# Improving specialist palliative care discharges from hospitals and hospices to community settings: a qualitative interview study of the communication experiences of patients, carers, and primary care professionals

**Authors:** Katharine Weetman, Catherine Grimley, Cara Bailey, Celia J. Bernstein, Jeremy Dale, Aprella Fitch, Sarah Mitchell, Rumandeep Tiwana, John I. MacArtney

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s12904-025-01851-x · 2025-07-26

## TL;DR

This study explores how patients, carers, and healthcare professionals experience discharges from specialist palliative care to community settings, aiming to improve communication during this transition.

## Contribution

The study provides novel insights into the communication challenges and opportunities during palliative care discharges, offering practical suggestions for improvement.

## Key findings

- Discharge communication was seen as effective when it was accurate, complete, and included written reinforcement of verbal instructions.
- Participants suggested incorporating palliative care preferences, offering letters to patients and carers, and ensuring accessible medication instructions.
- Poor discharge communication risks confusion, distress, and increased workload for patients and carers.

## Abstract

Patients who have received specialist intervention during periods of complex symptom and palliative care needs (e.g. pain crisis) may be discharged from specialist palliative care services to primary care. Despite such discharges being reasonably common, little is known about what happens during this process. We sought to explore patient, carer and healthcare professional experiences, identifying ways to improve this crucial and time-sensitive part of the healthcare journey.

A qualitative interview study designed using an interpretive approach and reflexive thematic analysis methods. Sampling was purposive across six specialist palliative care sites (hospitals and hospices) and six general practices.

A total of 38 participants took part in interviews:15 patients, 8 carers and 15 primary care professionals. Two overarching key themes were developed. The first described the multiple ways that ‘discharge’ was understood depending on the setting and circumstances of the patient. The second explored what was associated with better or worse transitions to primary care. Discharge communications that were accurate and complete were described as effective whereby written information reinforced verbal instructions and acted as a reminder. Participant suggestions for improving these discharge communications included: incorporating the patient’s palliative care preferences (e.g. advanced directives); offering letters to patients and, where appropriate, carers; providing post-discharge follow-up and contact details; ensuring medication instructions are accessible to patients and carers.

Current specialist palliative care discharge communications risk confusion, distress, and increased workload post-discharge. The study identified numerous suggestions professionals could take to improve this process.

Registered in ISRCTN Registry on 29.12.2023 ref: ISRCTN18098027.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12904-025-01851-x.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** pain (MESH:D010146), confusion (MESH:D003221)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12297703