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Today's presentation. Defining a simple dischargeCNST requirementsLocal Interpretation: measurementEstimating dates for dischargeDischarge training and accreditationChanging culture and thinking on the shop floor3 Case studies Tips for sustaining progress.. Defining a simple discharge. Department of Health discharge 'toolkit' (2004) defines simple discharges as those patients who will usually be discharged to their own homes and have simple ongoing care needs which do not require complex 34371
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1. Implementing systems for dynamic discharge practice (simple discharge) Liz Lees
Consultant Nurse (Acute Medicine)
Liz.lees@heartofengland.nhs.uk
2. Today's presentation Defining a simple discharge
CNST requirements
Local Interpretation: measurement
Estimating dates for discharge
Discharge training and accreditation
Changing culture and thinking on the shop floor
3 Case studies
Tips for sustaining progress.
3. Defining a simple discharge Department of Health discharge 'toolkit' (2004) defines simple discharges as those patients who will usually be discharged to their own homes and have simple ongoing care needs which do not require complex planning and delivery
Make up at least 80% of all discharges and are the norm in patients where a self-limiting condition has responded to treatment.
Defining principles:
Has a clear and often linear process
Co-ordinated and owned at ward MDT level
LEAN principles and delegation (transport)
Patient choice involvement (time of discharge)
Up to 7 components in the process (Simple bundle)
4. Discharge bundle concept (7 + 7) Decision (+/-)
Patient informed/involved in planning
Time of discharge agreed
Clothes
GP letter
Transport arranged (by patient or staff)
Medications (or advice)
1. (+/-) Sick notes (Schemes Employer/BHF/BUPA)
2. (+/-) Dressings
3. (+/-) Investigations as Outpatient
4. (+/-) Follow up as Outpatient (referral to specialist)
5. (+/-) Simple items of equipment (nebulisers, mobility aids)
6. (+/-) Mobility and site assessments (stair assessments/ walking aids - Crutches)
7. (+/-) Re-start of existing care services/arrangements
The specialist v complex discharge debate
(+/-) Lifestyle changes (Management of; Insulin, Oxygen, Stoma)
My view if it is your core business in your area it is NOT complex
5. The pace of simple discharges Generally about working out how many stages are involved
How many people are Involved
Simple discharge usually have bundles of typical activity: TTOs, Transport, DN referral, GP letter and =/-follow up at Hospital
Ones where there is unlikely to be any allied health professional involvement
Where the pathway is predictable
No multi-agency involvement and no funding requirementsGenerally about working out how many stages are involved
How many people are Involved
Simple discharge usually have bundles of typical activity: TTOs, Transport, DN referral, GP letter and =/-follow up at Hospital
Ones where there is unlikely to be any allied health professional involvement
Where the pathway is predictable
No multi-agency involvement and no funding requirements
6. National policy requirements
7. CNST and Trust standard
CNST:
Unified set of records with evidence of a discharge plan,
named person responsible for discharge
Clear audit trail of discharge (discharge checklist)
Trust standard: estimated date of discharge
Measures:
a completed discharge checklist (in notes)
patient information (evidenced from PAS)
evidence of patient involvement (ask patient)
Documented plan (in notes)
Overuse: (of procedures and practices that dont help discharge of patients)
Under use: (of procedures that do help)
Based on Pathway, Process & Practice (DoH, 2003 - updated from 1994 and effective in-patient discharge procedures, 2006).
Discharge From Hospital good practice checklist (H&S CAT)
Incorporate CSNT requirements
Takes account of planning (list at 48 & 24 hours)
The need to keep evidence of a plan (carbonated)
Includes EDD
A section for bespoke aspects.
Agreed with primary care and social care providers
Added 2007 patient signature
Misuse: ( errors in completion, execution of practice)
Practice and procedures matter.. But it is all about how individuals understand the process, are prepared to be compliant and relate to each other
Overuse: (of procedures and practices that dont help discharge of patients)
Under use: (of procedures that do help)
Based on Pathway, Process & Practice (DoH, 2003 - updated from 1994 and effective in-patient discharge procedures, 2006).
