Cargando…

O11.7. DISCHARGE PLANNING PRACTICES AND FAMILY INVOLVEMENT IN TRANSITIONS TO OUTPATIENT CARE FOLLOWING DISCHARGE FROM HOSPITAL PSYCHIATRIC UNITS

BACKGROUND: Individuals with mood and psychotic disorders treated in hospital psychiatric units have high rates of discontinuing treatment following discharge, a time that poses substantial risks of serious and even life threatening adverse outcomes. Hospital provider care transition practices belie...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Haselden, Morgan, Smith, Thomas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5887795/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sby015.267
_version_ 1783312384051380224
author Haselden, Morgan
Smith, Thomas
author_facet Haselden, Morgan
Smith, Thomas
author_sort Haselden, Morgan
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Individuals with mood and psychotic disorders treated in hospital psychiatric units have high rates of discontinuing treatment following discharge, a time that poses substantial risks of serious and even life threatening adverse outcomes. Hospital provider care transition practices believed to improve transitions include communication with outpatient providers, scheduling timely appointments for outpatient follow-up care, forwarding case summaries to aftercare providers, and involving family or support persons in discharge planning. While these are standards of care, little is known about how often they are adequately delivered and their impact on post-discharge aftercare adherence. METHODS: As part of a larger project looking at over 30,000 hospital admissions of Medicaid patients with serious mental illness, this study examined hospital medical records for 217 admissions at two urban US hospitals. Trained raters reviewed records for evidence of inpatient providers completing discharge planning practices. Medicaid data were used to measure demographics and attendance of seven- and 30-day outpatient appointments. RESULTS: The sample of 217 admissions was 51% male and 82% were adults, with discharge diagnoses including schizophrenia and related disorders (45%), bipolar disorders (28%) and depressive disorders (17%). The average length of stay was 14 ± 13 days with a median of nine days. The medical records showed evidence of inpatient providers communicating with outpatient providers 64% (n=139) of the time. There was evidence of an outpatient appointment scheduled within seven days of discharge for 81% (n=176) of the sample. A case summary was made available to the aftercare provider within one day of discharge for 66% (n=144) of the sample. Records showed that the inpatient team communicated with family members or support persons about the patient’s post-discharge treatment plan for 53% (n=114) of the sample, and 36% (n=79) attended a family meeting or therapy session. Rates of attending an aftercare behavioral health appointment were 55% (n=120) at seven days post-discharge and 80% (n=174) for 30 days. DISCUSSION: This study found varying rates of providers completing care transition practices. Only half of the sample had attended an aftercare appointment in the seven days post discharge, however the majority had attended an appointment by 30 days. Planned analyses will present demographic and clinical differences among those who received discharge planning activities and had family involvement. We will examine predictors of attending follow-up care and report the effectiveness of discharge planning practices. Findings will help inform strategies to improve care-coordination and discharge planning for individuals with serious mental illnesses treated in psychiatric hospitals.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5887795
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-58877952018-04-11 O11.7. DISCHARGE PLANNING PRACTICES AND FAMILY INVOLVEMENT IN TRANSITIONS TO OUTPATIENT CARE FOLLOWING DISCHARGE FROM HOSPITAL PSYCHIATRIC UNITS Haselden, Morgan Smith, Thomas Schizophr Bull Abstracts BACKGROUND: Individuals with mood and psychotic disorders treated in hospital psychiatric units have high rates of discontinuing treatment following discharge, a time that poses substantial risks of serious and even life threatening adverse outcomes. Hospital provider care transition practices believed to improve transitions include communication with outpatient providers, scheduling timely appointments for outpatient follow-up care, forwarding case summaries to aftercare providers, and involving family or support persons in discharge planning. While these are standards of care, little is known about how often they are adequately delivered and their impact on post-discharge aftercare adherence. METHODS: As part of a larger project looking at over 30,000 hospital admissions of Medicaid patients with serious mental illness, this study examined hospital medical records for 217 admissions at two urban US hospitals. Trained raters reviewed records for evidence of inpatient providers completing discharge planning practices. Medicaid data were used to measure demographics and attendance of seven- and 30-day outpatient appointments. RESULTS: The sample of 217 admissions was 51% male and 82% were adults, with discharge diagnoses including schizophrenia and related disorders (45%), bipolar disorders (28%) and depressive disorders (17%). The average length of stay was 14 ± 13 days with a median of nine days. The medical records showed evidence of inpatient providers communicating with outpatient providers 64% (n=139) of the time. There was evidence of an outpatient appointment scheduled within seven days of discharge for 81% (n=176) of the sample. A case summary was made available to the aftercare provider within one day of discharge for 66% (n=144) of the sample. Records showed that the inpatient team communicated with family members or support persons about the patient’s post-discharge treatment plan for 53% (n=114) of the sample, and 36% (n=79) attended a family meeting or therapy session. Rates of attending an aftercare behavioral health appointment were 55% (n=120) at seven days post-discharge and 80% (n=174) for 30 days. DISCUSSION: This study found varying rates of providers completing care transition practices. Only half of the sample had attended an aftercare appointment in the seven days post discharge, however the majority had attended an appointment by 30 days. Planned analyses will present demographic and clinical differences among those who received discharge planning activities and had family involvement. We will examine predictors of attending follow-up care and report the effectiveness of discharge planning practices. Findings will help inform strategies to improve care-coordination and discharge planning for individuals with serious mental illnesses treated in psychiatric hospitals. Oxford University Press 2018-04 2018-04-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5887795/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sby015.267 Text en © Maryland Psychiatric Research Center 2018. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Haselden, Morgan
Smith, Thomas
O11.7. DISCHARGE PLANNING PRACTICES AND FAMILY INVOLVEMENT IN TRANSITIONS TO OUTPATIENT CARE FOLLOWING DISCHARGE FROM HOSPITAL PSYCHIATRIC UNITS
title O11.7. DISCHARGE PLANNING PRACTICES AND FAMILY INVOLVEMENT IN TRANSITIONS TO OUTPATIENT CARE FOLLOWING DISCHARGE FROM HOSPITAL PSYCHIATRIC UNITS
title_full O11.7. DISCHARGE PLANNING PRACTICES AND FAMILY INVOLVEMENT IN TRANSITIONS TO OUTPATIENT CARE FOLLOWING DISCHARGE FROM HOSPITAL PSYCHIATRIC UNITS
title_fullStr O11.7. DISCHARGE PLANNING PRACTICES AND FAMILY INVOLVEMENT IN TRANSITIONS TO OUTPATIENT CARE FOLLOWING DISCHARGE FROM HOSPITAL PSYCHIATRIC UNITS
title_full_unstemmed O11.7. DISCHARGE PLANNING PRACTICES AND FAMILY INVOLVEMENT IN TRANSITIONS TO OUTPATIENT CARE FOLLOWING DISCHARGE FROM HOSPITAL PSYCHIATRIC UNITS
title_short O11.7. DISCHARGE PLANNING PRACTICES AND FAMILY INVOLVEMENT IN TRANSITIONS TO OUTPATIENT CARE FOLLOWING DISCHARGE FROM HOSPITAL PSYCHIATRIC UNITS
title_sort o11.7. discharge planning practices and family involvement in transitions to outpatient care following discharge from hospital psychiatric units
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5887795/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sby015.267
work_keys_str_mv AT haseldenmorgan o117dischargeplanningpracticesandfamilyinvolvementintransitionstooutpatientcarefollowingdischargefromhospitalpsychiatricunits
AT smiththomas o117dischargeplanningpracticesandfamilyinvolvementintransitionstooutpatientcarefollowingdischargefromhospitalpsychiatricunits