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eDischarges

This document is an initial HISAC view of the ‘eDischarges’ Action Zone of the Health Information Strategy for New Zealand 2005 (HIS-NZ). Its purpose is to stimulate discussion and responses from health and disability sector practitioners, providers and funders, about the issues and opportunities associated with the improved use of existing and emerging information technologies and information management systems in the health and disability sector.


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Background

This Initial View is a HISAC informed ‘Straw Man’ and it does not claim to represent the final direction of the Action Zone. It is a starting point for the sector informed Preliminary Scope and Approach currently being prepared, by proactive engagement with the sector, for each Action Zone.

HISAC sees the eDischarges Action Zone being delivered by:

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A view of a eDischarges in the future

Vision: Patients who are discharged from hospital will have relevant and accurate information available to those who continue their care.
Strategy: Timely electronic provision of complete and relevant discharge information by hospitals to all of the practitioners involved in a patient’s ongoing care.

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Features of eDischarges

For the purposes of this document, a Discharge is defined as the completion of a course of treatment or care. The treating physician or institution will usually complete care by summarising the salient events in a discharge summary. The patient is then usually returned to the continuing care of the family doctor, or to another physician or institution.

HISAC envisages that a comprehensive eDischarges solution will include these features:
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Benefits from sector investment in eDischarges

Patients will experience the following benefits:
Hospital practitioners will experience the following benefits:
Health practitioners who receive Discharge summaries will experience less frustration as: For sector Funders, Policy Advisors and researchers, processes and care pathways around the system will become more consistent. Service standards can be better defined and monitored.

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What happens today

A Discharge Summary contains information about a patient’s treatment and progress during a hospital admission or Emergency Department visit. It contains current clinical information about the patient, recommendations for the patient’s ongoing management and is used by the patient’s General Practitioner (GP) in their ongoing care. Discharge summaries can also be used by hospital staff in future contacts with the patient. About half the hospitals in New Zealand have implemented some form of electronic discharge summary; typically though in these organisations not all services are included. The Discharge summaries are distributed to health practitioners via a secure messaging system, or via fax, depending on the choice made by the practitioner. Patients are generally given a paper copy of the discharge summary to take with them.

Where electronic discharges have been implemented, a lot of effort is still required from GPs to incorporate the Discharge information into the patients’ health record within their patient management system. In hospitals where electronic discharges have not yet been implemented, the traditional issues associated with the production and handling of paper documents remain. These include the quality, completeness and legibility of information; the timeliness of their arrival at the GP’s practice; and the effort required to process the paper when it arrives at the practice.

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Areas for improvement

Problems with remaining manual processes for managing discharges include:
Problems with existing electronic processes for managing Discharges include:
Figure 1: A schematic representation of the flow of discharge (and referral) messages between practitioners.


A Schematic representation of the flow of discharge (and referral) messages between practitioners

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What happens next

Responsibility for implementing the Health Information Strategy for New Zealand lies with the whole health and disability sector under the leadership of HISAC. HISAC is working closely with sector representatives to prepare more detailed descriptions of current problems and practitioners’ priorities for improvements. If you would like to discuss the eDischarges initiative, please contact HISAC through enquiries@hisac.govt.nz or write to:

The Action Zone Development Leader
HISAC Office
PO Box 5013
Wellington

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Relevant documents

Initial View (PDF, 218 KB)
Preliminary Scope and Approach (PDF, 820 KB)
Road Map (PDF, 49 KB)
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Page last updated: 22 May 2009