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What Is Discharge Planning? According to Medicare, discharge planning is a process that determines the kind of care a patient needs after leaving the hospital. Discharge plans should ensure a patient's transition from the hospital to another medical facility or to their home is as safe and smooth as possible.
Information for the patient. Most discharge letters include a section that summarises the key information of the patient's hospital stay in patient-friendly language, including investigation results, diagnoses, management and follow up. This is often given to the patient at discharge or posted out to the patient's home ...
When creating a discharge plan, be sure to include the following: Client education regarding the patient, their problems and needs, and description of what to do, how to do it, and what not to do. History of the hospitalization and an explanation of test data and in-hospital procedures.
6 Components of a Hospital Discharge Summary Reason for hospitalization: description of the patient's primary presenting condition; and/or. ... Significant findings: ... Procedures and treatment provided: ... Patient's discharge condition: ... Patient and family instructions (as appropriate): ... Attending physician's signature:
The MD/DO or other qualified practitioner with admitting privileges in accordance with state law and hospital policy, who admitted the patient is responsible for the patient during the patient's stay in the hospital. This responsibility would include developing and entering the discharge summary.
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Discharge summary This report is completed after the patient is discharged from the hospital. The report is a summary of the admission to the hospital, care provided, the diagnosis, procedures, medications, tests, immunizations, any problems and the plan for care after discharge from the hospital.
A written transition plan or discharge summary is completed and includes diagnosis, active issues, medications, services needed, warning signs, and emergency contact information. The plan is written in the patient's language.
When you leave a hospital after treatment, you go through a process called hospital discharge. A hospital will discharge you when you no longer need to receive inpatient care and can go home. Or, a hospital will discharge you to send you to another type of facility. Many hospitals have a discharge planner.
In general, discharge planning is conceptualized as having four phases: (1) patient assessment; (2) development of a discharge plan; (3) provision of service, including patient/family education and service referral; and (4) follow-up/evaluation [12].
Discharge planning is an interdisciplinary approach to continuity of care and a process that includes identification, assessment, goal setting, planning, implementation, coordination, and evaluation.

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