Search results with tag "Hospital discharge"
The Post-Hospital Follow-Up Visit - California Health Care ...
www.chcf.orghospital physicians and primary care physicians is useful for reducing preventable hospital readmissions. Indeed, patients seen for a post-hospital follow-up visit by a physician who had received the hospital discharge summary were less likely to be readmitted.17 Unfortunately, discharge summaries are often unavailable
One-off personal health budgets within hospital discharge ...
www.england.nhs.uksupport as set out in the Hospital Discharge Service: Policy and Operating Model. • The PHB model is most likely to apply to patients in discharge pathways 0 and 1, although may include patients in the other pathways. One-off PHBs could fund, for example: • Payment of childcare to enable an informal carer to provide the necessary care.
Factsheet 37 Hospital discharge - Age UK
www.ageuk.org.ukIf your hospital admission is planned, your stay and abilities on leaving are more predictable. Planned NHS-funded treatment is generally provided in an NHS hospital but may be provided in a private hospital. An emergency admission brings more uncertainty, but staff should follow steps to ensure your stay is no longer than necessary, and you ...
Classification: Official Publication approval reference ...
www.england.nhs.ukJan 20, 2021 · For action: Improving discharge patient flow from acute settings This letter sets out three schemes that systems can immediately implement for discharging people home from hospital. All of these options can be funded from the £588m hospital discharge ‘scheme two’ fund up until 31 March 2021. They will
Hospital Discharge and Community Support - GOV.UK
assets.publishing.service.gov.ukHospital Discharge and Community Support: Policy and Operating Model . discharge fund (detailed in this guidance), local systems should follow agreed protocols for funding this care (see section 6). 2.11 Systems should work to be in a position where no one has to transfer permanently into a care home for the first time directly following an acute