This study aimed to determine the frequency and characteristics of patients discharged from a specialist community palliative care service, and the incidence, timing and reasons for discharge.
This retrospective audit reviewed admissions and discharges over a 6-year period, including demographics, length of admission, discharge reason and readmission status.
Of the 5149 admissions, 17% were discharged and 22% were later readmitted. 19% of readmissions were again discharged. The main reason for discharge was having no specialist palliative care needs (53%), followed by patients moving out of the service catchment area (13%). Median length of stay before discharge was 141 days, and median time from discharge to readmission was 214 days.
A small group of 32 patients was referred, reviewed and immediately discharged, and most had a non-malignant diagnosis and were male. The main reasons for immediate discharge was the absence of palliative care needs or the service not being needed or wanted. A third of these patients were later readmitted.
These data show that a substantial proportion of community specialist palliative care service patients are discharged. It raises further research questions around flexible models of care, validated discharge criteria and implementing quality measures on discharge.