Hospital readmissions are frustrating. Your medical team, family caregivers (and you!) work tirelessly to improve your health so that you can return home. But within 14-30 days, one out of five patients is readmitted to the hospital.
It feels pointless! Why work so hard to make sure a patient is ready for discharge when they will be back in less than a month?
Returning to the hospital shortly after discharge:
It’s not a pretty picture. That’s why transitioning elders back into their homes with proper support and assistance is vital to their health and independence.
Researchers have studied the causes of hospital readmission. You can use these evidence-based strategies to ensure a smooth transition home from the hospital so people who return home can stay there. Case managers or discharge planners play a vital role in this process.
Case managers are professionals who speak for the patients and work as the bridge between patients, their families and healthcare professionals. Their job is to look at the complex health needs of each individual and help map out a plan to address those needs.
Not an easy job! Case managers are like jugglers. They take all the care aspects of a patient and work to keep them all up in the air.
Case managers...
The role of the case manager is essential to the success of keeping patients from returning to the hospital. A case manager’s reach goes beyond the hospital and can extend to the community partners working with the patient at home.
Research shows that a case manager’s role in teaching the patient about what to expect when they return home will have a positive impact on their health. Returning home is often disorienting and upsetting for patients, as well as stressful for family members. Bridging care from the hospital to home is key to ensuring a happy return home.
Going back home can be hard for patients. As much as you might want to leave the hospital, it can be overwhelming to go from a place where others are taking care of you to managing on your own.
Someone might have fears like:
Answering these questions will prepare the patient to be successful in staying out of the hospital. You can accomplish this through five basic steps.
Arrange doctor visits in the community. Fewer than half of patients will see their community doctor within two weeks of discharge.
A Yale-led study found the following strategies were most likely to reduce the patient’s return to hospital:
Patients want to stay home. Staying at home promotes better health and can save thousands of dollars in health care costs. People just need the right support and education to transition back home.
There is a three-day window of opportunity that sets the patient up for a successful transition from hospital to home. If you miss that window, the patient has a one in five chance of being back in the hospital within 30 days. The homebound patient is often scared and confused.
Sometimes a person will try to keep up with what they did prior to their hospitalization and end up hurting themselves, or they will feel weak and helpless. A good strategy and proper support can ease this transition time and help the patient to feel confident at home again.
Once a patient is released from a hospital, the goal should be to prevent their return. Hospital readmissions are not good for patients and cost millions. Case managers, doctor follow-ups and well-trained caregivers are the most important pieces to the puzzle that can help prevent patients from returning too soon.
A patient that goes home with proper support and has a smooth transition from the hospital is a patient who stays safely at home.
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