Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Health literacy describes one's capability to understand and implement health information in daily practice. Hospital referral letters remain a main information tool for patients as well as physicians with information about therapeutic measures done during hospital stay as well as recommendations on drug intake, further therapies or diagnostics to be done after hospital discharge. With increasing medical knowledge, hospital referral letters have become more difficult to understand for patients and stakeholders alike. The aim of this study is to develop a patient-friendly referral letter that is easier to understand while transporting the same amount of information for patients as well as stakeholders.


Clinical Trial Description

During the last decades healthcare systems had to face new challenges in patient care: Along with increasing life expectancy and better treatment options for many diseases also the amount of chronically ill elderly patients increased. Much is expected of this particular patient group regarding self-management and comprehension of their medical condition. However, also younger patients or parents can be overstrained with self-care demands. Recent research among the US population showed that poor health literacy is associated with more frequent healthcare utilization and expenditures, showing that poor health literacy also has impact on the healthcare system itself. In this respect, adequate patient information is crucial. With every hospital visit - after hospitalisation or in the outpatient clinic - patients usually receive a referral letter which ideally describes the present symptoms or illness, the treatment carried out and steps the patient should take by herself/himself in the near or distant future. In reality these notes are often written in medical language that is difficult or impossible to understand for lays and usually contain information that is intended rather for communication between physicians or therapists. However, it is difficult to find a middle course that provides patients with adequate information while at the same time not losing informational content of immediate relevance for all professions involved in patient care. Despite great efforts of all departments of the University Hospital Graz and all Styrian (KAGES) hospitals, adequate referral letters that also suffice the demands of stakeholders such as general practitioners, remains an issue needing further attention. Up to now, there has been no referral letter that provides both medical information for professionals as well as information that addresses the patient directly and is adapted to the respective medical knowledge. Aim and Hypothesis The aim of this study is to develop and test an improved referral letter within the KAGES-wide project "Entlassungsdokumentation NEU" ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04628728
Study type Observational
Source Medical University of Graz
Contact
Status Completed
Phase
Start date July 15, 2019
Completion date December 31, 2021

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT05596474 - Effect of Beet-root Juice and PBM Treatments on Muscle Fatigue N/A
Recruiting NCT05778578 - Universal Basic Income and Structural Racism in the US South N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05558332 - Youth Nominated Support Team N/A
Completed NCT02451059 - Reducing Socioeconomic Disparities in Health at Pediatric Visits N/A
Completed NCT05082935 - COVID-19: Healthy Oregon (Oregon Saludable): Together We Can (Juntos Podemos) Phase II N/A
Recruiting NCT05454969 - One-4-ALL Initiative N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT05045222 - Economic and Clinical Outcomes of (Whole Exome) Sequencing in Tapestry
Completed NCT04587063 - Evaluation of Emails Promoting Mail-order Pharmacy N/A
Recruiting NCT05541913 - The Effect of Tele-Nursing on Parents of Circumcised Children N/A
Completed NCT05117333 - Reminders, Cost Sharing, and Healthcare Use N/A
Recruiting NCT04835012 - Health and Health Care Utilization Effects of Medical Debt Forgiveness
Completed NCT04567342 - Effect of Varied Outreach Methods on Appointment Scheduling, Appointment Completion, and Receipt of MMR Vaccination N/A
Withdrawn NCT05552638 - Telecare in Rural Senior Centers N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT04250103 - Home-based Longitudinal Investigation of the Multidisciplinary Team Integrated Care
Completed NCT04240093 - CoMBAT Opioid Use Disorder: A Combined Medication and Behavioral Activation Treatment for People Living With Opioid Use Disorder N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT03724695 - Advanced Heart Care at Home N/A
Completed NCT04517578 - European Neuromuscular Monitoring Survey
Active, not recruiting NCT05609188 - Black Economic Equity Movement N/A
Completed NCT04373135 - Understanding Community Considerations, Opinions, Values, Impacts, and Decisions for COVID-19 N/A
Recruiting NCT05324566 - Evaluation of ECG Transmission and AI Models Using Apple Watch ECGs and Symptoms Data Collected Using a Mayo iPhone App