Frequency and impact of housestaff contact with primary care physicians |
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Authors: | Martha Ways MD Jovine Umali BA Dr. Dedra Buchwald MD |
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Affiliation: | (1) Harborview Medical Center, 325 Ninth Avenue, ZA-60, 98104 Seattle, WA |
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Abstract: | To determine how often housestaff notified primary care providers (PCPs) of admissions, whether notification prompted a visit, and whether PCP input impacted care, 210 medical inpatients were asked about their PCPs, and at discharge, housestaff completed a questionnaire on the patient’s PCP, and whether he or she was contacted, came to the hospital, and influenced care. Of 105 patients with a PCP, 74 were contacted and 26 visited their patients. The PCPs spoken with personally more often made hospital visits than those contacted only by message (p<0.0001). PCP input frequently contributed to patient care by providing continuity, clarifying history/diagnosis, managing chronic problems, and elucidating psychosocial/cultural factors. Having a PCP did not influence length of stay or readmission rates. Received from the Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington. |
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Keywords: | housestaff primary care physicians physician— physician communication |
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