Central and Eastern Cheshire PCT has spearheaded a new shared IT solution to cut the long delays between a patient leaving hospital and their GP receiving detailed discharge notes.
The MedisecNET electronic delivery system is being used by three Acute Trusts (the Countess of Chester Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, East Cheshire Hospitals NHS Trust and Mid Cheshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust) to provide one consistent electronic way of delivering discharge documentation to 92 GPs across Cheshire.1
Uniquely, the technology builds on existing systems, giving both hospital and surgery the time-saving efficiencies of electronic delivery, without major IT investment.
Diane Nolder, Senior IT Project Manager at Mid Cheshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust comments: âDespite using a completely different system to generate our discharge correspondence than the two other Trusts in the area, weâve still been able to plug into the same delivery network as them, producing a commonality of approach for GPs right across the county.â
Tom Rothwell, managing director of system developers Medisec Software
adds: âAs the network can potentially collect from any hospital system and deliver to any GP system, the technology is hugely transferable across the NHS and could play a major role in helping Acute Trusts to meet next yearâs 24-hour NHS standard for delivering discharge communications to GPs.â2
With the right patient discharge information at the right time, GPs can look after the needs of patients much better.
Dr Neil Paul, a GP at Ashfields Primary Care Centre in Sandbach, enthuses: âMedisec is the missing link. By providing one central electronic funnel which a whole range of providers can drop information into, it allows everyone to talk to one another in a consistent way. It means that we get critical clinical information from the hospital overnight rather than it sitting in out-trays, waiting to be printed or being lost in the post!â
Surgery staff can transfer the information into their practice systems without any scanning or dual keying â saving time and avoiding errors.
âBefore, surgery staff would waste hours battling to scan in hundreds of documents each week, it was almost a full time job,â claims Dr Paul. âNow, itâs very quick and simple for our staff to just authorise and file letters. Itâs increased our efficiency and sped things up dramatically.â
âThe main benefit for the GPs is that they have a unified process,â says Debi Lees, ICT Project Manager/Business Analyst, Cheshire ICT Service, Central and Eastern Cheshire PCT. âIt doesnât matter which hospital the letters come from, they go in to the practice via the MedisecNET funnel into the GPâs document management software, so that the practice only need use one method of dealing with correspondence.â
The system can provide a clear audit trail from letter generation to delivery, so both the PCT and hospital can see exactly how long it is taking to deliver discharge updates to GPs.
Patricia Reilly, IM&T Clinical Systems Manager, the Countess of Chester Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, explains: âWe can now compare how long itâs taking different specialties and consultants to generate and issue clinical correspondence. By identifying backlogs and areas where action is needed, we can improve communications with our GP partners and deliver better patient care.â
The system can potentially handle any correspondence from any system and deliver it in one format in the GP practice. âWe are very much on the first rung of the ladder,â claims Debi. âElectronic delivery of discharge documentation has already proved very popular with the GPs but our end game is for every surgery in Cheshire to receive all clinical correspondence, not just discharge forms, in the same way.â
ENDS
For further information, please visit www.medisecsoftware.co.uk
For media enquiries, please contact Toby Walker or Debbie Wells at Cameron Wells Communications Ltd on tel: 0161 973 4158 or email: toby.walker@cameronwells.co.uk or debbie.wells@cameronwells.co.uk
Notes to Editors:
1. 50 out of 54 surgeries across Central and East Cheshire now receive all their discharge correspondence from both Leighton and Macclesfield hospitals electronically in one single in-box every morning. All 38 practices in West Cheshire also receive discharge letters from the Countess of Chester using MedisecNET. Each surgery will eventually receive all clinical correspondence from all three hospitals in the same way.
2. The NHS Contract for Acute Services has introduced new targets to cut the long delays between patients leaving hospital and their GP receiving detailed discharge notes. Trusts must now deliver discharge documentation to GPs within 24 hours of a patient leaving hospital by April 2010.
3. Medisec Software is a specialist systems developer providing clinical correspondence solutions for the health service.
4. Medisec products generate patient information documents and communicate them electronically between hospitals, GP surgeries and other health agencies, such as social services.
5. 6,500 healthcare professionals use Medisec products nationwide, with over 1.9 million documents generated and transmitted using the software annually.
