A senior woman getting a checkup at the doctor's office.

FierceHealthcare recently reported the discharge process continues to be a major hurdle for healthcare leaders looking to reduce readmissions because many patients do not understand their discharge instructions.New strategies are being introduced to improve the process such as treating discharge more like the admissions process and dispensing medications at that point.

Successful interventions incorporate this attention to detail that is found in the admissions process, said Dhruv Kullar, M.D., a resident physician at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School.

A study published in Pediatrics also found that patients who were discharged with medications in hand significantly reduced the odds of readmission. Another solution is to identify high-risk patients and implement discharge plans over a 30-day period after a thorough discharge process.

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For additional resources on care coordination and medication management, visit the Great Plains Quality Innovation Network Coordination of Care webpage.  Be sure to join our Learning and Action Network  to continue to receive related updates and resources. For additional information or assistance, contact the care coordination and medication safety task lead in your state to learn more about the assistance we can offer.