Princess Royal University Hospital: report on patient discharge

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Summary of report content

Healthwatch Bromley undertook a project to understand people's experience of discharge at the Princess Royal University Hospital between February-May 2017.  They spoke to 91 people.

Overall, most respondents were satisfied with the discharge service, but several recurring concerns were identified. 

The review found that the majority of admissions were emergencies, while planned admissions were generally well managed, with most patients receiving good pre-admission information. However, some issues were reported, such as delays in receiving medication on admission, missing patient information, and long waits for beds. 

During the hospital stay, most patients reported positive experiences of cleanliness and treatment, with high satisfaction scores. However, communication—particularly between doctors and nurses—was identified as a key weakness, with patients often feeling uninformed or that staff lacked up-to-date information. Some patients also reported disturbances at night due to noise. 

Preparation for discharge was generally viewed positively, with most patients satisfied with the information they received. Nevertheless, there was a significant gap between patient and carer experiences: while most patients felt involved in discharge decisions, many carers reported not being adequately consulted, which sometimes led to difficulties arranging care at home. 

On the day of discharge, patients were generally happy with staff support, but operational issues were common. These included long waits in the discharge lounge, delays in receiving medication or transport, poor signage and location of the lounge, and missed meals due to poorly timed discharges. 

After discharge, most patients were satisfied with the care and support they received, and coordination between hospital and community services was generally effective. However, some patients experienced delays in information being sent to their GP, inconsistencies in domiciliary care, and lack of continuity in carers. 

The report concludes that the discharge service is largely effective and supported by proactive and caring staff, but improvements are needed in communication, discharge planning, and operational efficiency. It makes ten recommendations, including improving staff communication, involving carers more in discharge decisions, reducing waiting times, ensuring timely access to medication, improving the discharge lounge environment, and strengthening communication with GP practices.

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General details

Local Healthwatch
Healthwatch Bromley
Publication date
Date evidence capture began
Date evidence capture finished
Key themes
Caring, kindness, respect and dignity
Communication with patients; treatment explanation; verbal advice
Consent, choice, user involvement and being listened to
Follow-on treatment and continuity of care
Discharge
Integration of services and communication between professionals
Medication, prescriptions and dispensing
Parking and transport
Patient/resident safety
Service organisation, delivery, change and closure
Staffing - levels and training
Written information, guidance and publicity

Methodology and approach

Was the work undertaken in partnership with another organisation?
No
Primary research method used
Interviews
Survey
If an Enter and View methodology was applied, was the visit announced or unannounced?
N/A

Details of health and care services included in the report

Details of health and care services included in the report
Adult social care, including care packages and social workers
Discharge lounge/ discharge team/ discharge to assess
Inpatient care/General inpatients

Details of people who shared their views

Number of people who shared their views
91
Does this report feature carers?
Yes
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