Critical Path Network: Discharge support may prevent, delay readmission
Critical Path Network
Discharge support may prevent, delay readmission
Study offers predictors
Researchers who reviewed thousands of studies have found that enhanced hospital discharge support might prevent or delay hospital readmissions for heart failure and stroke patients.1
Other predictors of a positive outcome upon discharge include patients having a positive attitude, family support, self-care ability, self-confidence, and being younger and independent, says Lolita Jacob, DNP, a family nurse practitioner at Monmouth Medical Center in Long Branch, NJ. Jacob co-authored the study.
"If patients have confidence in themselves and can do self-care, then they are the kind of people who have a successful transition to the community," she says. "Those who have a negative perception toward the future and life and who might go home and say they cannot do this at the outset, then those are the kind of patients who will have problems during their transition and are most likely to be readmitted or to have unscheduled emergency visits."
Some of the studies Jacob reviewed found that patients with a heart failure diagnosis could have a more successful transition to community care if they were given discharge preparation and support.
The research also showed that increased age, length of hospital stay, and Medicaid enrollment were among the risk factors for a poor transition among stroke patients.
The research has implications for discharge planners, suggesting that they might predict whether a patient will transition to the community successfully based on the patient's attitude.
For example, patients who talk cheerfully about the discharge while still in a hospital bed and are eager to return to work or to their families might be the ones who have the most successful transitions to community, Jacob says.
Reference
- Jacob L, Poletick EB. Systematic review: Predictors of successful transition to community-based care for adults with chronic care needs. Case Man J 2008; 9(4):154-165.
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