A daily multidisciplinary hospital discharge support meeting in an acute hospital: An evaluation of a quality improvement initiative to facilitate timely discharge & transfers of care

Introduction: Timely identification of those with complex discharge needs (CDN) in hospital is important for good discharge practice. Our region developed a number of pathways to support those with CDN including rehabilitation of frail older patients; support for patients with dementia; enhanced sho...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of integrated care 2017-10, Vol.17 (5), p.142
Hauptverfasser: O'Sullivan, Aoife Mary, Dukelow, Tim, Walsh, Carmel, Hayes, Mary, Looney, Eileen, O'Sullivan, Catherine, Fitzgerald, Karen, O'Connor, Kieran Anthony
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Introduction: Timely identification of those with complex discharge needs (CDN) in hospital is important for good discharge practice. Our region developed a number of pathways to support those with CDN including rehabilitation of frail older patients; support for patients with dementia; enhanced short-term support at home by community intervention team; and a new 18-bedded transitional care unit. However, hospital audit documented delays identifying patients with CDN and poor recording of the predicted date of discharge (PDD). As a consequence there were opportunities for improved patient flow & discharge support missed.Practice change implemented: We instigated a “discharge support meeting” daily between Monday & Friday in our hospital. The bed manager, discharge coordinators, clinical nurse specialist in gerontology and consultant in geriatric medicine are available to other teams at this meeting. A member of each medical and surgical team attends and shares the discharge plan for each of their patients. PDD are amended at the meeting.Aim: Our aim is for more timely identification of patients with CDN throughout the hospital, thereby allowing those patients be matched to appropriate discharge support services and improve overall patient flow.Targeted population and stakeholders: Those with CDN represent about 20% of discharges but account for over 50% of bed days. They have on-going health & social care needs, require multidisciplinary assessment, frequently require in-patient rehabilitation and regularly need support on discharge. The “discharge support meeting” helps make improving patient flow a hospital-wide endeavour.Impact: The meeting commenced September 2016. Discharge bottlenecks are identified and acted upon at the meeting. Potential discharge supports are highlighted for individual patients early. Over 80% of doctors responding to our feedback survey find the meeting helpful. The accuracy of the PDD has increased significantly. There has been a 25% increase in consultations by geriatric medicine with a corresponding appropriate increase of both rehabilitation and transitional care bed use. Our hospital weekend discharges have increased to our highest levels. There is cultural change in relation to discharge planning needing active management.Sustainability and transferability: The meeting is scheduled during patients’ mealtime as clinical teams would be leaving the wards. Individual team member presents their patients and then can leave. Inter
ISSN:1568-4156
1568-4156
DOI:10.5334/ijic.3450