Re: Improving Hospital Discharge
I couldn't agree more. The hospital/SNF discharges are absolutely abysmal as a rule. Drives me nuts. The patients really don't have a clue for the most part. Also, a lot of the time I find prescriptions still in the home not even filled because the pt/cg didn't realise it was a rx. I'm talking about the ones that end up at urgent care/ER and the discharge rx's are printed off in most places now on the A4 paper. Most of my older patients don't realise, they expect to see the rx on the smaller prescription pad paper, totally throws them off. The pts don't understand it's a prescription and here we are two days later with no antibiotics filled for the problem we initially went to get help for!!!! I've seen the same with nitrogycerin. Pts don't get it filled, end up back in hospital again for oh, let's see, we went back for "chest pain!!!"
Oh, and then you get the docs that just write admission orders/meds off of old lists they have in the system for the client and then DC home with old list of meds. Pts haven't been on that med for months. Or, what about NO PRESCRIPTIONS given to pt for new meds. Try getting the pcp to order something that the discharge doc ordered on your word alone (obviously not going to) before they get the paperwork. You can't get the pt to see pcp for follow up for three weeks!!!! Let's see, maybe the discharging doc will write/call in the med they should have got rx for, IF you can get them to call you back. No, not happening, "they are no longer our responsibility!!" Nightmare for follow up.
Oh, and what about the DC orders that have the generic and the brand name listed separately....with different dosages and the doc signed off on them!!! No-one catches it and the home health have to fight all the way for clarification. I totally understand how it is in the hospital when nurses are running round like chickens with there heads cut off. I get it, I really do. There just has to be a solution. It's not the nurses fault it's a myriad of failures in the system.
What about the patients that don't have home health, I can't imagine. No wonder there's a readmission rate of 25%, not surprising in the least. Discharge....it's an absolute joke for the most part. I've even been tempted to try and get a job as CM/discharge planner before, because honestly the discharges I see for the most part are atrocious, there has to be a better way!!! Wishful thinking!!!
Sorry for the rant, guess it's really a sore point with me!!
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