As the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges publishes updated ‘Please write to me’ guidance for clinicians to improve communication with patients, Dr Hugh Rayner, who chaired the work, sets out the case for specialists to write directly to patients rather than GPs.
Poor communication is at the heart of a large proportion of complaints from patients. Those who experience it report that their confidence in the NHS as a whole is undermined.
The Academy of Medical Royal Colleges has published ‘Please, write to me: Guidance for writing directly to patients’, updating a previous version from 2018. This revised document sets out the major benefits to be gained from hospital doctors writing directly to patients and gives detailed guidance about how to do it well.
Writing directly to patients has been endorsed by NICE and previously adopted as Government and NHS policy and we believe it is one simple and inexpensive way that this problem can be addressed.
The idea itself is not new. When patients first began routinely receiving copies of clinic letters in the early 2000s – as laid out in the Labour Government’s new plan for the NHS – a colleague of mine observed that medicine was unusual among professions in the way it did not write directly to the person concerned: the patient. As he put it, a lawyer or estate agent would write to you, not about you. The question then became: why not do the same in healthcare?
My first instinct when considering writing to patients was that GPs would not welcome it. To test this, we piloted the approach in our renal department. Over six months 1,099 letters were sent directly to patients under the care of 374 GPs in 201 practices. The GP received a copy, and both letters included a reply envelope asking for feedback.
The response was striking. We received almost universal positivity from patients – bar one man who felt it was a waste of a stamp. To my surprise, GPs were similarly supportive. Many told us it made their lives easier. I had not appreciated that previously patients would book appointments specifically to ask the GP to explain the content of the letter written about them.
Writing to patients is not about ‘dumbing down’ clinical content but clarifying it. The same clinical information is included, but it is expressed in a way that makes clear what was discussed, what has been agreed, who is responsible for next steps, and what the patient should do if they have questions. Examples are given throughout the guidance. In contrast, traditional letters often function more as records for the clinicians and can leave both patients and GPs having to extract what matters.
Responsibility for patient management
GPs complain about how responsibility for patient management is often poorly communicated between secondary and primary care. These issues are also addressed in the guidance.
Medical jargon and abbreviations can be included but must be explained in plain English. Care must be taken with some words that have different meanings in medical and lay usage. For example, to a doctor, ‘chronic’ simply means long-term, whereas to a patient it means really bad.
The increasing use of artificial intelligence (AI)-scribe software has made it easier to generate documents that patients are more able to understand. The need for safeguards around using AI are included in the guidance.
These technologies can produce a letter from a recording of the consultation that is tailored to a specified reading level or format. Special interest groups with differing needs should be involved in their development to ensure that documents are accessible and appropriate.
Since 2018, hospital doctors who have started writing directly to patients report how positive the effect on their communication has been, as outlined in the guidance. The challenge now is to make this practice the norm rather than the exception.