TY - JOUR AU - Vat, Molywan AU - Common, Carol AU - Laizner, Andrea AU - Maheu, Christine PY - 2014/01/19 Y2 - 2024/03/29 TI - Reasons for Returning to the Emergency Department: Perspectives of Patients and the Liaison Nurse Clinician JF - The International Journal of Whole Person Care JA - IJWPC VL - 1 IS - 1 SE - Congress 2013 DO - 10.26443/ijwpc.v1i1.63 UR - https://ijwpc.mcgill.ca/article/view/63 SP - AB - <p>Objectives: The authors wanted to understand the reasons why patients discharged from internal medicine units return to the emergency department within a short term period. The purpose of the study was to explore patients’ perspective of their reasons for returning to the emergency department within fourteen days post-discharge from an internal medicine unit, and to examine how these reasons relate to those determined by the liaison nurse clinician prior to discharge.</p><p>Methods: A qualitative descriptive design was selected to develop the study and individual face-to-face semi-structured interviews were conducted with participants. A convenience sample of eight participants was recruited from a major teaching hospital in Montreal, Canada. The study triangulated three different data sources, which were the patient’s perspective through the interview and the liaison nurse clinician’s perspective through the use of two evaluation tools, which were the Bounceback Probability Legend and the LACE Index Scoring Tool.</p><p>Results: The participants attributed their return to the emergency department due to 1) being discharged too soon, 2) feeling weak at discharge, 3) having limited discharge instructions prior to discharge, and 4) having limited resources available to rely on for help once home. It was also noticed that participants went through a decision-making process for choosing to return to the emergency department. Additionally, the liaison nurse clinician’s evaluation tools identified different reasons from those the participants had attributed to their return to the emergency department.</p><p>Conclusions: The findings suggest that health care professionals must evaluate and assess patients on several components upon their discharge, such as the understanding of their illness, primary concerns, and readiness prior to discharge. The study provides further data in supporting the need of patient’s involvement in the process of discharge planning.</p> ER -