- Toby Walker 13-10-2009
The MedisecNET electronic delivery system is being used by three Acute Trusts (the Countess of Chester Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, East Cheshire Hospitals NHS Trust and Mid Cheshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust) to provide one consistent electronic way of delivering discharge documentation to 92 GPs across Cheshire.1
Uniquely, the technology builds on existing systems, giving both hospital and surgery the time-saving efficiencies of electronic delivery, without major IT investment.
Diane Nolder, Senior IT Project Manager at Mid Cheshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust comments: âDespite using a completely different system to generate our discharge correspondence than the two other Trusts in the area, weâve still been able to plug into the same delivery network as them, producing a commonality of approach for GPs right across the county.â
Tom Rothwell, managing director of system developers Medisec Software
adds: âAs the network can potentially collect from any hospital system and deliver to any GP system, the technology is hugely transferable across the NHS and could play a major role in helping Acute Trusts to meet next yearâs 24-hour NHS standard for delivering discharge communications to GPs.â2
With the right patient discharge information at the right time, GPs can look after the needs of patients much better.
Dr Neil Paul, a GP at Ashfields Primary Care Centre in Sandbach, enthuses: âMedisec is the missing link. By providing one central electronic funnel which a whole range of providers can drop information into, it allows everyone to talk to one another in a consistent way. It means that we get critical clinical information from the hospital overnight rather than it sitting in out-trays, waiting to be printed or being lost in the post!â
Surgery staff can transfer the information into their practice systems without any scanning or dual keying â saving time and avoiding errors.
âBefore, surgery staff would waste hours battling to scan in hundreds of documents each week, it was almost a full time job,â claims Dr Paul. âNow, itâs very quick and simple for our staff to just authorise and file letters. Itâs increased our efficiency and sped things up dramatically.â
âThe main benefit for the GPs is that they have a unified process,â says Debi Lees, ICT Project Manager/Business Analyst, Cheshire ICT Service, Central and Eastern Cheshire PCT. âIt doesnât matter which hospital the letters come from, they go in to the practice via the MedisecNET funnel into the GPâs document management software, so that the practice only need use one method of dealing with correspondence.â
The system can provide a clear audit trail from letter generation to delivery, so both the PCT and hospital can see exactly how long it is taking to deliver discharge updates to GPs.
Patricia Reilly, IM&T Clinical Systems Manager, the Countess of Chester Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, explains: âWe can now compare how long itâs taking different specialties and consultants to generate and issue clinical correspondence. By identifying backlogs and areas where action is needed, we can improve communications with our GP partners and deliver better patient care.â
The system can potentially handle any correspondence from any system and deliver it in one format in the GP practice. âWe are very much on the first rung of the ladder,â claims Debi. âElectronic delivery of discharge documentation has already proved very popular with the GPs but our end game is for every surgery in Cheshire to receive all clinical correspondence, not just discharge forms, in the same way.â
ENDS
For further information, please visit www.medisecsoftware.co.uk
For media enquiries, please contact Toby Walker or Debbie Wells at Cameron Wells Communications Ltd on tel: 0161 973 4158 or email: toby.walker@cameronwells.co.uk or debbie.wells@cameronwells.co.uk
Notes to Editors:
1. 50 out of 54 surgeries across Central and East Cheshire now receive all their discharge correspondence from both Leighton and Macclesfield hospitals electronically in one single in-box every morning. All 38 practices in West Cheshire also receive discharge letters from the Countess of Chester using MedisecNET. Each surgery will eventually receive all clinical correspondence from all three hospitals in the same way.
2. The NHS Contract for Acute Services has introduced new targets to cut the long delays between patients leaving hospital and their GP receiving detailed discharge notes. Trusts must now deliver discharge documentation to GPs within 24 hours of a patient leaving hospital by April 2010.
3. Medisec Software is a specialist systems developer providing clinical correspondence solutions for the health service.
4. Medisec products generate patient information documents and communicate them electronically between hospitals, GP surgeries and other health agencies, such as social services.
5. 6,500 healthcare professionals use Medisec products nationwide, with over 1.9 million documents generated and transmitted using the software annually.
- Toby Walker 13-10-2009

