Abstract

BackgroundIn most Western countries, the referral letter forms the basis for establishing the priority of patients for specialised health care and for the coordination of care between the services. To be able to define the quality of referral letters, the potential impact of the quality on the organisation of care, and to improve the quality of the letters, we need a multidimensional definition of the ideal content. The study’s aim was to explore what information is seen as most important and should be included in referral letters from primary care to specialised mental health care to facilitate prioritisation and planning of treatment and follow-up of the patients.MethodsBased on purposive sampling, four mixed discussion groups, which included general practitioners, mental health nurses from primary health care, psychiatrists and psychologists from specialised mental health care, managers and patient representatives, were formed; they were asked to identify the information they considered important in a mental health referral letter. In line with the Delphi technique, the importance of the themes was later individually rated by the participants. The study was conducted within The Western Norway Regional Health Authority.ResultsThe four groups identified 174 information themes. After excluding themes that were assessed as duplicates, replaceable or less important, 40 themes were suggested, organised in seven units. A set of check-off points of essential information is recommended as an introduction in the referral letter.ConclusionCompared with general guidelines and guidelines for somatic care, the results of this study suggest that the referral letter to specialised mental health care should have a larger emphasis on the overall treatment plan, on the specific role of specialised health care in the continuum of care, and on patient involvement. Further research should evaluate the validity of these findings for other patient groups in need of integrated care and investigate how the quality of referral letters affects patient-related and organisational outcomes.Trial RegistrationTrial Registration number: NCT01374035

Highlights

  • In most Western countries, the referral letter forms the basis for establishing the priority of patients for specialised health care and for the coordination of care between the services

  • Once we excluded themes that less than 75% of the respondents had rated as important (4 or 5 on the scale), we had a list of 40 themes that the participants considered as the most important information in a referral letter to specialised mental health care

  • In this study, we have explored the information that a referral letter to specialised mental health should include

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Summary

Introduction

In most Western countries, the referral letter forms the basis for establishing the priority of patients for specialised health care and for the coordination of care between the services. A recent study by Holman et al revealed a fair inter-rater reliability between specialists prioritisation of patients based on referral letters within mental health care [8], indicating a risk of low horizontal equity. Both studies suggest defining guidelines for the content of referral letters as one strategy to improve the process of prioritisation [7,8]. By contrast, using scientific methods to define one standard of the most important information by consensus between the involved parties is in accordance with effective quality improvement [9,13,14]

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