Discharge From Hospital good practice checklist (H&S CAT)
Incorporate CSNT requirements
Takes account of planning (list at 48 & 24 hours)
The need to keep evidence of a plan (carbonated)
Includes EDD
A section for bespoke aspects.
Agreed with primary care and social care providers
Added 2007 patient signature
Misuse: ( errors in completion, execution of practice)
Practice and procedures matter.. But it is all about how individuals understand the process, are prepared to be compliant and relate to each other
8. Estimating dates for discharge Review:
Individual systems: above beds abstain
lack of understanding
Study: Lees, L., Holmes, K., (2005) Estimating a date of discharge at ward level: a pilot study, Vol. 19, No. 17, pp 40 43. Nursing Standard. www.nursing-standard.co.uk
EDD what does it really mean for patients
Proformas
9. The Front of the Notes
10. Facilitating Discharge Post Admission (Acute Medical Unit)
Post take WR standardised proforma
Nurses attending post take WR
Standardised Discharge Criteria e.g. Community Acquired Pneumonia, BTS 2004
11. The White Board
13. Current situation (2008) Centralised system ward consensus Disparity from degree of variability between different practitioners entering a date.
Not about a date - Length of stay, activities and commitment to dates
Initiating process and reviewing progress
Good nursing handovers
Excellent communication
Research underway: Abstract / Empirical continuum
Paternalistic model
Most of all what do you want it to achieve?! We make it up
We certainly dont tell the patient in case they dont want to goWe make it up
We certainly dont tell the patient in case they dont want to go
14. EDD back to basics to introduce a simple sustainable process, that every one would understand their contribution and participate in Label
Patient information
Discharge checklist
Visible
Understand the concernsLabel
Patient information
Discharge checklist
Visible
Understand the concerns
15. Discharge training Top 5 Training needs- For all wards
Starting from where staff are at
Training needs analysis
Induction
Study day
Pre, post and masters level module discharge planning (Birmingham City University)
E-learning
Discharge competency framework (Dh, 2004)
Top 5 for individual wards were all simple aspects of discharge e.g booking district nurses/accessing outreach/completing forms etc. They were different for each ward. And on each ward there were staff who identified themselves as able to teach on these particular aspects of discharge.Top 5 for individual wards were all simple aspects of discharge e.g booking district nurses/accessing outreach/completing forms etc. They were different for each ward. And on each ward there were staff who identified themselves as able to teach on these particular aspects of discharge.
17. Levels of competency(framework in toolkit, Dh, 2004)
18. Case study 1 Not simple, not complex
Incomprehensible!
19. On Presentation 74 yr old male
Ref: District nurses to A&E
PC: Constipation
PMH: Dementia, Alcohol abuse, Diabetic, leg ulcers, poor vision.
SH: large multi-agency care package, DN involved
48 hour stay on admissions ward, enemas
Discharge instructions home with Senna
What happened next?
20. Active discharge phase Staff arranged transfer by 2 man ambulance
Nurses organised TTO (cupboard on ward)
Doctor wrote discharge letter.
Ambulance staff arrived
What happened next?
21. Active discharge phase Ambulance collected him from ward (18:00)
Call from carers at 21:00 (put to bed service)
He is not at home
What happened next?
22. Salvage operation Nurse phones ambulance service and established patient had been safely dropped off.. Bit worried but thinks carers must have got it wrong.. Nothing documented in notes
What happened next?
At 22:00 call to ward: carers at a Nursing home had been putting residents to bed and noticed they had a new (extra) resident.. But no bed.. He was quite content and had enjoyed a good supper!
Nurses note address is 2 doors away from his home.. And she phones carers
What happened next?
