Discharge Planning |
Involves the important principle of planning ahead for hospital discharge while the patient is still being treated in the hospital. |
Complete communication of information |
Refers to the content that should be included in discharge summaries and other means of information transfer from hospital to post-discharge care. |
Availability, timeliness, clarity and organization of information |
Important because post-discharge providers must be able to access and quickly understand the information they have been provided before assuming care of the patient. |
Medication Safety |
This is of central importance because medications are responsible for most post-discharge adverse events. |
Educating patients to promote self-management |
Involves teaching patients and their caregivers about the main hospital diagnoses and instructions for self-care, including medication changes, appointments, and whom to contact if issues arise. |
Coordinating care among team members |
This is needed to synchronize efforts across settings and providers. |
Monitoring and managing symptoms after discharge |
Monitoring for new or worsening symptoms; medication side effects, discrepancies, or nonadherence; and other self-management challenges will allow problems to be detected and addressed early, before they result in unplanned healthcare utilization. |
Outpatient Follow-up |
Optimal follow-up with appropriate post-discharge providers is crucial for providing ideal transitions. These appointments need to be prompt (e.g. within 7 days if not sooner for high-risk patients) and with providers who have a longitudinal relationship to the patient, as prior work has shown increased readmissions when the provider is unfamiliar with the patient |