Home from Hospital Care
Leave Hospital Sooner with Live In Care Ready When You Are
Hospital Discharge Service
Whether planned or unexpected, admission to a hospital can be a worrying time, particularly for an older person. Once there, the main objective is always to get well and get home as soon as possible, but sometimes this isn’t practical without additional assistance. Knowing you can go home with the support and help you need can have a huge impact on your emotional well-being and aid your recovery.
We understand hospital discharge processes and work closely with discharge teams, local authorities, and families across the country to provide full-time, live-in care for people leaving the hospital once they are sufficiently recovered.
There’s no place like home, so when you’re being discharged from the hospital, you don’t want to slow down the process by waiting for care to be available. You can go home with all the help and support you need until you are fully recovered, until alternative support can be sourced, or you can decide to retain our services.
Our live-in care service can help you recuperate and regain as much independence as possible by empowering you and showing you new ways to manage your individual care needs.
Discharge summaries are sent directly to your GP practice with any changes to prescribed medication whilst in hospital.
Arranging Care Before You Leave Hospital
Before a person can be discharged from the hospital, their care needs must be assessed so that any support or care services they need can be arranged in advance before discharge.
Any organisations providing these services must be informed of the timing of the person’s discharge and when they can be visited to assess care needs, so that help and support can be arranged before you go home (are discharged).
Preparing to Leave Hospital
- Any extra help is arranged, such as visits from a district nurse community rehabilitation team.
- Any additional equipment required to aid mobility is ordered and fitted, such as a raised toilet seat, grab bars in bathrooms.
The Reablement Care At Home process should include:
- That they are medically fit (the consultant can only decide this, or another medical practitioner).
- The person is physically fit (often described as being at optimum level or safe) to return home with the support arranged and equipment ordered (only a occupational therapist with the aid of a physiotherapist can decide this). Additional support may be requested from the community rehabilitation team by making a referral.
- An assessment of the person’s needs, living environment and support network
- A written care plan that records these needs
- The support described in your care plan has been put in place, and it’s safe for you to be discharged.
- A system for monitoring and, if necessary, adjusting the care plan to meet any change in needs
- An assessment to see if the person qualifies for any funding towards the cost of care by local authority or through the NHS (Continuing Health Care)
Integrated Care Service
Communication and coordination with the onward care teams are essential to provide an integrated care service and avoid an unsafe discharge or readmission.
Indeed, many older people are now considering their long-term care before the decision is forced upon them by unexpected hospital admission.
An introduced live-in care professional can provide practical assistance with the tasks of everyday life – such as personal care, support with safe transfers, administering of prescribed medication, monitoring your well-being, preparing meals, shopping, cleaning, companionship, and they are there for you when you want to be accompanied to a medical appointment or even a social outing.
Thank you so much, you have saved our lives!
Mum’s carers have become part of the family, they’ve gotten to know Mum and her needs so well and are exactly what the family were hoping for and more.
Knowing that Dad has two regular carers, that know his needs, preferences and little idiosyncrasies has given the family total peace of mind. This is what sets Live in Care above the rest of the companies we considered.
Dad was quite tearful today when Corina left, she has been a wonderful carer and such lovely company for him. Dad said she felt more like family rather than a stranger within a few hours of meeting her. A real sweetheart
We tried other companies first but there were so many changes, and it all became too much for Mum, not knowing who would be there to help her. Since we chose Live in Care, she’s been so much happier.