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By ROISIN GADELRAB
 
4,000 outpatients seen without records as retrieval system fails

MORE than 4,000 hospital outpatients were seen without medical records in January because they could not be found in time, it has emerged.
Figures released to the New Journal reveal 30 per cent of records were effectively missing in January, corresponding to 4,200 out of 14,000 patients seen.
This figure more than halved in February to 12 per cent but still means 1,680 out of 14,000 patients were seen without notes.
Speaking at a board of directors meeting hospital chairman Peter Dixon was visibly disturbed by the revelations. He said: “The issue of patient records going missing is a serious one. What actually happened in order to get ourselves into this?”
Last month hospital chief executive Robert Naylor told the board he was renewing the contract with record guardians Iron Mountain, who store millions of records in a vast east London warehouse, for another six months with a view to extending to 18 months.
Doctors, frustrated with facing patients without any background medical information, raised the issue with Mr Naylor at a Medical Committee meeting weeks ago. But Mr Naylor says the fault does not lie with Iron Mountain. He said: “We’ve got something like a million sets of medical records. The last thing we want to do is disturb that position so we renewed the contract for 18 months and then it will go out to tender.
“It’s not really Iron Mountain’s problem. They say if you give us notice we will bring the records for you. The problem with paper records is you have to physically find them.
“They normally do turn up but what we’ve found recently is there is an increasing frequency when they are not there. It may be because we haven’t asked for them in time or because a patient has come in early.”
Clinical services manager Andy Webb told the board measures were already being taken to address the problem, with records being ordered five days in advance as a precaution. There are plans to increase this to eight days.
Claiming the problem is merely an inconvenience for staff, who have to go through the delaying process of ‘clerking’ – taking a medical history of – patients again, Mr Naylor said: “If a patient turns up and no records are there, doctor normally have to clerk them and that’s time consuming.
“It’s always been an issue and will be an issue for as long as we have paper records.
“Ultimately we’ll have a virtually paperless hospital with an electronic patient records system.”
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