Discharge Planning 101 (Part 1): How to Safely Discharge a Patient from the Hospital

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  • Опубликовано: 22 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 18

  • @janiceetomlinson
    @janiceetomlinson 8 месяцев назад

    I am completely new to discharge planning and I learned more in this video than I did in the past 2 weeks of training with my preceptor. It has been a confusing 2 weeks. Thank you!

  • @morninggloryfarmstead
    @morninggloryfarmstead 9 месяцев назад

    I'm a nurse but this was a great refresher just to remember the concepts that need to be top of mind prior to discharge!

  • @OnTheMarkWriting1
    @OnTheMarkWriting1 11 месяцев назад

    This was fantastic! I am just getting into discharge planning at a skilled nursing facility and really could use some help getting put on solid ground. Thanks for all your tips and I look forward to watching your future videos.

  • @Sammy.a1287
    @Sammy.a1287 8 месяцев назад

    SO INCREDIBLY HELPFUL! You are a legend Dr. Jeong!

  • @myllasupatan7530
    @myllasupatan7530 Год назад

    thanks for a thorough discharge planning video

  • @RuthStroman
    @RuthStroman Год назад

    Thank you this was super helpful for me to understand d/c planning.

  • @alexkumi6954
    @alexkumi6954 10 месяцев назад

    Great video

  • @steph3721
    @steph3721 Месяц назад

    thank you for this video 🫶🏽 i am wondering since some of this information sounds like something a medical social worker would do! so do doctor's go through the same list?

  • @banealics1108
    @banealics1108 2 года назад

    This is great, i am pgy1 and wana be hospitalist , looking forward to your vidoes

    • @MonicaJeong
      @MonicaJeong  2 года назад

      Thank you so much!! Amazing! Hospitalist is a great field :)

  • @iCanonKiD
    @iCanonKiD 2 года назад +1

    Great video! Do you have advice for resources to prepare for intern year?

    • @MonicaJeong
      @MonicaJeong  2 года назад +1

      Sure! I can really only speak to internal medicine intern year. My main pieces of advice are: 1) Don't stress too much about "preparing" for intern year - remember to have fun before residency starts! You'll learn most things on the job. 2) If you're dead set on preparing, choose just 1 or 2 resources, whether it's listening to a podcast at least once weekly (such as Clinical Problem Solvers) or subscribing to New England Journal of Medicine and reading 1-2 articles per week. And stick to it through residency!

  • @yasiranzar4343
    @yasiranzar4343 Год назад

    Great job. 👍

  • @vivekmahajan5178
    @vivekmahajan5178 10 месяцев назад

    Hello Monica, I would like to partner with you to educate discharge planners across the country. How do I get in touch with you ?

  • @lynel2765
    @lynel2765 Год назад

    Hi. How do I talk to, what do I say, or approach the patient or the patient's family in discharging the patient. Or is that something a social worker will be doing ?
    Do I need to read a patient's record about his hospital stay to determine what their skill needs are, what their DME could be , etc ?
    How many days do I normally have to get all that is required before the pt is discharged ? Am I to keep track of what the pt needs when they leave before even a Dr give the patient a discharge date ?
    thx

    • @MonicaJeong
      @MonicaJeong  Год назад

      If you're the primary intern or resident, you should be able to keep your patient updated each day in terms of when you anticipate they'll be discharged. Discharge is a team effort! You'll typically have a case manager and social worker helping you.

  • @ICUSocialWorker
    @ICUSocialWorker 6 месяцев назад

    It’s important to make sure the family does not mislead what you tell them. An example was provided to us that the family interpreted for a man who was having his leg amputated. They realized the family did not tell him his leg was being amputated and surgery was stopped.