Âé¶¹Ó³»­

Home to Hospital to Home Transitions

Primary Health Care Integration Network

Guideline

Âé¶¹Ó³»­¡¯s first provincewide Home to Hospital to Home (H2H2H) Transitions Guideline for adult patients will help healthcare providers and teams in acute, primary and community care operate as a singular entity with patients and their loved ones as equal partners ¡ª where people and communities, not diseases, are at the centre of the system. Join us on the journey.


ON THIS PAGE:
Overview | Learning & Support | Provider Resources | Patient Resources |ADAPT Grant | Contact


Overview

Why the Guideline is Needed

Currently, 30 per cent of patients in Âé¶¹Ó³»­ experience a gap in care during their transition from hospital to home. Gaps in care can result in accelerated progression of disease, hospital readmissions and suboptimal health system costs.

Evidence shows that we can help reduce readmissions, length of hospital stays, and emergency department encounters with transitions initiatives that coordinate across different points on a patient¡¯s journey.

The guideline helps ensure that patients move along their healthcare journey in a coordinated way, with important information following them.


Who Uses the Guideline

The guideline is for healthcare providers and teams working in hospital, primary care and community settings and to partner with patients, families and caregivers.


Which Patient Populations Are Supported

The guideline is for adult transitions from hospital only at this time. Other services and demographics may be added to the guideline in the future.


What Patients Have to Say

More than 15 patient and family advisors have been involved in different aspects of the H2H2H Transitions Guideline initiative.

One team, co-led by patient and family advisors, explored what patients and families need for safe, patient-centered transitions and created a report called Transitions through Patients Eyes: Recommendations to Support Patients and Families. The report outlines recommendations for Âé¶¹Ó³»­¡¯s health system leaders to use in implementation of the guideline.

The report reflects key themes from patient stories and gathering feedback from their transitions experiences, as well as identifying/analyzing current transition tools in the province.


What the Guideline Includes

To assist providers and teams within Âé¶¹Ó³»­, this guideline presents leading operational practices, change management tips, tools and resources and additional information for the following:

  • Confirmation of the Primary Care Provider
  • Admit Notification
  • Transition Planning
  • Referral & Access to Community Supports
  • Transition Care Plan
  • Follow-Up to Primary Care

How to Monitor & Assess Transition

H2H2H Transitions Monitoring Measures are a set of recommended measures, both system and strategic, developed at the same time as the H2H2H guideline. These measures are aligned with the guideline as well as the transitions in care measures of the Provincial Primary Care Network Committee.

For more information refer to the H2H2H Transitions in Care Data Infographic.


Implementing the Guideline

  • When planning transition initiatives, use the guideline to understand what processes and partnerships need to be in place to create safe, reliable and effective transitions.
  • Transitions of care committees in each zone are developing implementation plans. More information will be shared by your zone in the coming months.
  • Review the H2H2H Transitions Guideline one-pager for an overview of the initiative.


Provider Resources


Patient Resources


ADAPT Grant

Guideline in Action

ADAPT stands for A DiseAse-Inclusive Pathway for Transitions in Care.

The ADAPT project is a $1.3 million grant that will create a common transition in care pathway for Âé¶¹Ó³»­ns with complex chronic conditions. This pathway will be for patients with heart failure, COPD, cirrhosis, end-stage kidney disease and stage 3-4 cancers. The pathway will be rolled out in three waves across five acute care sites between 2021-22. The project will implement three components of the H2H2H Transitions Guideline: admit notification, transition planning and follow-up to primary care.

ADAPT is a Partnership for Research and Innovation in the Health System grant by Âé¶¹Ó³»­ Innovates.

Learn more, visit ADAPT Study.



¡°If there is better planning and better familiarization with the situation (around transitions of care), many of these patients will be able to cope and understand what they are going through, and that will be beneficial to them both in the confidence they have in the outcome of the situation and also in their confidence of the healthcare system in general.¡±

¨C John, patient/family advisor