name: conducting-discharge-planning-nursing description: Coordinates nursing discharge planning with medication teaching, follow-up scheduling, and resource coordination. Use when planning discharge, coordinating post-discharge care, or documenting discharge teaching. tags:
- process
- nursing
metadata:
author: casemark
practice_areas:
- Nursing
- Advanced Practice
- Nurse Practitioner document_types:
- Process Documentation skill_modes:
- Process Management
Conducting Discharge Planning Nursing
Why This Skill Exists
Discharge planning is a CMS Condition of Participation (§482.43) requiring hospitals to have a discharge planning process that applies to all patients. Effective discharge planning reduces 30-day readmissions — a CMS quality metric under the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program (HRRP) that imposes payment penalties for excess readmissions for heart failure, acute MI, pneumonia, COPD, THA/TKA, and CABG. The Joint Commission requires a coordinated, patient-centered discharge process. ANA Standard 5 (Implementation) includes coordination of care and Standard 5B includes health teaching as core components. HCAHPS discharge information domains directly affect hospital reimbursement under Value-Based Purchasing. Poor discharge planning contributes to medication errors at transitions (an estimated 60% of medication errors occur at care transitions), patient confusion, missed follow-up, and preventable readmissions.
Checkpoint A — Intake Verification
Required Patient Information
- Current medical diagnoses and problem list
- Current functional status: mobility, ADL independence, cognitive function
- Discharge disposition: home, home with services, SNF, LTACH, inpatient rehab, hospice
- Social determinants of health: housing stability, transportation access, food security, caregiver availability, insurance status
- Patient/family goals and preferences for post-discharge care
- Advance directives and code status (relevant for skilled nursing or hospice transitions)
- Language, literacy, and cultural considerations
Required Clinical Information
- Discharge medication list (reconciled against admission medications)
- Pending diagnostic results that may affect discharge plan
- Outstanding consults or procedures
- Activity restrictions and weight-bearing status
- Dietary restrictions or requirements
- Wound care or ongoing treatment needs
- DME (durable medical equipment) requirements
- Follow-up appointment requirements (PCP, specialist, surgeon)
Screening for Post-Discharge Risk
- LACE Index score or institutional readmission risk tool completed (Length of stay, Acuity of admission, Comorbidities, Emergency department visits in prior 6 months)
- High-risk medication regimen identified (anticoagulants, insulin, opioids, immunosuppressants)
- History of prior 30-day readmission
- Lives alone or has inadequate social support
- Three or more active comorbidities
Step 1 — Initiate Discharge Planning on Admission
Discharge planning begins at admission per CMS CoP §482.43:
- Screen all patients within 24 hours of admission for discharge planning needs using institutional screening tool
- Identify patients requiring formal discharge planning evaluation:
- Patients with complex medical needs
- Patients likely needing post-acute services (home health, SNF, rehab)
- Patients with inadequate social support or housing instability
- Patients with readmission risk factors
- Initiate interdisciplinary discharge planning team involvement: case management, social work, physical therapy, occupational therapy, dietitian, pharmacy as appropriate
- Set an estimated discharge date (EDD) and communicate to patient/family and care team
- Document the initial discharge planning assessment in the medical record
Step 2 — Conduct Medication Reconciliation for Discharge
- Compare the current inpatient medication list against the pre-admission medication list
- Identify medications that were: continued, modified (dose/frequency change), added (new), or discontinued during the hospitalization
- Resolve discrepancies: For each changed medication, document the clinical rationale
- Verify the patient/caregiver can obtain all discharge medications:
- Insurance formulary coverage
- Pharmacy access
- Cost barriers (coordinate with social work or pharmacy for patient assistance programs)
- Generate the discharge medication list in plain language with:
- Medication name (generic and brand)
- Purpose
- Dose, frequency, route
- Special instructions (take with food, avoid grapefruit, etc.)
- Common side effects and when to contact provider
- Highlight high-risk medications requiring additional teaching (anticoagulants, insulin, opioids)
Step 3 — Provide Discharge Education Using Teach-Back
Mandatory education topics per CMS and Joint Commission requirements:
- Diagnosis understanding: What was wrong, what was done, and current status in plain language
- Medication review: Review each discharge medication using the reconciled list; use teach-back
- Activity restrictions: Specific limitations (no lifting > 10 lbs, no driving for 2 weeks, etc.)
- Diet: Specific dietary requirements or restrictions with written instructions
- Wound care / ongoing treatments: Demonstrate and have patient/caregiver return-demonstrate
- Follow-up appointments: Confirm dates, times, locations, provider names; address transportation
- Warning signs: Specific symptoms requiring emergency care vs. provider contact
- Use condition-specific red flags (e.g., CHF: weight gain > 2 lbs/day, worsening SOB; surgical: fever > 101.5°F, wound drainage change)
- Equipment use: Demonstrate any DME (oxygen, glucometer, wound vac, etc.)
