The Discharge Choreography: A Narrative Review of Team-Based Workflows to Prevent Post-Hospitalization Complications
Abstract
Background: Hospital discharge is a high-risk transition of care, often characterized by fragmented communication, unresolved clinical issues, and inadequate patient preparation. Poorly executed discharges are a primary driver of preventable hospital readmissions, adverse drug events, and patient harm. Traditional models, which place the overwhelming burden on a single nurse or physician, are prone to error and system failure, as they inadequately address the multifaceted clinical, administrative, and social needs of the departing patient.
Aim: This narrative review aims to synthesize current evidence to propose and define a "Discharge Choreography" model to ensure a seamless, safe, and patient-centered transition from hospital to home or next care setting.
Methods: A systematic search was conducted across PubMed, CINAHL, Scopus, and Web of Science for literature published between 2010 and 2024.
Results: The review identifies four critical, interdependent domains of the discharge process. Evidence confirms that structured workflows leveraging all team members improve medication adherence, follow-up attendance, and patient comprehension while reducing readmission rates by 10-30%. Key barriers include role ambiguity, insufficient training for support staff, and lack of integrated health information technology.
Conclusion: Discharge must be reconceptualized from a solitary clinical task to a choreographed operational process. The proposed model provides a blueprint for health systems to deliberately allocate discharge responsibilities across licensed and non-licensed team members, creating a reliable, redundant safety net that protects patients during this vulnerable period and improves health system performance.
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Copyright (c) 2024 Samira Ahmed Ismail Ghobri, Byan Hussein Aref, Amani Mohammed Ali Arishi, Reem Mohammed Ahmed Shaabi, Azah Abdullah Hassan Masrahi, Samira Ali Hussin Halawi, Mashaer Mohammed A Mahdi, Walaa Abdu Khardali, Rehab Mohammed Abdaly, Yosra Mousa A Farhan, Mohammed Ahmed H Asiri, Tahani Obaid Sheeqa Almutairi

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