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The "Permanent" Patient Problem.

Courtenay R Bruce1, Mary A Majumder2

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The Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics : a Journal of the American Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics
|January 16, 2016
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Patients needing post-acute care face discharge barriers due to resource limitations. This study proposes ethical principles to guide financial support decisions for patients unable to afford continued care, ensuring consistent and reasoned outcomes.

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Area of Science:

  • Health Care Ethics
  • Hospital Resource Management
  • Post-Acute Care Policy

Background:

  • Acute care patients may become long-term hospital residents due to lack of post-acute care resources.
  • Physician and hospital "dumping" is legally and ethically prohibited, yet indefinite hospital stays are unsustainable.
  • Lack of specific hospital policies complicates financial support for extended care.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To propose ethical principles for decision-making regarding financial support for post-acute care.
  • To guide healthcare professionals in advocating for patients facing discharge barriers.
  • To inform hospital administrators in authorizing resource allocation for extended patient stays.

Main Methods:

  • Development of five mid-level ethical principles.
  • Application of principles to two de-identified patient cases.
  • Analysis of advocacy and administrative decision-making processes.

Main Results:

  • Ethical principles provide a framework for consistent financial support decisions.
  • Case studies illustrate practical application of the proposed principles.
  • Advocacy and administrative negotiation are key factors in resource availability.

Conclusions:

  • Ethical principles can facilitate reasoned and consistent decisions on post-acute care financial support.
  • Addressing resource limitations requires collaboration between healthcare professionals and administrators.
  • Proposed principles support equitable patient care and responsible hospital resource management.