TY - JOUR
T1 - Planning older people's discharge from acute hospital care
T2 - Linking risk management and patient participation in decision-making
AU - Huby, Guro
AU - Stewart, Jennifer
AU - Tierney, Alison
AU - Rogers, Wendy
PY - 2004/6
Y1 - 2004/6
N2 - This paper reports findings from a pilot qualitative study which aimed to develop a methodology to explore older patients' participation in discharge decision-making. The study involved 5 months' ward-based observation and formal interviews with older patients and ward staff in a care of the elderly department of a district general hospital in Scotland. A purposive sample of 22 older patients was recruited, selected to give adequate representation across age, gender, condition and type of ward. Findings suggest that participation in decision-making was linked to systems of risk management. Discharge planning relied to a large extent on formal assessments of patients' cognitive and physical ability. This system prevented older patients from expressing their views in terms which came naturally to them, and staff had therefore little reason to trust patients' competence to manage and to take part in decision-making. This, in turn, meant that ambiguous or difficult decisions about risk were circumvented or postponed through referral and assessments, rather than openly addressed. These dynamics excluded both patients and staff from active decision-making, something which, in turn, removed all parties' control of the situation and produced new risks. Two case studies are presented to illustrate and support this analysis.
AB - This paper reports findings from a pilot qualitative study which aimed to develop a methodology to explore older patients' participation in discharge decision-making. The study involved 5 months' ward-based observation and formal interviews with older patients and ward staff in a care of the elderly department of a district general hospital in Scotland. A purposive sample of 22 older patients was recruited, selected to give adequate representation across age, gender, condition and type of ward. Findings suggest that participation in decision-making was linked to systems of risk management. Discharge planning relied to a large extent on formal assessments of patients' cognitive and physical ability. This system prevented older patients from expressing their views in terms which came naturally to them, and staff had therefore little reason to trust patients' competence to manage and to take part in decision-making. This, in turn, meant that ambiguous or difficult decisions about risk were circumvented or postponed through referral and assessments, rather than openly addressed. These dynamics excluded both patients and staff from active decision-making, something which, in turn, removed all parties' control of the situation and produced new risks. Two case studies are presented to illustrate and support this analysis.
KW - Hospital discharge
KW - Older people
KW - Risk
KW - Risk management
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=2942729932&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/1369857042000219797
DO - 10.1080/1369857042000219797
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:2942729932
SN - 1369-8575
VL - 6
SP - 115
EP - 132
JO - Health, Risk and Society
JF - Health, Risk and Society
IS - 2
ER -