Improving the discharge process by embedding a discharge facilitator in a resident team.

Link to article at PubMed

Improving the discharge process by embedding a discharge facilitator in a resident team.

J Hosp Med. 2011 Oct 31;

Authors: Finn KM, Heffner R, Chang Y, Bazari H, Hunt D, Pickell K, Berube R, Raju S, Farrell E, Iyasere C, Thompson R, O'Malley T, O'Donnell W, Karson A

Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hospital discharges are vulnerable periods for patient safety, especially in teaching hospitals where discharges are done by residents with competing demands. We sought to assess whether embedding a nurse practitioner on a medical team to help physicians with the discharge process would improve communication, patient follow-up, and hospital reutilization. METHODS: A 5-month randomized controlled trial was conducted on the medical service at an academic tertiary-care hospital. A nurse practitioner was randomly assigned to 1 resident team to complete discharge paperwork, arrange follow-up appointments and prescriptions, communicate discharge plans with nursing and primary care physicians, and answer questions from discharged patients. RESULTS: Intervention patients had more discharge summaries completed within 24 hours (67% vs 47%, P < 0.001). Similarly, they had more follow-up appointments scheduled by the time of discharge (62% vs 36%, P < 0.0001) and attended those appointments more often within 2 weeks (36% vs 23%, P < 0.0002). Intervention patients knew whom to call with questions (95% vs 85%, P = 0.003) and were more satisfied with the discharge process (97% vs 76%, P < 0.0001). Attending rounds on the intervention team finished on time (45% vs 31%, P = 0.058), and residents signed out on average 46 minutes earlier each day. There was no significant difference between the groups in 30-day emergency department visits or readmissions. CONCLUSIONS: Helping resident physicians with the discharge process improves many aspects of discharge communication and patient follow-up, and saves residents' time, but had no effect on hospital reutilization for a general medicine population. Journal of Hospital Medicine 2011;. © 2011 Society of Hospital Medicine.

PMID: 22042739 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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