Families are rapidly becoming unpaid givers of complex care. Using McKeehan & Coulton's systems model, this critique reviews the evolution of the structure and processes of discharge planning programmes. It explores three common assumptions: discharge planning programmes are cost-effective, allow for enhancement of patients' and families' quality of life, and ensure continuity of care between hospital and community. Funds are saved due to decreased lengths of initial hospital admissions and readmission rates. However, the cost of additional hospital and community resources is rarely considered. Little evidence supports the concept that discharge planning directly affects a patient's health status. Patients and families often do not perceive the same level of benefit from discharge planning as do health professionals. Several issues surrounding research methodologies used in the reviewed studies are identified. Of particular concern is the lack of qualitative research into patients' and families' experiences. The critique concludes with an exploration of ethical issues and challenges arising from increased emphasis on cost-effective discharge planning. These include patients' rights, provision of sufficient human, social and financial resources, improved hospital-community communications, and control over hospital-developed but community-implemented programmes.
This descriptive study examines the use of community support services by elderly persons discharged from general and geriatric medical wards of a large acute care British teaching hospital. A convenience sample of 40 patients were interviewed at 6-week intervals over a 3-month period about their need for and use of community support services. The type of ward from which patients were discharged did not influence the use of nursing, homemaker, physician, or warden/community visitor services, hospital day care, or meals-on-wheels. Patients who used the largest number of community services, and were the most frequent users of all available services, were those who, because of their fragility, died or were readmitted to hospital within 6 weeks of discharge. All families interviewed identified a need for more information about their elderly members' illnesses and prescribed medical regimes.
The objective of this study was to explore, from a nursing perspective, the effectiveness of geriatric wards in preparing elderly patients for discharge from an acute care hospital. A convenience sample of 40 patients aged 70 years or older was obtained from three geriatric medical wards and two general medical wards of a large British teaching hospital. Data were collected immediately prior to discharge, and after 6 and 13 weeks following discharge. No meaningful differences were found between the two patient-groups in their ability to cope with activities of daily living following discharge. The majority of deaths and/or hospital readmissions occurred within 6 weeks of discharge. A major concern identified in both groups was patients' lack of knowledge about medications and their side-effects. A need for more effective teaching programmes for elderly patients was identified.
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