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Registration Number: {{org_field_registration_no}}


Transfer to and Discharge from Hospital Best Practice Policy

1. Purpose

The purpose of this policy is to ensure that any transfer of service users to hospital and any discharge back to the service is planned and delivered safely, effectively and in a person-centred way, with clear accountability and robust information sharing. This policy is written to support compliance with the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014 (as amended) (including, but not limited to, Regulation 9 (person-centred care), Regulation 10 (dignity and respect), Regulation 12 (safe care and treatment), Regulation 13 (safeguarding from abuse and improper treatment), Regulation 17 (good governance) and Regulation 20 (duty of candour)) and with the Care Quality Commission assessment approach (Single Assessment Framework quality statements). It also reflects the requirement to make statutory notifications to CQC where applicable under the Care Quality Commission (Registration) Regulations 2009 (including Regulation 18: notification of other incidents).

2. Scope

This policy applies to all staff members involved in the transfer or discharge of service users from {{org_field_name}} to any hospital. It includes planned and emergency transfers, short-term admissions, and discharges from hospitals back to the care home or other settings.

3. Policy Statement

{{org_field_name}} is committed to ensuring that transfers to and discharges from hospital are well-coordinated, person-centred, and managed with the utmost respect for the service user’s dignity, preferences, and safety.

4. Best Practice Procedures

4.1 Pre-Transfer Preparation (To Hospital)

4.1.1 Clinical escalation, baseline observations and risk assessment (including infection status)

Before arranging transfer, staff must escalate to the most appropriate senior clinician/service for advice (e.g., GP, out-of-hours service, NHS 111, community nurse, or other relevant professional) where this is clinically appropriate and does not delay urgent emergency care. Staff must record the service user’s baseline condition, current observations (where taken), presenting concern, what has changed, and the rationale for transfer.

A brief risk assessment must be completed and recorded, including (as relevant): falls risk, cognition/confusion/distress, communication needs, pressure area/wounds, oxygen/respiratory needs, nutrition and hydration risk, pain, continence/catheters/stomas, mobility/handling requirements, and allergies or known adverse drug reactions.

Staff must also document and communicate the service user’s infection prevention and control status, including (where applicable): symptoms of infection, current antibiotics, recent positive tests, and any outbreak restrictions/isolation requirements. This information must be shared with the receiving service/ambulance/hospital to reduce avoidable harm.

4.2 Communication and Consent

Where there is doubt about capacity to consent to transfer/discharge, staff must complete and record a decision-specific capacity assessment. If the person lacks capacity, staff must follow a Best Interests decision-making process, including considering the person’s wishes, feelings, beliefs and values; consulting relevant others (family/friends/attorney/deputy as appropriate); and documenting the decision and rationale. Staff must check whether the person has a Health and Welfare Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA) or a court-appointed deputy and involve them lawfully. Where required, staff must consider referral for independent advocacy and ensure information is provided in a way the person can understand, including any reasonable adjustments (e.g., hearing support, interpreter, easy read).

4.3 Safe Transfer Process (To Hospital)

4.4 Hospital Admission and Monitoring

4.5 Discharge Planning (From Hospital)

4.5.1 Minimum discharge information required before accepting return

The service will not accept a discharge back to the home unless a safe plan is in place and the following minimum information is received (or formally escalated to the hospital discharge team if missing): diagnosis/reason for admission, treatment provided, current clinical risks, infection status and any isolation requirements, mobility/handling guidance, nutrition/hydration needs, wound/pressure area plan, continence/catheter/stoma plan, cognitive/behavioural support plan, follow-up appointments, and a complete medicines list with clear changes and first doses due. Any shortfalls must be documented, escalated, and risk-managed before or at the point of return.

4.6 Safe Return to the Care Home

4.7 Incident Reporting and Learning

5. Related Policies

6. Policy Review

This policy will be reviewed at least annually and immediately following any significant transfer/discharge incident, safeguarding concern, cluster of medication discrepancies, CQC notification, or changes to legislation, CQC guidance/assessment framework, or national hospital discharge guidance. Any updates will be communicated to all staff to ensure ongoing compliance and best practice.


Responsible Person: {{org_field_registered_manager_first_name}} {{org_field_registered_manager_last_name}}
Reviewed on:
{{last_update_date}}
Next Review Date:
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Copyright © {{current_year}} – {{org_field_name}}. All rights reserved.

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