Home
Scholarly Works
Discharge planning and patient satisfaction in an...
Journal article

Discharge planning and patient satisfaction in an emergency short‐stay unit

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To determine the adequacy of discharge planning from an emergency short-stay unit (ESSU), and patient knowledge of and satisfaction with the ESSU. METHODS: Prospective follow up of patients discharged from an ESSU using patient surveys and a computerized patient information system, with descriptive and comparative data analysis. RESULTS: Eighty-five per cent of respondents stated that they received adequate discharge instruction, and 89% that they benefited from their ESSU admission. However, 29% of patients made unscheduled visits to another medical practitioner post discharge and 9% were readmitted to hospital for the same problem with which they were discharged from the ESSU. Patient satisfaction with all aspects of care in the ESSU was high. CONCLUSIONS: Most patients discharged from an ESSU are provided with adequate discharge instruction, but a sizeable proportion require subsequent medical care for the same problem after discharge. Patient satisfaction with all aspects of care in an ESSU is high.

Authors

Arendts G; MacKenzie J; Lee JK

Journal

Emergency Medicine Australasia, Vol. 18, No. 1, pp. 7–14

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

February 1, 2006

DOI

10.1111/j.1742-6723.2006.00798.x

ISSN

1742-6731

Contact the Experts team