Follow-up calls after hospital discharge are important in transitional care management (TCM). These calls support patients during the time after they leave the hospital. They help make sure patients understand discharge instructions, find health problems early, and keep up with medications and appointments. A study on October 13, 2023, showed that follow-up calls improve patient outcomes by lowering readmissions and increasing satisfaction.
In the US healthcare system, there are different ways to make these calls. Registered nurses (RNs), trained nonmedical staff, and automated systems like text messages or AI voice calls can do the calls. Each method has benefits and challenges related to resources, effectiveness, and patient involvement.
Traditionally, registered nurses or advanced practice nurses make post-discharge calls. Nurses use their medical knowledge to check patient symptoms, explain medication instructions, and decide if a patient needs more care. The Re-Engineered Discharge (RED) program by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) suggests these calls happen within 48 to 72 hours after discharge. This timing helps catch problems early.
The RED Toolkit says nurse callers should use clear scripts and the teach-back method. This means asking patients to repeat instructions in their own words to check if they understand. For example, a nurse in Pennsylvania found during a call that a patient avoided taking a diuretic because of bathroom access issues. Fixing this problem stopped the patient from being readmitted. This shows how clinical conversations help in follow-up care.
These calls can take 20 to 60 minutes and need skilled staff, which can increase healthcare costs. Also, care relies on sharing discharge summaries and plans with doctors outside the hospital. Studies show only 12% to 34% of discharge summaries are reviewed by doctors during follow-up visits. This makes keeping care on track harder.
Using trained staff without medical training for follow-up calls can lower costs while still keeping patients involved. These workers answer general questions, confirm appointments, check medication use, and pass serious concerns to nurses or doctors.
A recent review found that calls by nonmedical staff can support nurse-led calls. They do not replace nurses but can increase how often patients are contacted, especially for low-risk cases or simple questions. This model helps save resources without losing communication quality.
Nonmedical personnel follow clear call scripts for consistency. They are trained to know when to refer patients to clinical staff. This approach fits well with the need to control healthcare costs.
Technology offers ways to reach many patients with follow-up calls. Automated texts (SMS), interactive voice response (IVR), or AI phone systems can remind patients about medicines, appointments, or ask them to check their symptoms.
Research shows automated messages can work well alongside nurse calls. They handle routine tasks and let nurses focus on more complex patient needs.
But fully automated systems may not work as well for patients with complicated needs or tricky medication issues. They may also struggle with language differences unless interpreters are included.
Follow-up calls after discharge help patients feel satisfied, take their medicine properly, and lower chances of readmission. Transitional Care Management (TCM) programs with timely follow-ups have cut hospital readmissions by up to 86.6%. One program, Guideway Care, lowered emergency visits and saved about 11% in healthcare costs. This program uses thorough discharge planning, medicine checks, patient teaching, and ongoing follow-ups.
Even though different follow-up methods improve outcomes, no single method is clearly the best. Reductions in readmission risk were similar for nurse-led, nonmedical staff, and automated calls when good scripts and communication were used. This means a mix of methods might work best for healthcare providers who want cost-effective and patient-focused care.
Studies have looked at how discharge education helps, especially for surgery patients. A review found education alone did not significantly lower 28-day readmissions or infection rates after surgery. Patient knowledge, confidence, and satisfaction showed mixed results because of study quality limits.
This suggests education by itself is not enough. Follow-up calls are needed to repeat discharge instructions, check understanding, fix wrong ideas, and handle when patients do not follow directions on purpose or by mistake.
Medication errors happen in almost half of care transitions. Checking and clarifying medicines during follow-up calls is very important. These calls can find problems and fix them to keep patients safe. For example, a patient may stop medication because of side effects or beliefs, needing special explanation or a doctor’s help.
Transitional care programs also focus on social needs like transportation, housing, and food security. Helping patients get to appointments or manage medicines lowers readmissions and increases satisfaction.
Using AI and automated tools in follow-up care can assist US medical practices by balancing personal patient contact with working efficiently.
Companies like Simbo AI create AI tools that run phone systems and answering services. AI can do routine follow-up communication like reminding patients to take medicine, go to appointments, or check symptoms. If there is a problem, the AI directs the call to a clinical worker.
This reduces work for nurses so they can focus on patients who need more help. AI also uses consistent scripts, which research shows improves follow-up regardless of who makes the call.
Modern AI tools link to EHR systems to get discharge information, medicine lists, and care instructions automatically. Templates help keep data accurate and adjust call scripts for each patient. This makes communication between hospital teams and outpatient doctors faster, which has been a long-standing problem.
Automated systems keep records of call attempts, patient answers, and actions taken. This helps medical practices study how well follow-up works and find common problems to fix. The records also help meet healthcare rules and insurance requirements for transitional care.
Advanced AI phone systems can support many languages or connect to interpreter services in real time. This is important in the US where many patients speak different languages, helping everyone understand and stay involved.
Medical practice managers should plan follow-up calls based on the size of their practice, patient needs, and available staff.
A mixed approach might be best:
Nurse or clinician calls for patients who are at higher risk (for example, those with LACE index scores of 10 or more).
Trained nonmedical personnel for general follow-ups using clear call scripts.
AI and automated messages for routine reminders and check-ins.
Calls made within 48-72 hours after discharge are important to catch problems early and avoid readmissions. Workflows should make sure discharge information is reviewed before calls, use teach-back to confirm patient understanding, and keep good records.
Also, addressing patients’ social needs is important. Connecting patients to local help or transportation services improves following care plans and satisfaction. IT teams should make sure hospital data, follow-up tools, and outpatient records work well together.
Post-discharge follow-up calls, no matter who makes them, improve patient satisfaction and reduce readmissions.
No single call method is clearly better than others.
Scripts and structured communication help all methods work better.
Transitional Care Management programs cut readmissions and lower healthcare costs.
Checking medicines and addressing social factors are important for good follow-up.
Using AI and automation improves efficiency and keeps calls consistent.
Linking AI with EHR systems and data helps improve care quality and continuity.
Language support is needed to communicate fairly with diverse patients.
Medical practices in the US that want to improve care after hospital discharge should use a combination of clinical judgment and technology. This can help them give better care, reduce avoidable readmissions, and improve patient experience while controlling costs.
The review focuses on the various techniques of post-discharge follow-up phone calls and their impact on patient outcomes and satisfaction.
The methods discussed include calls by registered nurses/advanced practice nurses, trained nonmedical personnel, and communication via automated short messaging systems (SMS).
Effective discharge planning and education may directly influence patient outcomes, including satisfaction and readmission rates.
Follow-up calls by nonmedical personnel may serve as beneficial adjuncts to traditional nurse-driven follow-up methods.
The review found no consistent findings indicating that one follow-up method is more beneficial than another for patient outcomes.
Healthcare costs should be considered when identifying which follow-up technique serves as best practice.
Patient satisfaction is measured in relation to the follow-up methods employed post-discharge.
Scripting may be beneficial for all follow-up methods to ensure consistency and effectiveness.
The review indicated improvements in patient outcomes associated with post-discharge follow-up, including reduced readmission rates.
The integrative review was published on October 13, 2023.