By now carers have gone home, so he is brought back to A&E, where he spent the night and following morning before services could be recommenced
23. What could we improve? Follow a transparent discharge process
Clear on who is involved in patients care
Communicate the plan
Involve carers
Use discharge checklist (again)
Try a follow up call
Discharge education at ward level
24. Case study 2 Simple discharge??
25. On Presentation 76 yr old female, by ambulance
Ref: Emergency GP referral
Imp: Urinary tract infection
PMH: Hip replacement (96), depression
SH: Lives alone, Cat, None smoker, Daughter
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Req: Urine dipstick, chest x-ray, bloods, ECG
Decision: After 3 hours medically fit for discharge
What happened next?
26. Active discharge phase Nurses arranged discharge
s/w family (daughter, by phone)
Ordered medications
Waited for GP letter
Arranged transport (external taxi)
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What happened next?
27. And there is more! Taxi arrived at emergency dept
Another nurse (not involved in care) discharged patient
An hour later daughter called department mom had not arrived home
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28. Oh dear! Passers by had noticed lady could not cross road and appeared lost
Shop keepers contacted the Police
A&E department referred a lady brought into department by Police
Wandering in town centre..
Identified by wristband.
Established facts with Taxi Company and eventually the driver:-
He was not given a full address by his Taxi company
It was common place for him to rely on the patient to know where they lived
said she had lived in Solihull, but en route changed her mind about where she lived. She asked me to leave her in town, she wanted to do some shopping
29. What could we have done better? O/E: missed dementia screening (MMSE = 4/10)
Nurses: assess risk vulnerable persons policy
Intermediate Care will arrange escort service, via Red Cross
Did we ever ask the daughter to collect?!
Process: Discharge checklist (address)
Ensure responsibility and named person discharging patient
The usual:- documentation!
30. Case study 3 So near and yet, so far.
31. On Presentation 41yr old male, by ambulance
Ref: Self referral to A&E
PC: Painful bruised toes both feet
Imp: Cellulitis and Sepsis
PMH: Alcohol abuse, Depression.
SH: No fixed abode
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Req: Bloods & cultures, CXR, Swabs, ECG
In-patient stay: 2 weeks (surgery amputation, IV Abx, dressings, Physio
Plan: transfer to Intermediate Care
What happened next?
32. Active discharge phase Nurses arranged intermediate care assessment
Accepted for I/C and paperwork completed
Ordered transfer medications
Notified Social workers
Arranged Hospital transport (internal ambulance)
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What happened next?
33. A catalogue of disasters He waited patiently for the ambulance
By 6pm (5 hours after assessment)
Told by Bed Co-ordinator he cant go today
Senior Sister why?!....
(1) The weather had been particularly bad that day.Im afraid the doors have blown off the ambulance.
(that day a total of 3 patients were not able to be transferred).
He was eventually transferred at 10pm by WMAS.
(2) The service refused to take his Zimmer frame and he was unable to mobilise. This was eventually delivered by Taxi.
(3) The next day he was found not have any dressings or transfer of care instructions for the wound. He was also found to need IV antibiotics..(not detected as Cannulae had been removed to be replaced)
A combination of situations meant he was transferred back to the AMU.
(4) In the middle of a chaotically busy shift the Nurse could not locate the man he was presumed to have self discharged from the department
34. What could we have done better? Bad luck with transport (& weather)
Assessment: communicating the whole plan
Process: Discharge checklist (dressings)
Ensure responsibility and named person discharging patient
The usual:- documentation!
35. Top tips Multi-professional Discharge concerns admission and discharge (CNO, 2000)
Know the process and know how to execute process
Inextricable links between good communications and estimating dates for discharge or length of stay (in Hospital or on the service)
Requires new knowledge, skills and levels of competency
Standardisation of all processes (PGDs, Checklists, management plans, handover plans, patient information)
Requires ward leadership and continued strategic support
Start small and build evaluating success
Requires governance for sustainability (CNST & local standard)
36. Barriers and challenges
We are like inhabitants of little islands, all in the same part of the ocean. Each has evolved a different culture, different ways of doing things and a different language to talk about what they do.
Occasionally the inhabitants on one island may spot their neighbours jumping up and down and issuing strange cries about some new discovery but it makes no sense to them so they ignore it
(Charlton, et al 1980 p. 15).