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- Home Health: A Bridge in the Continuum of Care
Home Health: A Bridge in the Continuum of Care
- By Leslie Casey
- Published 04/9/2009
- Archive
Home
Health: A Bridge in the Continuum of Care
By Patricia
Driscoll
Continuity
in care during and after a hospital stay is a goal shared across the health
care industry. Each provider -- be it
the specialist or surgeon for the event that originated a hospital stay, the
hospitalist or the primary care physician -- understands the negative effects
of operating in silos within an increasingly complex and fragmented health care
system. A patient’s discharge from a
facility back into the community can be one of the most critical points in
maintaining continuity, because ineffective coordination often brings the
patient back to the point of re-admission.
Advances
in information technology, such as electronic health records, play an important
role in information sharing, but technology plays only one, albeit critical,
part in addressing continuity. Home
health care also serves as a valuable bridge between a hospital stay and the
successful transition to independence at home.
In
addition to the provision of services such as skilled care and therapy, home
health care staff serve as the clinical eyes and ears in the patient’s home,
observing and filtering information on the patient’s progress after discharge. This filter function increases efficiency for
all providers following the patient.
Home care staff can assess a patient’s issues and alert the correct
provider to facilitate follow-up where appropriate or simply provide
reassurance to the patient and family.
Working as a part of the total care team, home care staff serves as a
liaison or lifeline for the patient, identifying critical information that
circumvents a trip to the emergency room or re-hospitalization.
Assisting
with continuity of care is one vital role home health care can play, but it’s
also important to note the patient benefits of home health. Patients are often eager to get out of the
hospital, but anxious about leaving the security of around-the-clock care. Home health once again serves as a bridge,
facilitating patients’ recuperation and rehabilitation as they gain back their
full independence at home.
As health
care in the
