• Medical care · May 2010

    Nurse and patient perceptions of discharge readiness in relation to postdischarge utilization.

    • Marianne Weiss, Olga Yakusheva, and Kathleen Bobay.
    • Marquette University College of Nursing and College of Business Administration, Department of Economics, Milwaukee, WI 53201, USA. Marianne.weiss@marquette.edu
    • Med Care. 2010 May 1;48(5):482-6.

    BackgroundPrevention of hospital readmission and emergency department (ED) utilization will be a crucial strategy in reducing health care costs. There has been limited research on nurse assessment and patient perceptions of discharge readiness in relation to postdischarge outcomes.ObjectivesTo investigate the association of nurse and patient assessments of discharge readiness with postdischarge readmissions and ED visits.Research DesignHierarchical regression analysis of readmission or ED utilization using independent nurse and patient assessments of discharge readiness and patient characteristics as explanatory variables, with hospital and unit fixed effects.SubjectsA total of 162 adult medical-surgical patients and their discharging nurses from 13 medical-surgical units of 4 Midwestern hospitals.MeasuresReadiness for Hospital Discharge Scale completed independently by patients and their discharging nurses within 4 hours before hospital discharge; Postdischarge utilization (unplanned readmission or ED visit within 30 days postdischarge).ResultsCorrelations between nurse assessment and patient perceptions of discharge readiness were low (r = 0.15-0.32). Nurses rated patient readiness higher than patients themselves. Controlling for patient characteristics, nurse readiness for hospital discharge scale score (odds ratio = 0.57, P = 0.05) but not patient readiness for hospital discharge scale score was associated with postdischarge utilization.ConclusionsNurse assessment was more strongly associated with postdischarge utilization than patient self-assessment. Formalizing nurse assessment of discharge readiness could facilitate identification of patients at risk for readmission or ED utilization before discharge when anticipatory interventions could prevent avoidable postdischarge utilization.

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