Document teach-back results for each topic. Reference managing-patient-education skill for detailed teaching methodology.
Step 4 — Coordinate Post-Discharge Services
- Home health referral: Submit orders for skilled nursing, physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, home health aide as indicated; ensure referral includes specific visit frequency and duration
- SNF/LTACH/Rehab placement: Coordinate with case management; ensure medical records transfer; confirm bed availability; arrange transportation
- DME coordination: Order equipment, confirm delivery date/time, arrange for patient/caregiver training
- Outpatient services: Schedule follow-up appointments before discharge; PCP follow-up within 7 days (within 48 hours for high-risk patients)
- Community resources: Connect patient/family with disease-specific support groups, nutrition programs, transportation services, pharmacy assistance programs
- Caregiver support: Assess caregiver burden; provide caregiver education and respite care resources
Step 5 — Execute Day-of-Discharge Protocol
- Confirm all discharge orders are complete and signed
- Verify discharge medication prescriptions are transmitted to pharmacy or provided to patient
- Perform final medication reconciliation at discharge — compare what patient received inpatient against discharge orders
- Complete all discharge education with documented teach-back
- Provide written discharge instructions: medication list, follow-up appointments, activity restrictions, dietary instructions, warning signs, emergency contact numbers
- Ensure patient has follow-up appointment confirmed (not just "call to schedule")
- Arrange transportation
- Remove IV access, urinary catheter, and other devices not needed post-discharge
- Perform final assessment: vital signs, pain assessment, ambulation status
- Escort patient to vehicle per institutional policy
Step 6 — Document the Discharge
- Discharge summary note: date/time, condition at discharge, mode of transport, accompanied by whom
- Discharge medication list: complete reconciled list with patient/pharmacy copies
- Discharge instructions: all topics covered with teach-back results documented
- Follow-up plan: appointment dates, provider names, pending results with follow-up plan
- Referrals placed: home health, DME, outpatient services with confirmation
- Patient education: topics covered, materials provided, learner identified, teach-back results
- Advance directive status: confirmed and communicated to receiving facility if applicable
Checkpoint B — Discharge Readiness Review
Patient Readiness
- Patient/caregiver can verbalize diagnosis, medication regimen, warning signs (teach-back confirmed)
- Patient/caregiver can demonstrate any required skills (wound care, injection, equipment use)
- Patient has transportation arranged
- Patient has medications or prescriptions in hand
- Patient has written discharge instructions in preferred language
System Readiness
- All discharge orders complete and signed
- Medication reconciliation completed with discrepancies resolved
- Follow-up appointments confirmed (not just recommended)
- Home health/SNF referral submitted and confirmed
- DME ordered and delivery confirmed
- Discharge summary dictated/completed for PCP communication
- Transition record sent to receiving provider/facility per CMS requirements
Quality Audit
- Discharge planning initiated within 24 hours of admission per CMS CoP §482.43
- Readmission risk screening completed with appropriate interventions for high-risk patients
- Medication reconciliation performed at discharge with discrepancies resolved and documented
- Teach-back documented for all required discharge education topics
- Follow-up appointments scheduled before discharge (PCP within 7 days for general; 48 hours for high-risk)
- Written discharge instructions provided in patient's preferred language at appropriate literacy level
- Condition-specific warning signs included in written instructions
- HCAHPS discharge information domains addressed: understanding of care at home, understanding of medication purpose
- 30-day readmission rates tracked per CMS HRRP conditions
- Discharge process compliant with CMS CoP §482.43, Joint Commission standards, and ANA Standards 5 and 5B
Guidelines
- CMS CoP §482.43: Hospitals must have a discharge planning process; evaluate patients for discharge needs; develop discharge plans; arrange for post-hospital services
- CMS HRRP: Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program penalizes hospitals with excess 30-day readmissions for specified conditions
- Joint Commission: Transition of care standards require coordinated discharge with patient engagement, medication management, and follow-up
- ANA Standards: Standard 5 (Implementation) includes coordination of care; Standard 5B (Health Teaching) requires education for self-management
- HCAHPS: Discharge information domain questions directly affect hospital reimbursement
- Medication reconciliation: Joint Commission NPSG.03.06.01 requires medication reconciliation at every transition of care
- Health literacy: Discharge instructions must be at or below 6th-grade reading level; use teach-back to verify comprehension
- Scope of practice: RN coordinates discharge planning, performs medication reconciliation, delivers and evaluates discharge education; case management arranges post-acute services; social work addresses psychosocial barriers; pharmacy reviews medication reconciliation for high-risk regimens
- Post-discharge follow-up: Evidence supports follow-up phone calls within 48–72 hours of discharge to reduce readmissions; include medication review, symptom assessment, and appointment confirmation