient care teams, but many PAs do not receive formal education on authoring discharge summaries. High-quality discharge summaries can mitigate patient risk during transitions of care by improving inter-provider communication. Objective: To understand the current state of discharge summary education at our institution, and describe a novel curriculum to teach PA students to write effective discharge summaries. Design: Students completed a pre-survey to assess both knowledge and comfort levels regarding discharge summaries. They wrote a discharge summary and received feedback from two evaluators, an inpatient provider (IPP) familiar with the described patient and a simulated primary care provider (PCP). Students completed a post-survey reassessing knowledge and comfort. Results: Prior to instituting this curriculum, the majority of students (92.9%) reported rarely or never receiving feedback on discharge summaries. Eighty-four of 88 (95.5%) eligible students participated. There was discordance between IPP and simulated PCP feedback on their assessment of the quality of discharge summaries; simulated PCPs gave significantly lower global quality ratings (7.9 versus 8.5 out of 10, p = 0.006). Key elements were missing from >10% of discharge summaries. Student response was favorable. Conclusion: Clinically relevant deficiencies were common in students’ discharge summaries, highlighting the need for earlier, structured training. IPPs and simulated PCPs gave discordant feedback, emphasizing differing needs of different providers during transitions of care. This novel curriculum improved students’ knowledge and confidence.
topic discharge summaries
curriculum development
physician assistants
feedback
transitions of care
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10872981.2019.1648944
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