Background: Studies show that hospitalized patients often do not understand their postdischarge care plan. There are few studies about patients' preferences regarding the content of discharge care plans.
Objective: To identify what patients view as essential elements of a post-hospitalization plan.
Design: Anonymous written survey distributed on the second day of admission to internal medicine wards.
Setting: An academic tertiary care hospital and an academic county hospital in Seattle, Washington.
Patients: Two hundred English-speaking adult inpatients ≥ 18 years or their proxies.
Results: The majority of patients (64.5%) surveyed wanted verbal discharge instructions, with only 10.5% requesting written instructions (P < 0.0001). One hundred percent of patients valued the following discharge instructions as essential: "when you need to follow-up with [primary care provider] PCP," "warning signs to call PCP," and "medicines to continue post-hospitalization." One hundred percent of patients wanted "a lot of information about my condition" and "test results," but only 39% wanted "a lot of information about my medications" (P < 0.0001). When asked to choose the most important piece of discharge instruction related to their disease, 67.5% of patients chose "lifestyle changes." One hundred percent of patients thought that personal communication between the inpatient provider and the outpatient primary care provider was "extremely important" or "essential."
Conclusion: Patients uniformly placed high value on: 1) verbal communication about discharge care plans; 2) information about lifestyle changes for improved health; and 3) personal communication between inpatient and outpatient providers.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jhm.1937 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!