Friday, November 21, 2008

Discharge planning

On my rural placement, I had an eldery patient who presented with an exacerbation of COPD. Considering discharge planning, I came to the conclusion that if she were to go home, she would have to be fully independent, as she does not always have someone with her at home. Throughout her stay in hospital, she was often non compliant with physiotherapy, and refused walks several times.

When she was for discharge from a medical point of view, I was unsure how well she was able to ambulate, thus, I was not sure if she was safe for discharge from a physiotherapy point of view. The patient refused a mobility assessment, and I was not surprised, as she had refused to ambulate prior to this. I decided to use her going home as motivation to ambulate, and explained to her that she can only go home once she is deemed safe from a physiotherapy point of view. In doing so, she agreed on a mobility assessment.

NOT ONLY DOES THIS HIGHLIGHT THE NEED FOR EXPLANATIONS ON CERTAIN INTERVENTIONS, BUT ALSO THE IMPACT MOTIVATION CAN HAVE ON A PATIENT. IN THE FUTURE, I WILL SET GOALS FOR THE PATIENT, AND USE MOTIVATIONAL TOOLS TO IMPROVE PATIENT COMPLIANCE AND SATISFACTION FROM TREATMENTS.

1 comment:

joanneP said...

It is always a good idea to set realistic goals for patient and i always felt that by making those goals with the patient, it gives them some sense of independence in achieving their set goals rather than we telling them what we want them to achieve. This will definitely help with their motivation.