TY - JOUR
T1 - A Cross-Sectional Survey of Internal Medicine Residents’ Knowledge, Attitudes, and Current Practices Regarding Patient Transitions to Post-Acute Care
AU - Limes, Julia
AU - Callister, Catherine
AU - Young, Eric
AU - Burke, Robert E.
AU - Albert, Tyler
AU - Cornia, Paul B.
AU - Sehgal, Raj
AU - Jones, Christine D.
N1 - Funding Information:
Dr Jones' work was supported by Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Career Development Award (Award 1K08HS024569 ).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 AMDA – The Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine
PY - 2021/11
Y1 - 2021/11
N2 - Objectives: Prior studies have found suboptimal knowledge about post-acute care (PAC) among inpatient providers and poor communication at discharge that can lead to unsafe discharge transitions, but little is known about residents and the PAC transition. The aim of this study is to assess internal medicine residents’ knowledge, attitudes, and current practice regarding patient transitions to PAC. Design: A multisite, cross-sectional 36-question survey. Setting and Participants: Internal Medicine and Medicine-Pediatrics residents at 3 university-based Internal Medicine training programs in the United States. Methods: Survey delivered electronically to residents in 2018 and 2019. Survey responses were described by collapsing 4-point Likert responses into dichotomous variables, and thematic content analysis was used to evaluate free text responses. Results: Of 482 residents surveyed, 236 responded (49%). Despite high reported confidence in their ability to transition patients to PAC, only 31% of residents knew how often patients received skilled therapies at skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) and 23% knew how frequently nursing services are provided. The majority of residents (79%) identified the discharge summary as the main way they communicated care instructions to the SNF, but only 55% reported always completing it prior to discharge. Upper-level residents were more likely to know how much therapy patients received at a SNF, but resident knowledge about PAC did not vary by residency year in other domains. Residents who experienced a clinical rotation at a SNF had higher levels of knowledge compared to residents who did not. Conclusions: This national survey of internal medicine residents identified common knowledge gaps regarding PAC. These knowledge gaps did not improve throughout residency without deliberate exposure to PAC environments. This suggests a need for dedicated curriculum development as discharges to PAC continue to rise exponentially.
AB - Objectives: Prior studies have found suboptimal knowledge about post-acute care (PAC) among inpatient providers and poor communication at discharge that can lead to unsafe discharge transitions, but little is known about residents and the PAC transition. The aim of this study is to assess internal medicine residents’ knowledge, attitudes, and current practice regarding patient transitions to PAC. Design: A multisite, cross-sectional 36-question survey. Setting and Participants: Internal Medicine and Medicine-Pediatrics residents at 3 university-based Internal Medicine training programs in the United States. Methods: Survey delivered electronically to residents in 2018 and 2019. Survey responses were described by collapsing 4-point Likert responses into dichotomous variables, and thematic content analysis was used to evaluate free text responses. Results: Of 482 residents surveyed, 236 responded (49%). Despite high reported confidence in their ability to transition patients to PAC, only 31% of residents knew how often patients received skilled therapies at skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) and 23% knew how frequently nursing services are provided. The majority of residents (79%) identified the discharge summary as the main way they communicated care instructions to the SNF, but only 55% reported always completing it prior to discharge. Upper-level residents were more likely to know how much therapy patients received at a SNF, but resident knowledge about PAC did not vary by residency year in other domains. Residents who experienced a clinical rotation at a SNF had higher levels of knowledge compared to residents who did not. Conclusions: This national survey of internal medicine residents identified common knowledge gaps regarding PAC. These knowledge gaps did not improve throughout residency without deliberate exposure to PAC environments. This suggests a need for dedicated curriculum development as discharges to PAC continue to rise exponentially.
KW - Post-acute care
KW - discharge communication
KW - internal medicine residents
KW - transitions of care
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jamda.2021.02.011
DO - 10.1016/j.jamda.2021.02.011
M3 - Article
C2 - 33753022
AN - SCOPUS:85103728390
SN - 1525-8610
VL - 22
SP - 2344
EP - 2349
JO - Journal of the American Medical Directors Association
JF - Journal of the American Medical Directors Association
IS - 11
ER -