SUMMARYTo discover whether general practitioners are correctly notified of a patient's final diagnosis following hospital discharge, an observational study was undertaken in a district general hospital. The final diagnosis was compared with the diagnosis documented in the discharge summary and the take‐home prescription. Two hundred discharges were studied. Only 163 (81%) discharge summaries and 138 (69%) take‐home prescriptions had the correct diagnosis; 24 (12%) take‐home prescriptions did not have any diagnosis at all. In some cases the diagnosis differed between the discharge summaries and the take‐home prescriptions. Only in 122 (61%) cases was the final diagnosis correctly documented in both instances. Communication regarding diagnosis in discharge letters is less than adequate. Every effort should be made to improve this.
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