《Chinese Journal of Rehabilitation Theory and Practice》 ›› 2015, Vol. 21 ›› Issue (06): 634-641.

• 特稿 • Previous Articles     Next Articles

International Progress and Understanding of Discharge Planning

TANG Li1,2, LI Jian-jun1,2, GAO Feng1,2, YANG Ming-liang1,2, DU Liang-jie1,2, Sheila Purves3, HUANG Wei-ping3   

  1. 1. Capital Medical University School of Rehabilitation Medicine, Beijing 100068, China; 2. Department of Spinal and Neural Function Reconstruction, Beijing Bo'ai Hospital, China Rehabilitation Research Center, Beijing 100068, China; 3. The Hong Kong Society for Rehabilitation -WHO Callaboration Center for Rehabilitation, Hong Kong, China
  • Received:1900-01-01 Revised:1900-01-01 Published:2015-06-25 Online:2015-06-25

Abstract: With the social development and the transformation of medical model, providing patients with continuous services and seamless transfer between different medical institutions, namely continuity care, is inevitable. Discharge planning take patients as the center and patient's needs as the guidance. Patients and their families should actively take part in the plan. Through multi-disciplinary and multi-institutional cooperation, patients can continue to enjoy health services after discharge. Discharge planning is the basis of continuous medical service. This article summrized the background and situation of discharge planning in the United States, Canada, Brazil, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, Japan, India, South Africa, and Hong Kong, Taiwan and mainland in China. When heavy medical burden, aging, imbalence between supply and demand occurred, discharge planning could be helpful to make rational use of medical resources, save medical costs, guarantee the quality of medical service continuity, avoid the occurrence of adverse events after discharge and improve the patients' function and quality of life. This article reviewed group members, time, institutions and process of discharge planning in order to provide evidence-based basis for the development of discharge planning in China.

Key words: discharge planning, continuity of healthcare, rehabilitation