Title of article
Discharge planning, nursing home placement, and the Internet
Author/Authors
Eric J. Collier، نويسنده , , Charlene Harrington، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
9
From page
95
To page
103
Abstract
Background
Effective discharge planning and well-coordinated case management related to nursing home (NH) placement are key services in acute-care hospitals.
Objectives
(1) identify the individuals and important factors involved in the discharge planning process; (2) describe the types/sources of information used by discharge planners to recommend specific nursing homes for patients and families; and (3) determine which methods are used to evaluate the quality of US nursing homes (NHs).
Methods
Descriptive study, with a convenience sample of 41 discharge planners and case managers from California acute-care hospitals.
Results
This study found that patients, families, friends, and physicians are all involved in the discharge planning process along with discharge planners and/or case managers. Discharge planners/case managers were generally concerned about NH bed availability, geographic location, and financial considerations. Although the discharge planners and case managers were able to articulate important indicators of quality in NHs, such information was not routinely considered during discharge planning activities.
Conclusions
Discharge planners and case managers need to play a more central role in the decision-making process related to the selection of a NH, especially because decisions are time-limited and can benefit from a well-planned discharge planning program that uses a variety of data on quality and costs. The widespread use of Internet-based information sources can be expanded to aid this process.
Journal title
Nursing Outlook
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Nursing Outlook
Record number
719961
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