Mr. Jones is a 65 year-old gentleman with a past medical history significant for hypertension (HTN), diabetes mellitus (DM), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and coronary artery disease (CAD), who presents from OSH with … who-knows-what?
OSH denotes an “outside hospital” from where a patient was transferred. These hospitals are generally smaller medical centers that do not have the advanced specialists, equipment, or support facilities to manage the evolving complexity of a patient’s disease. Consequently, they request from a higher-level care center (i.e., tertiary hospital, major academic institution) to have the patient transferred there. In rare instances where patients carry cryptic or immensely challenging clinical diagnoses, a tertiary center may even refer the patient to another hospital where supposed “world experts” of a particular field may practice.
A common complaint at tertiary centers receiving transferred patients is that they arrive with poor supporting documentation. That is, what had been done for the patient while at the other hospital? What happened whereby the patient now requires higher level care? Discharge summaries sometimes appear as if they were drafted on the fly; at other times, they are replaced by randomly copied chart notes or nothing altogether. In worse scenarios, patients may arrive with such dearth of information that the admitting physician is left dumbfounded about the real reasons for admission.
In response, a group of medicine residents from the University of Pennsylvania created the following video to critique–with gross exaggeration, of course–the infamous OSH.


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